Trump encourages Alabama grads to enjoy the ‘golden age’ he’s creating

(NewsNation) — President Trump, marking the first 100 days of his second term this week, encouraged the University of Alabama’s Class of 2025 to enjoy the “golden age” he’s setting up for them through his administration’s policies.

“I think you have a chance to be the greatest generation in the history of our country because we’re turning it around and you happen to be available,” Trump told an appreciative crowd Thursday evening at the Coleman Coliseum.

Trump, in an hourlong commencement address laced with politics, encouraged the thousands of graduates to excel in their respective fields. He touted his administration’s immigration crackdown, controls on transgender athletes and the controversial tariffs he has imposed on foreign imports.

“It’s making us very rich,” Trump said of the tariffs, “and you’ll be seeing the results pretty soon, sooner than most people think.”

Trump, who praised Alabama’s winning Crimson Tide football dynasty, was playing to a state where he took a commanding 64% of the vote in 2024. Former football coach Nick Saban joked that it was a tough job introducing the president.

“I feel like I’m the warmup band for the Rolling Stones and the first song they’re going to play is ‘Start Me Up,'” he said.

Though billed as a commencement address, Thursday’s assembly keynoted by Trump was actually a special event that was created before graduation ceremonies that begin Friday. Attendance for graduating students was optional.

It wasn’t all harmony. Trump’s visit to the University of Alabama drew hundreds of protesters to an off-campus rally. One-time presidential candidate Beto O’Rourke of Texas and former U.S. Sen. Doug Jones, the last Democrat to hold statewide office in Alabama, appeared at the “Tide Against Trump” event — a play on the university’s nickname.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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‘Psychopath or sociopath?’ Conservative worries Trump has proved he’s ’emotionally broken’



Criticism of Donald Trump's remarks regarding Rob Reiner's death intensified on Tuesday morning when a prominent conservative columnist questioned the aging president's mental fitness.

In a notably direct column for conservative publication The National Review, Jim Geraghty asserted that Trump's statements suggest "something deeply wrong." He proceeded to question whether "psychopath or sociopath" better characterizes the president's behavior.

Acknowledging the tragedy of Reiner and his wife Michele, who were reportedly killed by their son, Geraghty suggested that Trump's actions reveal long-standing indicators of instability. He characterized the president as consistently "obsessed with grievances; vindictive and prone to posting late-night tirades on social media; uninterested in details; erratic, impulsive, spiteful."

Geraghty argued that Trump lacks the capacity to assess moral character through objective standards. Instead, he wrote, "Donald Trump's entire worldview of whether someone is a good person or a bad person depends entirely on whether that person offers praise or criticism of Trump."

The columnist raised concerns about Trump's access to nuclear weapons while simultaneously pursuing aggressive military policies globally, suggesting his emotional state presents a national security concern.

Geraghty acknowledged that Trump supporters could defend his policies or express satisfaction with their electoral choices. However, he concluded, "But what you can't say is that Donald Trump is a good and decent human being."

He further contended that Trump's inability to empathize with the Reiners' tragedy mirrors his disconnect from Americans struggling with cost-of-living concerns. "This is why his approval rating on the economy hit 31 percent. There are far-reaching consequences of having a president who is emotionally broken," Geraghty wrote.

You can read more here.