Donald Trump sat in the front row of the Supreme Court to watch his executive order against birthright citizenship get torn apart, and he couldn’t even sit through the whole thing. He walked out midway through oral arguments — the constitutional equivalent of rage-quitting a multiplayer game you started. Then he went on Truth Social to call the country “stupid” for protecting the Fourteenth Amendment. The man tried to end a right that’s been in the Constitution since 1868 and got mad when the justices who can actually read told him no.
Amy Coney Barrett — his own appointee — asked a single question that unraveled the entire argument. That’s how thin this case was. You don’t need a law degree to see what happened here: a president who governs by tantrum ran into a wall he can’t executive-order his way through. The Constitution doesn’t care about your Truth Social following. It’s been here longer than you, and it’ll be here after you’re gone.