Let me try to tell you what an old man I really am. As a start, imagine this: I still read the New York Times every day on paper. Yes, the paper New York Times still exists! Yikes! And the other day, at the very bottom of page seven of the first section of the Times, I noticed an article by Rebecca Dzombak with this headline: ā2025 Wildfires Were Worldās Costliest Ever, Study Says, With Populated Areas Hit.ā
Really? The costliest fires ever? Doesnāt that catch your attention? It certainly did mine!
In fact, wouldnāt it catch your attention more than āPresident Said to Be Dropping Plans for Fund,ā or āIn Stalemates, Trumpās Talk Meets Reality,ā or, for that matter, āLutnick Runs Commerce Dept. With Bare-Knuckles Approachā? All three of those headlines were on the front page of that same paper, not at the bottom of page seven, and all three were, of course, distinctly Trumpian-themed pieces.
And, of course — sorry to be so repetitive, but what choice do I have in the world of… yes, who else but, of course, Donald J. Trump? — who or what could possibly catch your attention more than him and his crew?
Or put another way, of these four lines, which would you have highlighted on page one and which would you have buried on page seven:
āPresident Trump is backing off his plan to establish a $1.8 billion fund to compensate people who claimed they were victims of unfair prosecution by the government, two people familiar with the matter said on Monday.ā
āPresident Trump likes his military and diplomatic victories quick, clean, and decisiveā
āWhen auto executives learned last year that President Trumpās punishing tariffs on foreign car parts were set to cost their companies billions of dollars, they were rattled.ā
Or (yawn):
āEven though the total area burned was relatively small, 2025 was the most economically damaging wildfire year on record, according to a new analysis published Sunday.ā
Yes, those are the first lines of each of those pieces and that ordering tells you so much about how Donald Trump has indeed taken control of our world in 2026. And give The Donald credit. After all, his greatest skill (above all others) is his unbelievable ability — no matter what he has to say — to regularly get more attention than just about anything (or anyone else) on this planet of ours, including the possible end of this world as weāve known it.
And I suppose we need to give him credit in another sense, too. He has, in every imaginable fashion, proved capable of all too literally changing the climate of our all-American world. (And Iām already sweating as I write that!) Heās the man who has shut down wind-power projects along the East Coast, tossed solar power projects out the window, managed to open another 1.3 billion acres of ocean waters to oil and natural gas drilling, and considers climate change not just a distinctly fake news story, but a genuine āscam,ā and yet Americans elected him president a second time in 2024.
And consider this no less strange: Despite Donald Trump, as the Guardian reported recently, red states, unbelievably enough, seem to be heading the green energy build-out in this country, with Texas, for instance, āthe leading green energy superpower, especially in wind power where it leads the country,ā while green states seem — how truly strange! — to be cutting back on or āshrinking away from their climate plans.ā Yikes!
And in his own strange fashion (despite that ādespite Donald Trumpā in the previous paragraph), āourā president has, in fact, launched a kind of global green energy — well, if not revolution, then at least potential spurt. After all, by launching a war on Iran and ensuring the blocking of the Strait of Hormuz, through which about one-fifth of this planetās sea-borne oil and 20% of its natural gas passes (or rather once passed), heās also spurred countries globally, especially in Asia and Europe, to at least start thinking about revving up green energy production. Of course, Itās sad indeed to count on a war for good news on the energy front, but there we are. Sigh.
Now, donāt misunderstand me. Donald Trump is doing everything he can to promote the worst kind of energy on this planet. Only recently, for instance, heās been using the Cold-War era Defense Production Act to provide grants to, as the (wonderful) Guardian again reports, āmore than a dozen existing coal plants across the U.S., including facilities capable of exporting coal.ā As he put it recently, āAs a result of the $700m investment that Iām announcing today, we will protect 14 coal plants and 42 coalmines, a tremendous number, and build two new coal plants and one massive new export terminal.ā And he added charmingly, āYouāre not allowed to say ācoalā within the Trump administration unless itās preceded by the words āclean, beautifulā.ā
Now, admittedly, American coal production has nonetheless been falling for years.
And of course, if I were running a newspaper these days, I would indeed put the fate of the planet in the age of Donald Trump front and center. The top of page one, day in, day out. After all, nothing else truly matters if this planet of ours becomes ever more unlivable for us.
Letās face it, if we donāt read not The Times but our times correctly, weāre in trouble deep.

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