
The man currently residing in the White House announced this week that the U.S. used a secret weapon when we attacked Venezuela. He called it the “discombulator.” He said he wasn’t allowed to talk about it — which meant, of course, that he immediately kept talking about it.
(Remember, this is a guy who liked storing top-secret documents in public restrooms.)
He claimed this mystery weapon meant we could press a few buttons and Venezuelan air defenses would simply fail, leaving Maduro exposed to capture by U.S. forces.
To quote Jake Peralta: Cool, cool, cool.
The fact that this weapon does not exist — and sounds like something you’d buy at ACME for use against the Road Runner— isn’t surprising, given Donald Trump’s long, complicated, and frankly fictional relationship with the truth and mental health. Nor should it surprise anyone that he reveals state secrets the way middle-school boys brag about imaginary conquests.
But what actually threw me was his use of the word discombobulate.
First: it’s five syllables. Considering Delta Tango’s declining mental acuity and worsening speech tics, that alone feels like a minor miracle. I hope Stephen Miller gave him a Scooby Snack for his efforts.
Second: he used it correctly — which is frankly unsettling.
Because discombobulate was one of my father’s favorite words.
For reference, it’s a playful, invented American word from the 19th century meaning to confuse, bewilder, or disorient — born in an era when writers loved fake-Latin silliness. Skedaddle came from the same linguistic fever dream. As in: we wish Donald Trump would skedaddle from our existence.
But I digress.
Hearing him say it felt like someone borrowing a family heirloom and using it to open a beer.
No. You don’t get to use that word.
Discombobulate is how I feel this week
Think about it. He’s been throwing things at us hard and fast:
ICE everywhere.
Arrests without warrants.
Broader sweeps.
Shootings in Arizona.
Deaths in detention camps.
Command shake-ups in Minneapolis.
Warrantless home entries.
Journalists arrested for doing journalism.
Trump suing the U.S. Treasury for $10 billion.
How does that even work? When the chief executive sues the government he runs, who exactly defends the case — him? Also him?
Considering how quickly he fires anyone who disagrees with him, it feels less like governance and more like a very expensive grift.
Then there’s the executive order to hold an IndyCar race through Washington, D.C., to celebrate the nation’s 250th birthday.
Because nothing says patriotism like gridlock and concussions.
Cuba is apparently a “national emergency.” More tariffs. Higher prices.
And — in a special bit of irony — an executive order about drug addiction after pardoning dozens of convicted dealers.
Raids on election offices.
Historical markers removed because they mention slavery.
Redacted Epstein files theatrically dumped like a bad magician’s trick.
I could keep going.
But honestly, I’m out of breath just listing it.
Then, when my brain finally cleared, a thought popped up like a prairie dog:
Donald Trump isn’t discombobulated.
He’s the discombobulator.
Sure, he personally seems confused — claiming Biden appointed Jerome Powell, confusing Greenland and Iceland, insisting he’s not a dictator while explaining why sometimes you “need” one.
But that’s not the point.
The point is this:
The chaos is the strategy.
Flood the zone.
Overwhelm the senses.
Create so many outrages that nothing sticks.
Confuse. Bewilder. Disorient.
The “secret weapon” isn’t a machine.
It’s him.
He’s the discombobulator.
So the real question becomes: how do we keep from frying our brains?
How do we recombobulate?
Here’s what I’m trying.
You cannot metabolize forty outrages a day. Stop doom-scrolling. Limit the cable-news churn. Read more. Watch less. To paraphrase Robert Heinlein, most neuroses come from wallowing daily in the troubles of eight billion strangers.
Slow your roll. Discombobulation works because everything feels urgent. But most political fights are marathons, not sprints. Ask: Will this matter next week? Next month? If not, let it go.
Pick one thing and go deep. Press freedom. Elections. Immigration. Local organizing. Whatever hits home. Focus beats frenzy. Movements win through sustained pressure, not scattered outrage.
Because this year promises to be a banner year for chaos: the entire House, 35 Senate seats, and 39 governors’ races.
(Assuming we’re still allowed elections.)
So breathe.
Step back.
Recombobulate.







