From Tirana to Trump, passion for Típex, for Plàcid Garcia-Plains

From Tirana to Trump, passion for Típex, for Plàcid Garcia-Plains

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Trump’s Fascination with Dictatorial Erasure: A Deep Dive into Típex Culture

Donald Trump, a man who openly admires tyrants like Kim Jong Un, seems to have developed a peculiar fondness for a little thing known as Típex—the tool used to erase the truth. It appears he and his Albanian counterpart, Inver Hoxha, both belong to the Típex Fans Club, erasing inconvenient facts and histories with a flourish of white-out.

A Disturbing Aesthetic: Ghosts of a Dystopian Albania

The imagery that emerges from Roger Mateos’ photographic exploration of Albania’s communist past is nothing short of chilling. Like scenes from a B horror movie, these images depict a land where reality was systematically erased by regimes using metaphorical Típex, just as our own leaders attempt today.

“In the Twilight Zone of Washington, the need to erase others from existence is hauntingly reminiscent of Hoxha’s Albania,”

The Erasure of Reality Under Trump

In Trump’s world, the Típex isn’t just for corrections; it’s for rewriting the very fabric of reality itself. He replaces the images of those before him—like Obama—with his own narrative, while decrying critics who dare question his motives, demanding they be silenced!

The Left’s Hypocrisy: Their Own Use of Típex

And let’s not pretend the Democrats aren’t guilty of the same sins—erasing names, statues, and all evidence of history that doesn’t fit their agenda. No president, Republican or Democrat, has openly toyed with the idea of dictatorship as Trump has, saying, “many people say they may want a dictator.”

The Republican Party: A Cautionary Tale

  • Republican senators and congressmen show both fear and joy as their identities dissolve amid Trump’s influence.
  • A massive portrait declaring “American Workers First” now looms over the Labor Department, signaling a new era.
  • Yet, the chilling specter of erasure creeps ever closer, like those Albanian ghosts from Mateos’ book.

As we gaze into this morbid abyss, we must remember: Típex is the dictator’s saliva.

The Final Word: A Reckoning with Reality

As the famed writer Solzhenitsyn once noted: “We know they lie. They know they lie. And still, they keep lying.” The sobering truth is that in this landscape of Típex pragmatism, we must resist the delightful grimness and fight for an unfiltered reality.

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