As I watched Donald Trump take the oath of office as the 47th president of the United States, something many Americans thought would never happen, I felt an overwhelming sense of amazement and gratitude.
I was amazed because Trump's return to the White House was American history's most astonishing political comeback. I was grateful because Trump promised to reverse the dangerous, costly policies and gross abuses of power we have endured for the last four years.
Four years ago, many Americans felt relief when Joe Biden became the president because they believed he offered them a calmer and more secure country in contrast to what they saw as the political and social chaos that dominated much of Trump's first administration.
Some of us, however, believed that Biden's presidency would be detrimental to our country because of the Democratic party's shift to the left. This movement was on full display during much of Trump's first term and especially during the summer of 2020 when there were riots throughout our country because of George Floyd's death.
Although Biden campaigned as a moderate and a unifier, many of us had seen enough of his party and its deep hatred of Trump and his supporters to know they had no intention of being either moderate or unifying.
They had a radical agenda and found a man so desperate to be the president that he would support any policy, no matter how extreme, in exchange for the White House. Biden was far more interested in obtaining power than doing what was best for the American people.
And so began four years of the very same political and social chaos many Americans hoped to escape by voting Trump out and replacing him with Biden. Unfortunately, they would soon learn what Biden and the Democratic party had in store for them.
On his first day as president, Biden signed several executive orders that immediately set the tone for the next four years for Americans. He froze student loan payments and revoked the Keystone pipeline permit, costing thousands of Americans high-paying jobs.
He issued stricter emissions and fuel economy standards for vehicles. He stopped the construction of the U.S.-Mexico border wall. He issued an order that stopped discrimination based on sexual orientation or gender identity in violation of Title IX; a law passed in 1972 that led to the creation of women's sports.
In a single day, Biden released students from repaying money they owed to taxpayers, dealt the fossil fuel industry a serious blow, opened our border and invited the whole world in without any vetting or likelihood of deportation, and enabled biological males to compete against biological females in sporting events.
By contrast, on the first day of his second term, Trump issued entirely different executive orders. He issued an order ending federal censorship and established the Department of Government Efficiency to track fiscal abuse and reduce government size.
He ended a diversity, equity, and inclusion policy, commonly known as DEI, and returned the merit system to the hiring process in government. He ordered all federal employees to return to work in their offices instead of working remotely.
Trump declared a national energy emergency to permit the fossil fuel industry to refine more oil and gas. He secured the borders by telling border agents to deport migrants without granting asylum claims, and he designated cartels as foreign terrorist organizations.
And last but not least, he signed an order stating that the federal government recognizes only two genders—male and female.
The differences between these presidents cannot be more obvious. For the last four years, we endured an administration determined to impose its radical agenda on us, no matter what the consequences. Biden did not care a bout our safety or our financial hardships. He only cared about his power as president.
Unlike Biden, Trump's only concern is for the welfare of the American people. He ran for the second time, hoping to reverse the course our country has been on for the past four years, and he will work tirelessly to achieve that. Trump refers to his second term as the beginning of a "Golden Age," in which we will accomplish extraordinary things.
With Trump at the helm, I would say that such an age is possible.
Editor's Note: The views expressed in this article are those of Mary Zahran and do not reflect the views of all of the staff at Up & Coming Weekly.
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