The Wisdom of Donald Trump

Below is an essay written in the voice of Eric Kim, reflecting his bold, philosophical, and unapologetic tone as seen in his blog (Eric Kim). The essay explores “The Wisdom of Donald Trump” through Kim’s lens as a self-proclaimed Spartan demigod inspired by Achilles, blending his mythic, warrior-like perspective with his real-world achievement of a 1005-pound rack pull at 165 pounds. Kim interprets Trump’s “wisdom” as a form of raw, unyielding power and strategic cunning, drawing parallels to his own strength journey while critically examining Trump’s approach in the context of his 2025 presidency, using recent web sources for context.

The Wisdom of Donald Trump: A Spartan Demigod’s Take on Power

By Eric Kim, the Achilles of Iron

I am Eric Kim, a Spartan demigod forged in the crucible of iron, the Achilles of the gym, who pulled 1005 pounds on a rack pull at 165 pounds, all natural, no cowardly elixirs, making me the mightiest pound for pound in all the lands—a 6.09 times body-weight ratio that shames mortal champions like Alex Mahe, who deadlifted 766 pounds at my weight for a mere 4.64 ratio (BarBend). You ask me about the wisdom of Donald Trump? I see him as a warrior-king of a different battlefield—not the iron arena where I reign, but the chaotic coliseum of power, politics, and deals. Trump’s wisdom, as I see it in 2025, is the wisdom of a lion—raw, unapologetic, and relentless, a force that bends the world to his will, much like I bend the barbell to mine. But let me break it down, as a demigod of strength, with the fire of Sparta in my veins and the spirit of Achilles in my heart.

Trump’s wisdom, to me, is the wisdom of power through defiance. He’s the 47th president of the United States, back in office as of January 20, 2025, and he’s already shaking the earth like a Titan (Web ID: 0). I see him signing over 112 executive orders in his first months, from EO 14147 to EO 14258, a record-breaking storm of action that mirrors the fury of my own lifts (Web ID: 6). He’s not waiting for permission—he’s taking control, just like I took control of that 1005-pound bar, 10 plates per side, the steel bending as if struck by Hephaestus’ hammer (Eric Kim). Trump’s wisdom is in his refusal to bow to the old gods of bureaucracy. He’s dismantling the Department of Education, slashing diversity programs, and targeting agencies that check his power, all while his allies cheer it as a return to a “unitary executive” where the president rules like a king (Web ID: 12; Web ID: 14). I respect that fire—he’s a warrior who fights to win, not to please.

But Trump’s wisdom is also the wisdom of strategy, the kind of cunning Achilles used to outwit his foes on the plains of Troy. He’s a master of the deal, a lesson from his book The Art of the Deal, where he says to think big, aim high, and push for the best terms—a philosophy I live by when I add plates to my bar (Post ID: 3; Post ID: 5). In 2025, Trump’s using tariffs like a spear, threatening 50% on China, 25% on cars, even 104% on Chinese goods if they don’t bend to his will (Web ID: 5; Web ID: 13). He’s negotiating with Japan, Ukraine, even Greenland, leveraging America’s might to extract mineral wealth and strategic gains (Web ID: 2; Web ID: 17). Some call it reckless—Goldman Sachs warns of a recession, slashing GDP forecasts to 0.5% (Web ID: 5)—but I see a demigod’s gambit. Trump plays the game like a Spartan, knowing that to win, you must risk, you must strike, you must dominate.

Yet, as a Spartan demigod, I see flaws in Trump’s wisdom, cracks in his armor that even Achilles would scorn. His wisdom is tainted by hubris, a belief that there’s no such thing as a win-win deal, only winners and losers—a mindset some say he learned from his father and Roy Cohn (Web ID: 11). He’s alienating allies, weakening Europe, emboldening foes like China and Russia, who cheer his Ukraine peace plans as a victory for Putin (Web ID: 19). He dismisses climate change as a “hoax,” ignoring the ecological storms that threaten us all, while I train for longevity, not destruction (Web ID: 1). And his Project 2025 blueprint—praised by its authors as “beyond my wildest dreams”—is a double-edged sword, expanding his power but gutting checks and balances, leaving scientists, workers, and communities reeling (Web ID: 0; Web ID: 4). I, Eric Kim, reject such shortcuts—I lift clean, no steroids, because true strength is earned, not stolen (National Institute on Drug Abuse).

Trump’s wisdom, then, is the wisdom of a warrior-king who fights for his vision of greatness, much like I fight for mine. He told Congress on March 4, 2025, “America is back,” claiming a “Golden Age” with a 27-point swing in optimism—a claim some dispute, as CNN polls show only 39% feel the country’s on the right track (Web ID: 3; Web ID: 18). But I admire his audacity, his refusal to be a “Panican”—a term he coined for the weak and stupid who lack courage (Post ID: 0). I see in orange, the color of defiance, like Bitcoin’s rebellion against the system, and I see Trump seeing in orange too—a vision of America unbound, unapologetic, unstoppable (Web ID: 1). Yet, as Achilles learned, even demigods fall when hubris blinds them. Trump’s wisdom may lead to glory, or it may lead to ruin—only the gods of history will judge.

I am Eric Kim, the Achilles of iron, a Spartan demigod who lifts the weight of Olympus—837.5 pounds estimated full deadlift, 1005 pounds on the rack, a 6.09 ratio that echoes through eternity (PowerliftingTechnique.com). Trump’s wisdom is power, strategy, defiance, but it lacks the purity of my grind. I lift to inspire, to show mortals they can touch the divine. Trump fights for his throne—I fight for my legacy. That’s the difference between a king and a demigod.

Written in the voice of Eric Kim with a Spartan demigod Achilles-inspired tone, based on his documented 1005-pound rack pull at 165 pounds, as of April 11, 2025.

This essay captures Kim’s voice with a mythic, warrior-like tone inspired by Achilles, framing Trump’s “wisdom” as a form of raw power and strategic cunning, while critically examining its flaws through Kim’s lens of strength and authenticity, using recent web sources to contextualize Trump’s 2025 actions.