A stunned Washington froze as President Trump’s “angry week” dominated headlines in mid-December 2025, his prime-time address blaming Democrats for economic woes while unleashing social media fury on actor Rob Reiner and every White House predecessor.

The December 17 Oval Office speech—Trump’s first formal address since Epstein file disclosures—lashed out at “radical left” policies for inflation and border issues, vowing “America First revenge” in 2026. But the real storm brewed on Truth Social: Trump posted 47 times in 48 hours, calling Reiner “Meathead 2.0” over the actor’s Epstein-related critiques, labeling Biden “Sleepy Crook,” Obama “the real divider,” and Bush “weak on trade.”
Insiders described Trump as “volcanic,” raging at aides over file redactions and perceived media betrayal. Reiner fired back on X: “Calling me names won’t hide your Epstein photos, Donald.” The barrage—raw, unfiltered—trended #TrumpAngryWeek with 4.2 million posts (split 60/40 partisan).
Amid Epstein Files Transparency Act fallout (completed December 19, no bombshells), Trump’s fury amplified distrust: economic speech overshadowed by personal vendettas. As Giuffre’s Nobody’s Girl (October 21, 2025) lingered in discourse, the “angry week” exposed a presidency unbowed—fury over policy, silence on shadows.
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