Buckle up, folks. It's time to dismantle the loosely woven narrative of Trump as a lone villain in Jerome Powell's investigation. This is not a comic book with clear-cut heroes and villains. This is the twisted world of politics and economics, where hypocrisy is the norm, and smoke and mirrors are used as deceptive tools of the trade.

Let's start with Jerome Powell. He's the Federal Reserve's Chairman who has been on a mission to investigate the economic mishaps of the Trump administration. And my, what a convenient investigation it is. It’s almost as if he's trying to divert attention from his own questionable decisions. But we're supposed to believe that all our economic woes boil down to one orange man in the White House?

And then we have the PhD types, the so-called economic intelligentsia, who are tripping over themselves to join the anti-Trump chorus. They desperately want to believe that they are superior to Trump, that they understand the intricacies of the economy better than he does. But as they point their fingers at Trump, they unwittingly expose their own myopia.

These academics are operating within their echo chambers, where they confuse correlation with causation and ignore inconvenient data that doesn't support their biases. They’ve essentially made Trump the scapegoat for their own inability to predict or control the economy. Here’s a hard truth: Economists are more wrong than they are right. They can’t predict recessions, they can’t predict stock market trends, and they sure as hell can’t predict the impact of a global pandemic.

Trump may not be the hero we want, but he’s not the villain Powell and his academic cronies are painting him to be. Trump's economic policies, like the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017, have been a breath of fresh air in an otherwise stagnant economic climate. Under Trump's watch, pre-pandemic unemployment rates hit a 50-year low. His push for deregulation and lower taxes gave businesses a fighting chance, unlike the strangleholds previous administrations placed on them.

Remember, the Fed was predicted to crash the economy under Trump. Yet, here we are, with the economy outperforming pre-Trump levels. It's almost as if these PhD types got it wrong...again.

So, why is Trump the only villain in Powell's investigation? Because it's convenient. Because it shifts the blame away from those who've been mismanaging the economy for years. Because it creates an easy narrative for the masses to swallow. The reality, however, is far more complex and uncomfortable.

The truth is, there's plenty of blame to go around. Powell, the Federal Reserve, the economic intelligentsia - they're all part of the problem. They're playing a game of hot potato with economic responsibility, and Trump just happens to be the one left holding the bag.

So prepare for the onslaught of "Trump ruined the economy" narratives. Just remember to question who's pushing them and why. Because the reality is, it’s a scapegoat circus, and the ringmaster isn't necessarily the one at the center. The real villains are often lurking in the shadows, pointing fingers, and smiling as they evade their fair share of the blame.