I'll admit, I'm surprised how much he's doing and has been doing for the past month, I genuinely thought he and his cabinet were just going to repeat his last four years in office, but the fact that he and his administration are targeting both the political aspects, and more importantly, the long lasting social change is pretty surreal.
I initially thought the highlight of his second term would've been Robert F. Kennedy Jr; thinking he would have the most impact in the long term by ridding the foods we consume of unnecessary chemicals, dyes, high fructose corn syrup, among other unnecessary additives that only stagnate the health of the population without them knowing or realizing it, which is fucked up because we have a right to know exactly what they're putting into our food, and although we technically do if we read the label, what do these chemicals actually do to us and how do they "benefit" our bodies by putting them into our food, and into the food that our own children consume. How have their bodies been affected as a result of eating literal sludge and slop all their life?
But I'm really curious about the next three years of his presidency since he and his administration are trying to do as much as possible as early as they can, especially how well he'll do in the midterms. I'm hoping he isn't just trying get as much done early on just so he doesn't have to do anything later on, and that he'll keep the ball rolling even into his final days in office.
Hopefully doing even more than what he and the administration have done so far already, rather than an equal amount from beginning to end. I'm also hoping that the impact will have longevity and won't just be completely eroded and reversed by 2028 or 2032.
The progressives have had a grip on the United States social upheaval for nearly two decades, thirty if you want to include Bill Clinton and him turning the Oval Office into the Oral Office.