The anger is back, and this time it has a number.
A petition demanding Donald Trump’s impeachment is rocketing toward 100,000 signatures, fueled by accusations of greed, corruption, and shattered trust. Supporters call it a moral reckoning. Critics sneer that it’s empty theater. But as the count climbs, one question grows louder: what happens when symbolic rage becomes someth… Continues…
The petition’s rise exposes something deeper than a digital protest: a refusal to let Trump’s legacy quietly harden into political normalcy. For many signers, adding their name is less about legal outcomes and more about refusing to forget what they see as violations of democratic norms. Each signature becomes a small act of memory, a public record that not everyone has moved on.
Yet the backlash is just as fierce. Opponents insist the effort is partisan theater, proof that the country is trapped in an endless cycle of retribution. That clash is precisely why this petition matters. It shows how activism has shifted online, where numbers become headlines and outrage becomes leverage. Even without legal force, the campaign keeps the demand for accountability alive, reminding leaders that public judgment doesn’t end when a presidency does.