BREAKING🚨 Judge just slapped Trump’s hand off the delete button — his texts have to be saved. On Wednesday, a federal judge in D.C. ordered the Trump White House to preserve ALL presidential records — including text messages between senior officials — while a lawsuit over his secretive record‑keeping moves forward. For months, Trump’s team has been acting like screenshots, Signal threads, and frantic staff texts about wars, protests, and January 6‑style security fears belong to him personally, not to the American people. The Justice Department even issued a memo saying the Presidential Records Act was basically optional, and that Trump’s texts could be treated like private notes he was free to delete. Judge John Bates wasn’t having it. His ruling temporarily blocks that memo and tells the White House, in plain English: you are still bound by the Presidential Records Act. You don’t get to unilaterally rewrite the law because it’s inconvenient. Every text about official business — from Iran strike planning, to the anti‑weaponization slush fund, to internal debates over the January 6 rioters and the “lawfare” narrative — has to be preserved while the case plays out. This is bigger than one court fight. Trump’s people have already been caught using auto‑deleting apps like Signal to discuss military operations and sensitive political schemes. Watchdog groups say key messages about airstrikes, domestic deployments, and legal strategies may already be gone. Now the White House was trying to go a step further: to formally bless the idea that anything on their phones is personal, and that the public has no right to a paper trail of how life‑and‑death decisions are made. If they got away with that, future investigators, historians, and even Congress would be staring at a black hole where the record of this presidency should be. No texts about who ordered what. No contemporaneous notes about what Trump was told and when. No receipts when officials lie later. The judge’s order doesn’t fix what’s already been deleted. But it does something crucial: it draws a line. It says a president who’s already been impeached twice, indicted multiple times, and now sits on top of a $1.8 billion slush fund does NOT get to quietly erase the evidence of what he’s doing with power. That only matters if we keep watching. If you appreciate my posts, it would mean the world if you followed my page. Thank you for being here.