President Donald Trump has responded to speculation about his health in a post about truth in truth.
“Never felt better in my life,” the president wrote on Sunday night, linking back to a truth’s social post from another user who made debris comments about former President Joe Biden’s Health. The user added that “Media Freaks out if Trump disappears for 24 hours.”
Unfounded rumors swirled on social media this week about the president’s health. Conspiracy theorists pointed to the fact that Trump had not been seen in public since his cabinet meeting Wednesday and had a clear weekend plan.
Others also quoted Vice President JD Vancer’s interview Wednesday with USA Today, where he said he is ready to take on the presidency if a “terrible tragedy” arose. In the same interview, Vance also noted that Trump is in “incredibly good health.”
Questions about the president’s health were among the top Google searches at noon Saturday, while “where is Donald Trump” was tend to x, Forbes Reports. However, Trump was discovered again on Saturday on his way to his Virginia golf course.

In the same truth, Trump also declared Washington, DC, a “crime -free zone.” Trump deployed the National Guard to the country’s capital this month and claimed he did it in response to a “crime’s emergency.” Violent crime has fallen into DC since 2023.
Despite questions about his whereabouts, Trump has shared dozens of positions on truth social this weekend, including several statements that DC is now secure and a call to end mail-in vote. He also published a Bisarr broadcast of a Rose Garden worker in the White House to damage a piece of stone and common surveillance recordings of the incident.
Questions about Trump’s health mounted earlier this year as photos of his raised ankles and suggested hands circulated online.

The White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt revealed in July that Trump, 79, had been diagnosed with chronic venous insufficiency. The condition is pretty common in the elderly and occurs when veins in the legs struggle to bring blood to the heart.
Leavitt added that there were no evidence of deep vein thrombosis or arterial illness. A blood count test and echocardiogram also came back usually, she said.