川普控告《华尔街日报 》

Trump Sues The Wall Street Journal
On the East Coast of America, where summer heat clings to the air like a second skin, the news broke like sudden thunder. Trump—once again—strikes back. This time, his fury is aimed squarely at a familiar adversary: The Wall Street Journal. Reports say he is preparing to sue the paper over a controversial article involving a so-called “birthday letter” to Jeffrey Epstein, reigniting a storm of scrutiny and suspicion.
Yet beyond the headlines and legal filings, I see something deeper: not just a man fighting for his image, but a country wrestling with its own fractured truths. When a former president sues the press, and when journalism becomes evidence in a court of law, democracy itself seems to wobble at the eye of the storm.
This is not only Trump’s trial—it is America’s quiet cross-examination of its soul. In an era where information overwhelms and trust dissolves, the lines between defamation and revelation blur into a gray fog.
As the summer wind stirs the curtains and the news anchor’s voice repeats the day’s drama, I sit by the window and wonder:
In the heart of this storm, who is truly on trial?