Is the President's reference to the 2nd Amendment really what I think it is? It's being interpreted as suggesting armed rebellion, but has Trump said anything about what he might have meant instead?
As for the rest of it, it looks like he's encouraging the citizens of states whose governors he doesn't like to rebel against the orders of those governors. It's one thing to urge political opposition to elected leaders via the social and political mechanisms, and another thing altogether -- sedition -- to incite disobedience. And I supposed this has arisen because someone Trump trusts has convinced him he really doesn't have the authority as President to overrule them. And it does no good to speculate about what laws the President may have broken or what consequences there can be for his actions, because the parts of the government that the GOP controls (save one Senator) have shown no intention of opposing him in the ways the U.S. Constitution provides for, if only to save themselves from embarrassment.
That's what baffles me. Donald Trump's incompetence and instability have been on display long before Day One. It should hardly surprise us anymore. But not every Republican is as bat-crap crazy or as nefarious as Trump. I keep asking myself at what point the rest of the party will say "Enough is enough." I'm more than surprised to discover that this point hasn't yet been reached. If not now, then at what point? Peter B's post is spot-on. America -- specifically, elected American officials, the wealthy, and the powerful -- seem to believe that any and all outrageous behavior on their part is sustainable because the institutions of the nation will somehow kick in and prevent any actual disaster, or at least insulate them from its effect. They seem to consider it an infinitely exploitable system. These institutions have an effect only insofar as the people they affect respect and uphold them. Instead, people today are behaving as if there is some ineffable something about America that will magically prevent it from becoming no different than a banana republic and having all the problems that entails.