The Westside Gazette

A Ball of Confusion: When Power Plays God

Bobby Henry

A MESSAGE FROM  THE PUBLISHER

By Bobby R. Henry Sr.

More than fifty years ago, The Temptations gave us a warning wrapped in rhythm with Ball of Confusion (That’s What the World Is Today). It was a song about chaos, contradiction, and a world that felt like it was spinning out of control.

Today, that song isn’t nostalgia—it’s a diagnosis.

Same Song, Louder Noise

Inflation is rising. Oil prices shift with every global tremor. Families are making harder choices at the grocery store than ever before.

Violence has become so routine that headlines blur together—another shooting, another life gone too soon.

And beneath the surface, a quieter crisis grows louder: depression, despair, and a troubling rise in suicides.

The Temptations said it plainly then—and it echoes even louder now:

“That’s what the world is today.”

Power, Politics, and the Illusion of Control is truly weighing heavy over this country like a dark ominous cloud.

We are living in a time where leadership is often measured not by humility, but by dominance—by who can command the loudest room, the biggest crowd, the strongest reaction.

Figures like Donald Trump continue to shape the national conversation, influencing how truth is defined and how power is exercised.

But what becomes dangerous—deeply dangerous is when leadership crosses from confidence into something else… something closer to self-deification.

There is a growing concern in this country when a president for that matter any president begins to present himself not just as a leader of the people, but as if he stands above accountability… above criticism… even above truth itself.

When rhetoric, behavior, or posture begins to resemble that of someone who believes they are the ultimate authority, untouchable, unquestionable it sends a chilling message: That power no longer answers to the people…but expects the people to answer to it.

When Man Tries to Play God

No elected official is divine.

And history has shown us over and over again that when leaders begin to elevate themselves beyond human limits, the consequences are real: Truth becomes whatever they say it is; Justice becomes selective and loyalty is demanded, not earned

The shadow of figures like Jeffrey Epstein reminds us what happens when power protects itself instead of the people. When influence overrides accountability, the system fractures.

And when leadership begins to take on a god-like posture, democracy itself is at risk.

War Outside, War Within

The Temptations sang about war overseas.

Today, we see global conflicts affecting everything from oil prices to international stability. But the deeper war is internal. We have communities battling gun violence, families battling economic pressure and individuals battling silent mental health struggles.

And all of it compounded by a leadership climate that often fuels division instead of healing it.

The Cost of Confusion is astronomical 

Confusion is not harmless it is costly.

It disconnects people from truth.

It discourages civic engagement.

It erodes trust in institutions that are supposed to serve us.

And in that confusion, the line between right and wrong begins to fade.

A Call for Clarity—and Humility

What made “Ball of Confusion” timeless is that it didn’t just describe chaos it demanded awareness.

And awareness today must come with something else: Accountability. Humility. Truth.

Leadership is not about being worshipped.

It is about being responsible.

No president, no politician, no person—

is bigger than the people they serve.

When Man Tries to Play God

No elected official is divine.

And history has shown us over and over again that when leaders begin to elevate themselves beyond human limits, the consequences are real: Truth becomes whatever they say it is; Justice becomes selective; Loyalty is demanded, not earned

The shadow of figures like Jeffrey Epstein reminds us what happens when power protects itself instead of the people. When influence overrides accountability, the system fractures.

And when leadership begins to take on a god-like posture, democracy itself is at risk.

Final Word

The world may still feel like a ball of confusion.

But we must not lose sight of one simple truth:

We the people were never meant to follow a king…and certainly not a god.

We were meant to hold power accountable.

And now, more than ever that responsibility belongs to all of us.

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