There's a fuzzy line in here somewhere.
Let's take, for example, a five-year-old who is angry and repeatedly says that he is going to kill his mom. If rational adults discount his threat, is it because we don't think the kid actually wants to kill his mom? Or is it because that child's wants are irrelevant to whether or not he could actually succeed in killing his mom?
Or, on the other hand, take the scenario of some of our fellow posters who have, in the past, expressed the desire and intention to do physical harm to people on the other side of their aisle (punch nazis, carve MAGA into people's foreheads, etc.). If we discount their claims, is it because we think that's a line they'd never actually cross, or is it because we believe that realistically, they will never be in a position to competently carry through those desires?
I guess that's where i fall with this. What Trump might want to do is irrelevant to me. I don't care how much he screams and yells. He cannot actually make it happen. It has nothing to do with whether or not he's willing to cross a line, it's whether or not he has the ability to do so. It's the same argument I had when people were all wound up about Trump being the president and starting a nuclear war by calling up the folks in charge of the missiles and ordering a launch. His desire to do so has no value - at the end of the day, regardless of what the technical authority seems to be, it's simply not going to happen. There are other checks and balances in place, and in order for him to actually overthrow US democracy and seize the reigns of power as a dictator (or launch nukes, for that matter) requires a LOT of other people to completely disregard their own duties and oaths to enable that. And the people who need to become outright traitors are exactly the people who are least likely to do so.