There are two narratives emerging, and that has been the case for awhile now, and these narratives will likely fight it out in the wake of Mueller's report, at the time of its release. Two dramatically different interpretations of what we are going through as a nation. Clearly these represent, or reflect, different interpretations of the world itself. They really cannot both be right, either. It is very alarming, I believe, because such diametrically opposed interpretations simply does not bode well for what lies ahead for us as a nation.
Now, in fairness, since people like myself have made no effort to hide anti-Trump sentiments, here is a piece from the far right, so far as I can tell, which adopts that narrative that I believe is concocted, and not based in reality, but the piece at least acknowledges the existence of these competing narratives. Now, I could say I think this perspective is nuts, and yeah, in the sense that I cannot understand why everyone does not simply see through Trump as easily as myself, it does seem "nuts", or divorced from reality. But, I also want to keep in mind this is a "war" of sorts between sides that fundamentally see the world differently. I have no choice but to keep that in mind, or I risk seeing the other side as lacking humanity somehow, and I cannot let that happen.
And I do not always practice what I am trying to say here, but I do in fact always have this belief in the back of my mind. I do not understand why everyone does not think like me, and sometimes lash out at those who don't, but nothing will ever be resolved as long as we do treat the other side as an enemy, rather then fellow Americans who see a different world then other Americans.
https://amgreatness.com/2019/02/21/the-greatest-constitutional-crisis-since-the-civil-war/
"For more than two years, the United States and the world have had two competing narratives: that an elected president of the United States was a Russian agent whom the Kremlin helped elect; and its rival narrative that senior officials of the Justice Department, FBI, CIA, and other national intelligence organizations had repeatedly lied under oath, misinformed federal officials, and meddled in partisan political matters illegally and unconstitutionally and had effectively tried to influence the outcome of a presidential election, and then undo its result by falsely propagating the first narrative. It is now obvious and indisputable that the second narrative is the correct one."