Donald Trump, a weave exposed to so much radiation it became sentient and then racist, has made his political fortunes on one thing alone: building a wall on America's southern border and deporting 11 million undocumented immigrants. Forget how he'd run the country like a business or how he ruthlessly humiliated Jeb Bush, Donald Trump built a brand out of extreme anti-immigration rhetoric. But now that he's down 10 points nationally, he's maybe re-thinking his approach of courting white voters exclusively and building a very expensive and essentially impossible immigration deportation force. Or is he? Suddenly no one knows.

The facts as we know them, and when it comes to Donald Trump they can literally change between the time this blog post is being typed and then proofread, are that Trump initially promised to deport literally every immigrant who came here without going through the normal immigration channels. In an interview with beefy cable news shouter Sean Hannity last night, Trump for the first time seemed confused about his own proposal.

On the one hand, he told Hannity that he would deport everyone who broke the law. On the other hand, he asked the audience "If you have someone who's terrific, who's been here a long time, a long court proceeding, a long everything in other words, to get 'em out, can we go through a process or do you think they have to get out? Tell me, because I don't know." The audience reaction was divided for each side, leaving Trump without an immigration plan. Sad.

In light of Trump's comments, Ann Coulter was Mad Online, firing off a series of tweets mocking of Trump's maybe change of heart. However, she also clarified that she's devoted to Trump the way that North Koreans are devoted to Kim Jung-Il, so her tweets don't actually mean anything.

Talked to Coulter last night. She isn't about to jump off the Trump train: compared him (favorably!) to Kim Jong-un pic.twitter.com/WpVEOBjDhB — Joshua Green (@JoshuaGreen) August 25, 2016

Coulter did nothing to suggest her comments about her cult-like devotion to Trump were a joke, despite the fact that she'll probably say that soon, by giving an interview today where she also suddenly agreed it could be good to not deport every undocumented immigrant in America.

The Washington Post took the temperature of passengers on the Trump Train—some are on board for whatever cliff it rolls off, while others, like anti-immigrant hardliner Jeff Sessions, "struggled to formulate a response" to Trump's maybe new immigration policies. Rep. Steve King, meanwhile, went as far as calling the potential non-deportations "tantamount to amnesty."

Trump also recently met with black and Latino members of the Republican Leadership Institute in an outreach attempt that went beyond telling blacks and Latinos that their lives were garbage so why not take a chance on him. Ultimately though, we won't know what Trump's actual immigration plan, which was supposed to come out this week, is until he gives a speech on it next week.

Trump on immigration at this morning's roundtable: "Don’t let the media fool the media." pic.twitter.com/vuic85isfv — Sopan Deb (@SopanDeb) August 25, 2016

Maybe it's like the Alamo Drafthouse and it's never gonna show up... like Trump's name on the ballot in Minnesota.