May 5, 2020
Win McNamee / Getty
President
Trump’s pièce de résistance came during a late April coronavirus
task-force briefing, when he floated using “just very powerful light”
inside the body as a potential treatment for COVID-19 and then, for good
measure, contemplated injecting disinfectant as a way to combat the
effects of the virus “because you see it gets in the lungs and does a
tremendous number on them, so it’d be interesting to check that.”
“I
have no doubt, none at all, that this spirit of service and sacrifice is
alive and well in America,” Bush said. He emphasized that “empathy and
simple kindness are essential, powerful tools of national recovery.” And
America’s 43rd president asked us to “remember how small our
differences are in the face of this shared threat.”
“In the final
analysis,” he said, “we are not partisan combatants; we are human
beings, equally vulnerable and equally wonderful in the sight of God.”
Bush concluded, “We rise or fall together, and we are determined to
rise.”
That was too much for Trump, who attacked his Republican predecessor on (where else?) Twitter: “[Bush] was nowhere to be found in speaking up against the greatest Hoax in American history!”
So
think about that for a minute. George W. Bush made a moving, eloquent
plea for empathy and national unity, which enraged Donald Trump enough
that he felt the need to go on the attack.
But there’s more. On the same weekend that he attacked Bush for making an appeal to national unity, Trump said this about Kim Jong Un, one of the most brutal leaders in the world: “I, for one, am glad to see he is back, and well!”
Then, Sunday night, sitting at the foot of the Lincoln Memorial for a town-hall interview with Fox News, Trump complained
that he is “treated worse” than President Abraham Lincoln. “I am
greeted with a hostile press, the likes of which no president has ever
seen,” Trump said.
By Monday morning, the president was peddling a cruel and bizarre conspiracy theory
aimed at MSNBC’s Joe Scarborough, a Trump critic, with Trump suggesting
in his tweet that a “cold case” be opened to look into the death of an
intern in 2001.
I
could have picked a dozen other examples over the past 10 days, but
these five will suffice. They illustrate some of the essential traits of
Donald Trump: the shocking ignorance, ineptitude, and misinformation;
his constant need to divide Americans and attack those who are trying to
promote social solidarity; his narcissism, deep insecurity, utter lack
of empathy, and desperate need to be loved; his feelings of
victimization and grievance; his affinity for ruthless leaders; and his
fondness for conspiracy theories.
None of these traits are new in Trump; they are part of the reason why some of us were warning about him long before he won the presidency, even going back to 2011.
But, more and more, those traits are defining his presidency, producing
a kind of creeping paralysis. We are witnessing the steady,
uninterrupted intellectual and psychological decomposition of an
American president. It’s something the Trump White House cannot
hide—indeed, it doesn’t even try to hide it anymore. There is not even
the slightest hint of normalcy.
THIS WILL HAVE ongoing
ramifications for the remainder of Trump’s first term and for his
reelection strategy. More than ever, Trump will try to convince
Americans that “what you’re seeing and what you’re reading is not what’s
happening,” to quote his own words in 2018.
That
won’t be easy in a pandemic, as the death toll mounts and the economy
collapses and the failures of the president multiply. But that doesn’t
mean Trump won’t try. It’s all he has left, so Americans have to prepare
for it.
Trump and his apparatchiks will not only step up their
propaganda; they will increase their efforts to exhaust our critical
thinking and to annihilate truth, in the words
of the Russian dissident Garry Kasparov. We will see even more
“alternative facts.” We will see even more brazen attempts to rewrite
history. We will hear even more crazy conspiracy theories. We will
witness even more lashing out at reporters, more rage, and more lies.
“The
real opposition is the media,” Steve Bannon, the president’s former
chief strategist, once told the journalist Michael Lewis. “And the way
to deal with them is to flood the zone with shit.”
We
will see more extreme appeals to the fringe base of Trump’s party,
including right-wing militias. For example, after hundreds of
protesters, many of them carrying guns,
descended on the capitol in Lansing, Michigan, to protest Governor
Gretchen Whitmer’s stay-at-home order, Trump, summoning the ghosts of
Charlottesville, described the protesters as “very good people.” Some of these “very good people” carried signs saying Tyrants Get the Rope and Tyrant Bitch and comparing the governor to Hitler.
We will see a more prominent role played by One America News, a pro-Trump network that the president has praised dozens of times. And we will see the right-wing media complex go to even more bizarre places—not just people such as InfoWar’s Alex Jones, who literally threatened to eat his own neighbors if the lockdown continued, but more mainstream figures such as Salem Radio Network’s Dennis Prager, who declared the other day that the lockdown was “the greatest mistake in the history of humanity.”
Watching
formerly serious individuals on the right, including the Christian
right, become Trump courtiers has been a painful and dispiriting thing
for many of us to witness. In the process, they have reconfigured their
own character, intellect, and moral sensibilities to align with the
disordered mind and deformed ethical world of Donald Trump.
And we
will see, as we have for the entire Trump presidency, the national
Republican Party fall in line. Many are speaking out in defense of Trump
while other timid souls who know better have gone sotto voce out of
fear and cowardice that they have justified to themselves, and tried
less successfully to justify to others.
What
this means is that Americans are facing not just a conventional
presidential election in 2020 but also, and most important, a referendum
on reality and epistemology. Donald Trump is asking us to enter even
further into his house of mirrors. He is asking us to live within a lie,
to live within his lie, for four more years. The duty of citizenship in America today is to refuse to live within that lie.
“The
simple step of a simple courageous man is not to partake in falsehood,
not to support false actions,” Alexandr Solzhenitsyn said in his
mesmerizing 1970 Nobel lecture. “Let that enter the world, let it even reign in the world—but not with my help.”
Solzhenitsyn went on to say that writers and artists can achieve more; they can conquer falsehoods. “Falsehood can hold out against much in this world, but not against art,” he said.
Solzhenitsyn went on to say that writers and artists can achieve more; they can conquer falsehoods. “Falsehood can hold out against much in this world, but not against art,” he said.
But art, as powerful as
it is, is not the only instrument with which to fight falsehoods. There
are also the daily acts of integrity of common men and women who will
not believe the lies or spread the lies, who will not allow the
foundation of truth—factual truth, moral truth—to be destroyed, and who,
in standing for truth, will help heal this broken land.
Comments
The article is the absolute truth and you know the Trumpeters wouldn't know the truth even if it smacked them in the face!
I thank you for posting it for the rest of us!
Christer.
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