Tom
watched Trump’s recent speeches and just had to vent. No numbers.
Just venting.
Like many Americans, I watched Donald Trump speak on both Monday
and Tuesday nights, his speech announcing his Afghanistan strategy, and then his
“campaign rally” in Phoenix, Arizona.
And the pattern we have observed post-Charlottesville – and throughout
his presidency – returned. There are two
Trumps out there – let’s call them Trump One and Trump Two -- and they appear
in a weird rotation, repelling each other in an ongoing orbit, reacting to each
other, not quite polar opposites, since both inhabit Donald Trump’s body, but nevertheless they are completely at odds with each other – in temperament and in message.
Trump One – obviously the “real” Trump – released an odd
statement in the immediate aftermath of the Charlottesville tragedy, making
moral equivalents of the neo-Nazis and their protesters, saying, in part, “We condemn in the strongest possible terms
this egregious display of hatred, bigotry and violence, on many sides.” Trump Two countered with
a more measured statement on the following Monday: “Racism is evil. And those who cause violence in its name are
criminals and thugs, including the K.K.K., neo-Nazis, white supremacists and
other hate groups that are repugnant to everything we hold dear as Americans.”
Trump One countered with a
vengeance on Tuesday in a press conference ostensibly on infrastructure, going
on an extended, unscripted rant, defending his initial Charlottesville response,
while a dozen officials squirmed behind him; his new Chief of Staff John Kelly was
the very personification of mortification, his arms crossed, eyes affixed to
the floor. But Trump Two re-emerged on August
19, in response to protests in Boston: “Our
great country has been divided for decades. Sometimes you need protest in order
to heal, & we will heal, & be stronger than ever before!”
And in the latest duality, on
Monday night, Trump One gave a straightforward address on Afghanistan, in which
he declared, out of character, “"My
original instinct was to pull out -- and, historically, I like following my
instincts. But all my life I've heard that decisions are much different when
you sit behind the desk in the Oval Office." Like his predecessors, he chose to stay
in and pursue a conventional strategy, complete with added troops.
But Trump Two returned on
Tuesday night in Phoenix, giving a hate-filled diatribe against his enemies, parsing his
various Charlottesville statements so as to divine a consistency in them, and
altogether giving evidence that he had become completely unhinged. This, of course, was followed hours later by
Trump Two, dutifully cleaning up with a unifying speech in Reno.
It’s easy to tell Trump One
and Two apart. Trump One is
off-the-cuff, venomous, vitriolic, vituperative, vindictive, vengeful – and that’s
just the “v’s.” Trump Two, on the other
hand, is glued to the teleprompter, mechanically pivoting from one screen to
the other, stilted, lethargic, disengaged, sulky and sarcastic. He is every bit the combative child, tossing
off the insincere apology at the behest of his elders, itching to get on to the
next misadventure. There is no mistaking
the two Trumps. You can easily distinguish
them, even with the sound off.
I stayed up well past my
bedtime for the Arizona speech, and found myself spinning surreally between a sluggish
wakeful daze, a fitful nightmarish doze, and an ever-present nausea. I realized I had never watched a complete
Trump rally speech before. The effect
was stunning. The moment demanded, cried
for, soothing words of unification, but instead Trump unleashed a revolting
barrage of hate and divisiveness to all of his perceived enemies – protesters,
Democrats, elites, both Arizona Senators (the “unnamed” Flake and McCain) and, of
course, the hated media. Trump spent
incredible amounts of time defending his post-Charlottesville behavior and
attacking the media, and outright lying again and again. Unifier?
Jefferson Davis himself was a model of unification compared to this bilious
onslaught.
Remember the days when presidents
secured national attention with the Address-From-The-Oval-Office? The President, accompanied only by the spare,
somber dignity of that setting, stared right into the living rooms of America,
and gravely informed the nation of the business at hand – calm, resolute,
decisive. JFK on the Cuban Missile
Crisis. Bush 43 after 9/11. Reagan on the Challenger disaster. Carter on the crisis of confidence. No matter your party….did anyone doubt the gravity
of the issue? The magnitude of the
message? The utter sincerity of the president?
Is anyone really fooled by
all these Trumps? Of course not. Not those who support him, who love Trump
One. Not those who despise him, who see
right through Trump Two. Not even those
who are “open-minded” to him – they are the ones who have dismissed him during his presidency, those
on-the-fencers who have caused Trump’s approval rating to sink by eight points
since January.
How about Paul Ryan? Does he get it? I watched his Town Hall, which immediately
followed Trump’s Afghanistan speech.
Ryan expressed complete satisfaction with Trump Two in the aftermath of his
post-Boston statement, believing that performance more than offset Trump One’s
press conference performance and the initial statement. Is that how it works in Wisconsin, Paul? It’s OK to be an utter shit-heel on Monday,
Wednesday and Friday as long as you pretend to be a pious soul on Tuesday, Thursday
and Saturday? Is that what you teach the
children in your Sunday school class?
Integrity and leadership, children, can be measured neatly in a tidy balance
sheet -- just make sure your credits outweigh your debits, and your assets inch
ahead of your liabilities. Like that? Pretending to be a good person, occasionally,
is the appropriate counterweight to actually being a bad one?
Of course Ryan gets it. He is as cynical as anyone, carefully
calibrating just how far he can go in critiquing Trump so as not to jeopardize his
own seat, his own powerbase, his own aspirations. In many ways, the Ryan’s of this world
disgust me more than Trump. Ryan has the
ability to distinguish right from wrong, but lacks the fortitude to be
honest. I’m sure he abhors Trump, but he
will not pull the trigger. His pathetic
attempt to talk tough on Trump – calling Trump’s “messy” performance at the
press conference “morally ambiguous” –
was rightly called out by Jake Tapper – “it wasn’t morally ambiguous…it was morally wrong.” Ryan further claimed that censuring the
president would be turning Charlottesville into a partisan battle. Huh?????
That actually makes no sense.
Bob Corker was right to
question Trump’s fitness for office. Tim
Scott was right to say that Trump has lost his moral authority. Susan Collins and Lisa Murkowski were right
to vote down the insidious “repeal and replace” bill. John McCain was right to call out and vote
down an incredibly cynical legislative process.
Lindsay Graham names names. We
need more Republicans like them. In
fact, we may need exactly 19 of them at some point – 19 of them gutsy enough to
vote “Yes” on Articles of Impeachment, to reach the magic 67 required to
convict.
With apologies to Dr. Seuss:
Meuller cast down his net
It came down with a PLOP!
And he had them! At last!
Those two Trumps had to stop.
Then he said to the Senate,
Now you do as I say.
You pack up those Trumps
And you take them away!'
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