April 02,
2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- "
LA Times"
-
It
was no secret during the campaign that Donald
Trump was a narcissist and a demagogue who used
fear and dishonesty to appeal to the worst in
American voters. The Times called him
unprepared and unsuited
for the job he was seeking, and said his
election would be a “catastrophe.”
Still,
nothing prepared us for the magnitude of this
train wreck. Like millions of other Americans,
we clung to a slim hope that the new president
would turn out to be all noise and bluster, or
that the people around him in the White House
would act as a check on his worst instincts, or
that he would be sobered and transformed by the
awesome responsibilities of office.
Instead, seventy-some days in — and with about
1,400 to go before his term is completed — it is
increasingly clear that those hopes were
misplaced.
In a
matter of weeks, President Trump has taken
dozens of real-life steps that, if they are not
reversed, will rip families apart, foul rivers
and pollute the air, intensify the calamitous
effects of climate change and profoundly weaken
the system of American public education for all.
His
attempt to de-insure millions of people who had
finally received healthcare coverage and, along
the way, enact a massive transfer of wealth from
the poor to the rich has been put on hold for
the moment. But he is proceeding with his
efforts to defang the government’s regulatory
agencies and bloat the Pentagon’s budget even as
he supposedly retreats from the global stage.
These
are immensely dangerous developments which
threaten to weaken this country’s moral standing
in the world, imperil the planet and reverse
years of slow but steady gains by marginalized
or impoverished Americans. But, chilling as they
are, these radically wrongheaded policy choices
are not, in fact, the most frightening aspect of
the Trump presidency.
What is
most worrisome about Trump is Trump himself. He
is a man so unpredictable, so reckless, so
petulant, so full of blind self-regard, so
untethered to reality that it is impossible to
know where his presidency will lead or how much
damage he will do to our nation. His obsession
with his own fame, wealth and success, his
determination to vanquish enemies real and
imagined, his craving for adulation — these
traits were, of course, at the very heart of his
scorched-earth outsider campaign; indeed, some
of them helped get him elected. But in a real
presidency in which he wields unimaginable
power, they are nothing short of disastrous.
Although his policies are, for the most part,
variations on classic Republican positions (many
of which would have been undertaken by a
President Ted Cruz or a President Marco Rubio),
they become far more dangerous in the hands of
this imprudent and erratic man. Many
Republicans, for instance, support tighter
border security and a tougher response to
illegal immigration, but Trump’s cockamamie
border wall, his impracticable campaign promise
to deport all 11 million people living in the
country illegally and his blithe disregard for
the effect of such proposals on the U.S.
relationship with Mexico turn a very bad policy
into an appalling one.
1Trump’s
shocking lack of respect for those
fundamental rules and institutions on which our
government is based. Since Jan. 20, he has
repeatedly disparaged and challenged those
entities that have threatened his agenda,
stoking public distrust of essential
institutions in a way that undermines faith in
American democracy. He has questioned the
qualifications of judges and the integrity of
their decisions, rather than acknowledging that
even the president must submit to the rule of
law. He has clashed with his own intelligence
agencies, demeaned government workers and
questioned the credibility of the electoral
system and the Federal Reserve. He has lashed
out at journalists, declaring them “enemies of
the people,” rather than defending the
importance of a critical, independent free
press. His contempt for the rule of law and the
norms of government are palpable.
2
His utter lack of regard for truth. Whether
it is the easily disprovable boasts about the
size of his inauguration crowd or his
unsubstantiated assertion that Barack Obama
bugged Trump Tower, the new president regularly
muddies the waters of fact and fiction. It’s
difficult to know whether he actually can’t
distinguish the real from the unreal — or
whether he intentionally conflates the two to
befuddle voters, deflect criticism and undermine
the very idea of objective truth. Whatever the
explanation, he is encouraging Americans to
reject facts, to disrespect science, documents,
nonpartisanship and the mainstream media — and
instead to simply take positions on the basis of
ideology and preconceived notions. This is a
recipe for a divided country in which
differences grow deeper and rational compromise
becomes impossible.
3His
scary willingness to repeat alt-right conspiracy
theories, racist memes and crackpot,
out-of-the-mainstream ideas. Again, it is not
clear whether he believes them or merely uses
them. But to cling to disproven “alternative”
facts; to retweet racists; to make unverifiable
or false statements about rigged elections and
fraudulent voters; to buy into discredited
conspiracy theories first floated on fringe
websites and in supermarket tabloids — these are
all of a piece with the Barack Obama birther
claptrap that Trump was peddling years ago and
which brought him to political prominence. It is
deeply alarming that a president would lend the
credibility of his office to ideas that have
been rightly rejected by politicians from both
major political parties.
Where
will this end? Will Trump moderate his crazier
campaign positions as time passes? Or will he
provoke confrontation with Iran, North Korea or
China, or disobey a judge’s order or order a
soldier to violate the Constitution? Or,
alternately, will the system itself — the
Constitution, the courts, the permanent
bureaucracy, the Congress, the Democrats, the
marchers in the streets — protect us from him as
he alienates more and more allies at home and
abroad, steps on his own message and creates
chaos at the expense of his ability to
accomplish his goals? Already, Trump’s job
approval rating has been hovering in the
mid-30s, according to Gallup, a shockingly low
level of support for a new president. And that
was before his former national security advisor,
Michael Flynn, offered to cooperate last week
with congressional investigators looking into
the connection between the Russian government
and the Trump campaign.
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On Inauguration Day,
we wrote on this page
that it was not yet time to declare a state of
“wholesale panic” or to call for blanket
“non-cooperation” with the Trump administration.
Despite plenty of dispiriting signals, that is
still our view. The role of the rational
opposition is to stand up for the rule of law,
the electoral process, the peaceful transfer of
power and the role of institutions; we should
not underestimate the resiliency of a system in
which laws are greater than individuals and
voters are as powerful as presidents. This
nation survived Andrew Jackson and Richard
Nixon. It survived slavery. It survived
devastating wars. Most likely, it will survive
again.
But if
it is to do so, those who oppose the new
president’s reckless and heartless agenda must
make their voices heard. Protesters must raise
their banners. Voters must turn out for
elections. Members of Congress — including and
especially Republicans — must find the political
courage to stand up to Trump. Courts must
safeguard the Constitution. State legislators
must pass laws to protect their citizens and
their policies from federal meddling. All of us
who are in the business of holding leaders
accountable must redouble our efforts to defend
the truth from his cynical assaults.
The
United States is not a perfect country, and it
has a great distance to go before it fully
achieves its goals of liberty and equality. But
preserving what works and defending the rules
and values on which democracy depends are a
shared responsibility. Everybody has a role to
play in this drama.
Copyright Los Angeles Times
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