Trump for President?
By Paul Craig Roberts
June 21, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" -
Perhaps it has occurred to you as it has to me
that the United States is no longer capable of producing political
leadership. In the current issue of Trends Journal, Gerald Celente
describes the eight candidates (at the time he went to press) for
the US presidential nomination as “Liars, cowards, freaks & fools.”
Celente put it well. If you look at the sorry
collection that aspires to be the CEO of what continues to be
described as the “exceptional, indispensable, most important country
with the largest economy and military, the world’s only Superpower,
the Uni-power,” you see a collection of nobodies. America is like
the last days of Rome when contenting factions fought to put their
puppet on the throne.
There is no known politician in America who
measures up to Vladimir Putin’s ankle, or to the knee of China’s
leaders, or to the waist of Ecuador’s, Bolivia’s, Venezuela’s,
Argentina’s, Brazil’s, or to the chests of India’s and South
Africa’s.
In Europe, the UK, Australia, and Canada, the
natural leaders are also frozen out of the corrupt system.
In the US, “leadership” positions depend on
financial support from the ruling economic interests. American
presidents and politicians represent about six powerful private
interest groups and no one else.
After Celente went to press, Donald Trump
announced to much mirth. A “con man” they say, but what else is the
President of the United States? Do you think you weren’t conned by
Clinton, George W. Bush, and Obama? What universe do you live in?
In actual fact, Trump might be our best candidate
to date. By all accounts, he is very rich. Thus, he doesn’t need the
office in order to become rich by selling out America to interest
groups.
By all accounts, Trump has a healthy ego. Thus, he
could be capable of standing up to the powerful interest groups that
generally determine the governance of the American serfs.
Trump’s ego might even be strong enough for him to
stand up to the Israel Lobby, something my former colleague, Admiral
Thomas Moorer, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said publicly
that no American President was capable of doing.
As Celente makes clear in the current Trends
Journal, all politicians are con men or con women. We are going to
have them regardless, so why not try a rich one who might decide to
break with tradition and serve the interests of the citizenry. This
would be a unique accomplishment, affording Trump the elevation in
history books that would satisfy his ego. When a person reaches
Trump’s state, does he need another couple of billion dollars or is
historical recognition as the savior, however temporary, more
valuable?
This is not my endorsement of Trump for President.
It is merely my speculations on how we might think of how large egos
might be brought into our service. When we put the Clintons in
office, they decided to make money so that they could outdo
Hollywood and show their arrival with the $3 million they spent on
their daughter’s wedding.
For Trump, $3 million is pocket change.
The rich are everywhere demonized, but no action
follows. So, let’s consider voting for Trump. Some of the better
Roman emperors were rich. Their riches allowed them to maintain the
stability of the state and to think about its long-run survival.
They could outbid the private interests that wished to overthrow
them for their own purposes of immediate and highly selective gain.
It would take a lot of money to outbid Trump,
although if he neglects the Secret Service and the CIA, he could go
the way of John F. and Bobby Kennedy. He would have to make certain
he was well protected if he cuts the budget of the military/security
complex.
Money, lots of it, has one great virtue. Money in
sufficient amounts conveys INDEPENDENCE. Trump, if press reports are
correct, has money. This means, if correct, that Trump, unlike every
other candidate, has independence from the ruling handful of private
interest groups.
If Trump can assemble independent thinkers as his
advisers, thus keeping himself out of the hands of the usual
interest groups, should he be able to get elected, his
administration could succeed in taking America in a more promising
direction.
An important question is: can a really rich person
find and be comfortable with peers who are not themselves really
rich? If not, then Trump is not our man. But if Trump wants to save
our country, he has the money and the ego, and he can find enough
people to help him.
This opportunity doesn’t mean that it will be
seized or that it would pan out. If Trump is our best choice,
imagine how deplorable our situation is.
Dr. Paul Craig Roberts was Assistant Secretary
of the Treasury for Economic Policy and associate editor of the Wall
Street Journal. He was columnist for Business Week, Scripps Howard
News Service, and Creators Syndicate. He has had many university
appointments. His internet columns have attracted a worldwide
following. Roberts' latest books are
The Failure of Laissez Faire Capitalism and
Economic Dissolution of the West
and
How America Was Lost.