In Defense of Donald Trump’s Name-calling
By Ted Rall
December 15, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - Donald Trump likes
to call people “stupid.”
And/or “loser.”
Obviously, it’s juvenile.
Also obviously, Republican primary voters are
into it. They like Trump’s
short declarative sentences — the secret sauce of which is
namecalling.
Trump’s namecalling, so loud and so short on
specifics, drives the establishment political writers who dominate
corporate media crazy. I suspect this is because it doesn’t give
them much to do: no 12-point plans to debunk, no statistics to
factcheck, no rhetorical rabbit holes in which to run around in
circles at 50 cents a word.
I think it’s fabulous.
Not his politics. Those are reprehensible. For the
purpose of this week’s column, however, let’s focus on The Donald’s
namecalling.
First, though, I’m not at all into the “loser”
thing.
Consider the source: it’s hard not to win when you
inherit a fortune from your dad.
Trump started the marathon of life at mile 25-1/2.
Competition does more harm than good, especially
the way we do it here in America. Consider athletics: everyone who
doesn’t win a gold medal or get ranked first in his or her sport is
technically a loser. But those “losers” include a lot of superb
athletes, many of whom are separated from the gold by random
hundredths of a second in some race that easily could have gone
another way. Not to mention, competition is subject to the
corruption, nepotism and bad taste that determines that
neither Patti Smith nor Public Enemy deserve a Grammy while
Toto and Milli Vanilli do. If Patti Smith is a “loser,” there’s
something wrong with the dictionary.
There is, on the other hand, something wonderfully
refreshing about Donald Trump’s gleeful deployment of the S-word.
“She is the one that caused all this problem with
her stupid policies,” Trump said,
referring to Hillary Clinton. “You look at what she did with
Libya, what she did with Syria. Look at Egypt, what happened with
Egypt, a total mess. She was truly — if not the — one of the worst
secretaries of state in the history of the country. She talks about
me being dangerous. She’s killed hundreds of thousands of people
with her stupidity.”
Trump is absolutely right. Hillary voted for the
invasion of Iraq, which killed a million people. As I’ve
pointed out, it wasn’t just an immoral decision — it was a
stupid one, since anyone with a half a brain could see at the time
that Saddam probably didn’t have WMDs, and that Bush’s war would be
a disaster.
As secretary of state, Clinton never met a war she
didn’t love. Under her watch and following her counsel, the United
States
armed radical jihadis who are now terrorists,
helped topple Moammar Gaddafi, expanded a civil war that has
killed
hundreds of thousands of Libyans and reduced
one of the most advanced nations in Africa into a failed state.
Then she turned around and did the same exact thing to Syria.
Stupid.
Let Hillary’s supporters take offense. How is
unfair, wrong or intemperate to call out a foreign policy record
that fits the dictionary definition of “stupid” — doing the same
thing over and over, even though it never works?
Stupid is as
stupid does. Hillary is stupid, especially on foreign policy,
and Trump is right to say so.
Winner or loser, Trump has done political debate
in America a huge favor by freeing “stupid” from the rhetorical
prison of words and phrases polite people aren’t allowed to use.
Interestingly, stupid people aren’t all losers and
losers aren’t always stupid in Trumpworld. Hillary Clinton has one
hell of a resume, which she has parlayed into a
big pile of cash. She is, by Trump standards, a winner (albeit a
stupid one). If I met Trump, I’d ask him if a smart person can be a
loser (possible example: he
called the obviously smart Russell Brand a loser, but also a
“dummy”).
Pre-Trump, American politics and culture suffered
from a lack of stupid-calling. I am serious.
“There has been a long tradition of
anti-intellectualism in America, unlike most other Western
countries,” Ray Williams
wrote last year in Psychology Today. Insults reflect a
society’s values. Americans value macho masculinity, good looks and
youth, so our top slurs accuse their victims of being effeminate,
weak, ugly, fat, old and outdated. In France, where the life of the
mind is prized so much that one of the nation’s
top-rated TV shows featured philosophers and auteurs discussing
politics and culture over cigarettes, there are few things worse
than being called stupid and having it stick. A society that ranks
“stupid” as of its worst insults lets it be known that being smart
is at least as important as being tough or hot or buff.
So, Donald Trump, thanks for dropping those
S-bombs.
But I’m not voting for you.
Ted Rall, syndicated writer and the cartoonist
for ANewDomain.net and
SkewedNews.net,
is the author of “Snowden,”
about the NSA whistleblower. His new book “Bernie”
about Democratic presidential candidate Bernie Sanders, is now
available for pre-order. Want to support independent journalism? You
can subscribe to
Ted Rall at Beacon.) http://rall.com/