Categories
Politics

Trump’s Top Ten Travesties, Week 14

It’s Saturday, April 29, 2017. Today we acknowledge the much-anticipated 100th day since Donald Trump desecrated the office of POTUS. With every acknowledgment of a mile marker come reflection, evaluation, and analysis; and there’s been plenty of all those things going on this week both in the media and in Trump’s private moments and public comments. As this momentous day has approached, the usual chaos which has become the trademark of this White House has escalated to frenzy as 45 throws things at the wall—everything his troubled mind can think of—just frantically hoping something, anything, will stick. Having faced unprecedented resistance during his short time in office, he desperately longs to legitimize his “presidency” and to win the adulation he so deeply craves. Alas, however, all we continue to see as we cross the invisible line into his next 1,361 days is the now-familiar blank expression, the vacant eyes, and the videos of him childishly displaying his most recent executive order to the cameras as if showing his kindergarten classmates or his mommy the picture he just colored. In the absence of a single piece of legislation, his large stack of executive orders—most of them worthless, dealing with matters which could have been resolved by a simple phone call—is the only tangible thing he can point to as an “accomplishment” during this almost three-and-a-half months. Sad for him, sadder for our country.

Here’s a quick recap of the week.

  1. Let’s just start with those executive orders. Trump has so far signed 30 of them, more than any other president in history within the same length of time. The one who comes closest to Trump’s number is Lyndon Johnson who signed 26 orders during his first 100 days. According to Leada Gore, “Trump has also signed 13 Congressional Review Act resolutions, more than any other president. The resolutions are designed to identify unnecessary regulations and block them from being issued.” These facts might be somewhat less noteworthy if the ceremonious, show-and-tell signings had been accompanied by any real legislation, but we all know that hasn’t happened; so that stack of black folders is all Trump has to show for “achievement.” Pathetic, Donald.
  2. The best news of the week is that the Republican leadership’s second repeal-and-replace attempt met the same fate as the first. Late Thursday, leaders were forced to scrap the vote, after conceding that they simply couldn’t muster the necessary support to pass the bill. House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy assured the public, “As soon as we have the votes, we’ll vote on it.” Speaker Paul Ryan echoed that statement. Trump was desperately hoping to push through a bill this week, regardless of what it looked like (it’s not like he ever reads this stuff), in order to place success in beginning the process of repealing and replacing the ACA on his 100-day report card. Fortunately for the millions who depend on the ACA, that process will be delayed a bit longer.
  3. Tonight, the annual White House Correspondents’ Dinner will convene, with all of the traditional elements except for one small difference: the “president” will not be in attendance. Trump is the first “president” since Ronald Reagan to skip the event often jokingly dubbed the “nerd prom,” but we forgave Reagan because he was busy recovering from a bullet wound received in the failed assassination attempt. Trump, on the other hand, is just being churlish and spiteful: dissing the media who have treated him “very badly” and have been “so unfair” to him and whom he has named “the enemy of the people.”
  4. While the lavish White House Correspondent’s Dinner proceeds, Trump will be doing his favorite thing: holding a campaign-style rally in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, where he’ll be getting a lot more love than he’d have gotten at the dinner. He just can’t seem to get enough of the adulation from those screaming crowds. Most presidents find it unnecessary to continue campaigning after they’ve won the election; but Donald Trump is clearly NOT most presidents, and since winning the election has so far been his only success, his narcissistic ego needs an occasional replay of those happy times. Sunday morning update: The New York Times Sunday morning headline: “Trump Savages News Media at Rally to Mark 100th.” Looks like the second 1,361 days will be a lot like the first 100. Sigh!
  5. In that Reuters interview, Trump also admitted that he misses his old life. Gee, Donald, at last we agree on something: we, too, miss the time when you had your old life and you were not part of our lives. Ah, those were the days! The most jaw-dropping part of this nostalgic moment was this comment: “’I loved my previous life, I loved my previous life. I had so many things going,’ Trump told Reuters. ‘I actually, this is more work than my previous life. I thought it would be easier.’ Then, later: ‘I do miss my old life. This — I like to work. But this is actually more work.’” (CNN) Seriously? Let me see if I understand what you’re saying. You thought being president of the most powerful country in the world—running the entire government of that country—would be EASIER than being a reality TV star? Really? And you have no shame in actually admitting such stupidity to the entire world? Wow!
  6. On Thursday of this week, Trump told an interviewer from Reuters, “There’s a chance that we could end up having a major, major, conflict with North Korea, absolutely.” Not only is “major, major conflict with North Korea” a terrifying prospect, but normal presidents don’t make public statements like this! We seem to have fallen into a dark hole that has no bottom. Each day brings a new display of ignorance more abysmal than the last. Yet so far none of 45’s violations of the Constitution, of ethics, of common decency have been sufficient to trigger serious investigations and actions by Congress to reign him in. Shame on them!
  7. During his campaign, Trump issued a two-page document called “Donald Trump’s Contract with the American Voter,” which begins with the line, “What follows is my 100-day action plan to Make America Great Again.” And then there is a list of the things which he would easily accomplish within that time period. I think it’s safe to say that Candidate Trump embraced the 100-day marker, looked forward to basking in his accomplishments on April 29. Fast forward to the week just preceding April 29, and we hear Trump as “president” whining about the 100-day evaluation: “It’s an artificial barrier”; “Not very meaningful”; “A ridiculous standard.” Nevertheless, throughout the week leading up to this ridiculous, non-meaningful, artificial report card, he blustered on and on about having the most successful 100 days in history, doing more than any other president has done in that short time, yada yada yada. And then he scheduled a rally in Pennsylvania where a screaming crowd would agree with him and bolster his narcissistic ego. And so it goes.
  8. On Saturday, April 29, Trump reminded us all that May 1 is Loyalty Day. A Guardian article explains, “The day [May Day] is a US tradition dating back to the cold war, when it was a bolster to stop May Day becoming a rallying point for socialists and unionised workers, but for an embattled president learning politics on the job it has an added resonance.” Or one could say, for a “president” who hasn’t learned that loyalty has to be earned, it can’t be demanded, May Day may be another straw at which he desperately clutches to create a little support. “Sad,” as he would say.
  9. In a Fox News interview marking 45’s 100th day, Mr. Nothing Sticks to Me turned to blaming the Constitution itself for his failure. The same Guardian article mentioned in #8 reports: “He blamed the constitutional checks and balances built in to US governance. ‘It’s a very rough system,’ he said.’“It’s an archaic system … It’s really a bad thing for the country.’” Archaic? Bad thing for the country? That damned constitution! How on earth can a dictator be expected to get anything done when the constitution keeps cutting off his power and giving it to the legislative or judicial branch of the government? That’s so unfair. This may well be Trump’s most offensive and narcissistic statement yet. When looking for someone or something to blame for his own failures, even our 230-year-old constitution is not safe. This may also be among his most dangerous statements so far; in Trump’s thinking, anything which limits his power is bad, up to and including our treasured constitution. Just a short 101 days ago, we had a president who knew, loved, and taught our constitution; now we have one who’s never read it and who blames it for not allowing him to become the dictator he so longs to be. How did we get here?
  10. Meanwhile, Trump’s approval ratings continue to hover around the 40% mark—historically low for any president at this early stage in his tenure. The only surprise here is that there could possibly be 40% of this country’s voters who DO approve of this train wreck! There’s much more work to be done!

The only positive news to come out of this last 100 days is that millions of Americans have begun to take more seriously than ever before the words “government of the people, by the people, for the people” and to take personal responsibility for seeing that—in the words of Abraham Lincoln—such government “shall not perish from the earth.” I read this morning that Trump is being sued by a group of youths, the youngest of whom is nine, for 45’s irresponsible attitude toward climate change. And that group will be among the thousands participating in Saturday’s march, the third such event during this nascent administration, to the White House to express the marchers’ disapproval of Trump and the Republican Congress’s inaction on climate change. Such hands-on involvement in government is something many of us have never seen to this extent, at least not since the Viet Nam days. Thanks to all of the marchers, protesters, letter writers, phone callers, meeting attenders, writers, and beautiful young lawsuit filers who represent all of us who love our democracy and refuse to stand idly by and watch it being destroyed.

That’s it for this week. See you next week, back here in The Swamp, when we’ll be 7 days into the second 1,361.

 

 

 

 

Categories
Politics

Trump’s Top Ten Travesties, Week 13

Arthur Miller’s play “Death of a Salesman” is a piece I watched and explored with hundreds of students over the span of my teaching career. Recently, a couple of quotes from the play’s protagonist Willy Loman have been replaying in my head. The action covers the last 24 hours in the life of a man whom the playwright saw as representative of the common man, in a play which Miller called a modern tragedy. Willy Loman lived his life obsessed with achieving the American Dream, only to die feeling he had achieved nothing at all. During this crucial day and night, Willy is haunted by the ghosts from his past and spends a great deal of time arguing with the voices in his head. In the final scenes of the play, Willy meets his two sons in a restaurant and, for the first time, is confronted with the truth of their lives. As he leaves the restaurant, he asks the waiter, “Tell me . . .  Is there a seed store in the neighborhood? . . .  I’ve got to get some seeds, right away. Nothing’s planted. I don’t have a thing in the ground.” After arriving home with his newly purchased seeds, Willy goes to the back yard to begin planting and starts speaking to the ghost of his brother Ben, who cautions Willy that the plan taking shape in Willy’s head may backfire and that Willy will be seen as a coward. Willy responds with the question, “Why? Does it take more guts to stand here the rest of my life ringing up a zero?”

Everyone wants to feel that their life has amounted to something, that they haven’t just “rung up a zero” during their years on earth. As Donald Trump nears the reality checkpoint of his 100th day in office, he seems to be feeling much the same angst which Willy Loman experiences in “Death of a Salesman.” Trump has failed to pass a single piece of legislation, he’s caricatured daily by every publication on the planet, and his approval rating is at an historic low for a “president” at this stage of his term. He has nothing in the ground; and as he grows more desperate to plant some seeds, he becomes more and more delusional in his erratic stabs at and babbling talk about doing something important. For the fictional Willy Loman, this behavior evokes sympathy; for the real-life Donald Trump, there is no sympathy. There’s only disgust, disbelief that he actually holds the highest office in our country, terror over what calamity he may rain down upon us, and anger at the lawmakers who refuse to do their constitutional job of holding him accountable.

Here’s a snapshot of Week 13.

  1. At least there is one priority on which Trump can take pride in his first-hundred-day accomplishments. With Earth Day taking place on Saturday, April 22, 45 can proudly point to this assessment from the Huffington Post: “Almost 100 days into Trump’s tenure, the fears of environmentalists, scientists, public health advocates have been confirmed — and then some.” Great work, Donald! You’ve outdone yourself! Oh, and pay no attention to that group of protesters who’ll be showing up again tomorrow. They’re probably being paid by someone anyway. You just sit inside and tweet to your little heart’s content.
  2. Yes, the defeat of the Republican attempt to repeal the Affordable Care Act and replace it with a hastily jotted down bill was so far the greatest humiliation of Trump’s first 100 days. Yes, the Repubs have squandered huge amounts of time, effort, and money trying to repeal the ACA but no time working out a carefully crafted replacement for it. Yes, the one they now propose to put up for a vote next week is being called weaker than the one that already failed. NO, none of those facts is reason enough for them to back away from taking another ill-fated stab at passing a House bill which can be sent on to the Senate. According to Huff Post writers Sam Stein and Ryan Grim, Repubs have no choice but to launch another attempt because “virtually all elected Republicans in Congress pledged to repeal and replace Obamacare during their campaigns ― more or less every day since it became law. To abandon it after one attempt at passage (and a meek three-week effort at that, without even a vote) would be to risk alienating their core voters.”
  3. The SCPOTUS (so-called president of the United States) had some special dinner guests this week: Sarah Palin, Ted Nugent with his wife Shemane Deziel, and Kid Rock with his fiancée Audrey Berry. Fashion watchers called out Sarah Palin and Shemane Deziel for violating White House dress code with their off-shoulder tops and Palin’s open-toed shoes; and I believe it’s still considered rude for men to wear their hats indoors, as Nugent and Kid Rock did in the Oval Office. Yet these offenses—if one regards them as such—are minor compared to the smart-ass photo of Sarah Palin, Ted Nugent, and Kid Rock in front of the official White House portrait of First Lady Hillary Rodham Clinton. There seems to be no bottom to Trump’s degradation of our historic presidential residence.
  4. Also this week, Turkey’s president narrowly won a referendum which pretty much makes him a dictator: the vote gives him “new, virtually unchecked powers,” according to The Economist. Since coming to power in 2002, Erdogan has had 50,000 of his critics arrested, “including many soldiers, journalists, lawyers, police officers, academics and Kurdish politicians” (BBC News). Did these detentions, along with his authoritarianism, intimidation tactics, and firing 120,000 public servants cause 45 to denounce him and the vote that gave him “virtually unchecked powers”? Of course not, silly! Our SCPOTUS called Mr. Erdogan to congratulate him on his victory. Why not? There’s nothing 45 likes more than winning, and he’s not doing much of it these days, so he’s happy for some other authoritarian who is.
  5. One of the biggest news stories this week is Bill O’Reilly’s dismissal by Fox News. Of course, this has nothing to do with 45; but it warrants mention of 45’s statement a week or two ago that O’Reilly is his close friend and that, in his opinion, his buddy did nothing wrong and should have continued to fight the charges. How many times does Trump have to tell the world he’s a misogynist before some people will start believing him? Some crotch grabbers get fired; others get elected “president.”
  6. One of Trump’s most controversial and embarrassing appointees, Jeff Sessions, our Attorney General, made this statement to an interviewer about the federal judge in Hawaii who last month blocked Trump’s second Muslim travel ban: “I really am amazed that a judge sitting on an island in the Pacific can issue an order that stops the president of the United States from what appears to be clearly his statutory and constitutional power.” Like his boss, Sessions appears to have slept through history and government classes. Imposing a travel ban on a specific religious group is not one of the powers our Constitution grants to our president; and since 1959, Hawaii has been one of the 50 states that comprise the United States, so the judge is not some outsider trying to influence US affairs. Like, oh, you know, Russia did in the election. Any comment on that one, Mr. Sessions?
  7. We all know when money’s tight, we have to take a hard look at our priorities and allocate funds to the most important parts of the budget; so kids’ school shoes have a higher priority than a weekend at your favorite spa. With another spending deadline on April 28, bringing with it as always the possibility of a government shutdown, our nation’s lawmakers are also being forced to evaluate budgeting priorities. Wednesday night, White House Budget Director Mick Mulvaney delivered to budget negotiators a plan which makes a “hefty down payment” on the border wall “a top demand.” The full price tag for the completed wall is currently estimated at $15 billion, of which Mexico has agreed to pay zero. Of course. And just as spouses negotiate budget deals—if I can buy that new fishing pole, you can get the new tennis racket you want—Trump too is willing to make deals. According to Mulvaney, Trump “may consider insurance subsidies for low-income Americans to keep the Affordable Care Act kicking” if Democrats agree to allocations for the wall. What a great guy! Pay for my stupid wall, and I’ll let poor people have health care awhile longer. Holding poor people hostage—is that included in Art of the Deal?
  8. As international tensions continue to escalate, Russian aircraft are skirting US airspace at a much greater than usual frequency. From Monday through Thursday this week, Russian planes were spotted off the Alaska coast four times. Although they never entered US airspace and officials who spoke to CNN downplayed the threat level, one official told CNN there is “no other way to interpret this other than as strategic messaging.” I’d never go so far as to say Trump gets the message, but he did deny the ExxonMobil request for a waiver of sanctions that would allow them to drill for oil in Russia. Maybe he’s finally getting nervous about growing public knowledge of his bromance with Putin? Hmmm?
  9. The Trump administration continues its game of nuclear chicken with North Korea, giving all of us good reason to be very afraid. With no knowledge of history, geography, diplomacy, or much of anything else to go on, Trump seems to be handling the rising crisis with North Korea pretty much the way he handles everything else: Posting stupid tweets and dispatching his band of misfits—Mike Pence et al.—to make threats and attempt to give the appearance that there’s some sort of strategic plan at the White House (There’s not). From Trump’s ridiculous statement that Korea used to be part of China to the suggestion that he learned all about Korea’s history by listening to Chinese President Xi Jinping for 10 minutes, he continues to shock the world and humiliate our country with his shameless display of ignorance. Pair that ignorance with escalating international tension, and it’s difficult to see how the Korean situation is going to end well.
  10. Finally, the biggest story of the week is the strange series of lies or bluffs regarding the United States aircraft carrier, USS Carl Vinson. Everyone who’s watched the news knows by now the story of this carrier which Trump called a “great armada” heading toward North Korea, but which was actually 3000 miles away heading in the opposite direction, and the conflicting reports from various members of the Trump administration on the ship’s whereabouts. The most disturbing part of this story is what it portends for US credibility in global interactions. Both allies and adversaries listen to the words of the US President, and our national security depends on other leaders’ ability to trust those words. Our allies need to be able to believe what our president says because their own national security is also impacted by US actions, and the support we can expect to receive from them depends on our maintaining honest relations. Our adversaries need to believe our president’s words because, with modern weaponry in play, bluffing is risky business. Once again, it’s hard to see a scenario in which all of this ends well.

Donald Trump must surely wander the White House hallways at night talking to the voices in his head, obsessing over having nothing in the ground, and desperately plotting to make his mark on the world and to make people love him. He’s a sadly delusional old man, like Willy Loman, who’s growing more desperate with every passing day. But the real culprits in this situation are the Republicans who have placed him in the White House and who continue to support him, responding to every new scandalous revelation with a shoulder shrug and a “Meh!” Our job is to keep up the phone calls, letters, emails, town halls, and in-person meetings. And if all of those things fail to get their attention, we have to show up in every possible way in 2018 to send all of them out job hunting.

 

 

 

Categories
Politics

Trump’s Top Ten Travesties, Week 11

It’s been another history-making week in our nation’s capital! Lawmakers have succeeded in ending the longest SCOTUS vacancy in history, forever changing some Senate rules, and—oh, yeah—lobbing a few missiles at a Syrian airbase. All in a week’s work! Although no week since January 20 has been dull or uneventful, Week 11 has been particularly significant for everything from changing international relationships to more leaks from the White House and lots of daily drama on Capitol Hill.

From this reality TV-worthy week, here are a few of the highlights.

  1. Early in the week, Jared Kushner traveled to Iraq as a White House envoy, accompanying Joseph F. Dunford Jr., chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, in what the Washington Post calls a “further expansion of [Kushner’s] role as shadow diplomat.” Aside from the obvious problem of Kushner’s lack of any relevant experience whatsoever, this incident also further highlighted Trump’s ignorance of protocols and security concerns. According to the Post, Trump confirmed reports of the trip before the plane had landed. Normal protocol is to give confirmation only after arrival, to prevent incidents such as the one in 2007 when “the Taliban, having gained knowledge of Vice President Dick Cheney’s visit to Bagram Airfield in Afghanistan, carried out an attack on the base, killing more than 20 people” (Washington Post). I guess that wasn’t covered in Presidenting for Dummies.
  2. Running as a thread throughout the week was the confirmation of Neil Gorsuch to fill Antonin Scalia’s Supreme Court seat. First came the filibuster. On Monday, Democrats achieved the 41-vote minimum necessary to sustain a filibuster; Republicans needed 60 votes to end the filibuster; they had only 56 as of Monday afternoon (that total includes four Democrats). So Monday ended in gridlock.
  3. The floor debate on Gorsuch’s confirmation began on Tuesday and continued through Wednesday. In between, Senator Jeff Merkley (D-OR), opting for a more traditional type of filibuster, held the Senate floor for more than 15 hours in an all-night protest of Gorsuch’s nomination. Neither party emerged from this standoff unscathed: there’s been plenty of criticism and blame for both parties as well as for individual players.
  4. The SCOTUS debacle ended on Friday in a lose-lose. On Thursday, the Senate took a series of votes which culminated in a permanent rule change, known as the “nuclear option.” Never again will a party be able to stage an effective protest against a SCOTUS nominee, regardless of his/her qualifications or lack thereof; from now on forever, a simple 51-vote majority is sufficient to confirm any nominee to our highest court. And on Friday, for the second loss, the Senate voted to confirm Gorsuch, helping to preserve the court’s conservative majority for several more decades. Mitch McConnell left the Senate chamber with a big smile and a thumbs up, and millions of people worldwide dreamed Friday night of punching that smile off his turtle-ish face.
  5. Because anything put in place by President Obama MUST be reversed, Attorney General Jeff Sessions this week “ordered a review Monday of all police reform agreements and investigations initiated by the Justice Department, part of an effort to cut back on federal oversight of local law enforcement” (USA Today). The Obama administration investigated many local law enforcement agencies and made court-enforceable agreements with them to improve their tactics, especially in their use of deadly force and dealing with minority communities. Sessions says, “It is not the responsibility of the federal government to manage non-federal law enforcement agencies.” It’s the federal government’s job to be sure racism in all its forms is allowed to flourish, eh Jeff?
  6. Because Trump has never met a brutal authoritarian ruler he didn’t salute, he welcomed Egypt’s President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi to the White House Monday, in yet another reversal of President Obama’s policies. Because of the Egyptian president’s long record of human rights abuses, Obama never invited him to the White House, expressed his disapproval of el-Sissi’s human rights record, and briefly suspended military aid. Trump, on the other hand, told him, “You have a great friend in the U. S. and in me.” Just makin’ America great again.
  7. Did you hear the one about Trump declaring the month of April Sexual Assault Awareness Month and then defending scumbag Bill O’Reilly for whom $13 million has been paid out in settlements to five of his accusers? This would be a great joke if it were not so disgusting and tragic. The “president” of the United States said, “I think he’s a person I know well — he is a good person. I think he shouldn’t have settled; personally I think he shouldn’t have settled. Because you should have taken it all the way. I don’t think Bill did anything wrong.” Bullies defend bullies, even when one of them lives in the White House.
  8. In a move for which Trump received some praise even from intelligent people, he removed Steve Bannon from the National Security Council and replaced him with some of the people who should have been there in the first place. I must admit to being skeptical of the motives at first, but now it’s being widely reported that Bannon’s future as a White House adviser is increasingly uncertain. Perhaps there is just one bit of good news from Week 11.
  9. Devin Nunes has stepped down from his role in leading the House intelligence committee’s investigation into Russia’s interference in the 2016 election. He is calling the accusations against him untrue and biased, but he feels it to be in the country’s best interest for him to turn over the investigation to others so that he can “expedite the dismissal of these false claims.” Meanwhile, the investigation is now in the hands of Representatives Mike Conaway, Trey Gowdy, and Tom Rooney. Gee, I can hardly wait to see whether Trey Gowdy will be nearly as passionate in his pursuit of truth about possible election interference by a hostile foreign power as he was about possible email violations.
  10. And finally, as the whole world knows, Trump ended his 11th week in office by ordering the launch of 59 Tomahawk missiles at an airbase in Syria, in response to Bashar al-Assad’s use of chemical weapons earlier this week to kill 100 of his own citizens of all ages. Response to Trump’s decision has been all over the map, and the attack raises a number of possible repercussions, none of which are good. Much more to come on this subject in the weeks and months ahead.

As a side note, I just have to ask, am I the only one who is offended by 45’s seeming disdain for the White House? First families have always made our national house their home, not a hotel for the president to stay in during the work week while his family remains in their private home. And visiting dignitaries have been received and entertained at the White House, not at the president’s private home or club. I shuddered at the thought of that family of cretins moving into the White House and spray painting everything gold, but I think I’m even more offended by their utter lack of reverence for the home and its history.

And so Week 11 comes to an end with a cliffhanger: Who is in and who is out among the contentious White House staff? Is Trump preparing for another shake-up? Is Bannon out? Will Priebus survive the cut? Will Gary Cohn be the new Chief of Staff? Will Jared and Ivanka get the boot? HA! Just kidding! Doddering Donald needs his family caretakers to watch after him, so the Kushners are safe. But odds are that other heads are about to roll.

It’s bound to be another busy week! Stay tuned for Swamp Report, Week 12.

 

Categories
Politics

Trump’s Top Ten Travesties, Week 10

The 1960s gave us Camelot; the 2000s have given us Scam-a-Lot! The word “unprecedented” has become the euphemism for “I can’t believe this crazy-ass stuff is happening right here in the USA!!!” A “president” who knows nothing about how government works and has no interest in learning; a “president” who’s under FBI investigation; the “president’s” 30-something son-in-law, whose sole qualification for serving in government is his relationship to the POTUS, being appointed to take charge of . . . well . . . everything; the “president’s” 30-something clothing and accessory designer daughter being appointed as a top-level adviser; a press secretary whose daily briefing sessions are a combination of lies, cover-ups, and scolding reporters; an ethics committee chairman changing cars at night and making clandestine White House visits—yes, you could definitely call those things “unprecedented.” However, I’d prefer to call them what they are: corruption at its worst, criminal and treasonous acts, and a grave threat to the future of our democracy. And there’s only solution: repeal and replace Donald Trump!

Here’s just a little bit of the evidence that his ouster is warranted.

  1. Week 10 began with a new position for Jared Kushner. Trump was probably so happy to see him again after having to weather Friday’s crushing defeat all on his own—while Jared and Ivanka were off on a ski trip, compliments of American taxpayers—that he wanted to give him a little welcome-home present. Jared, who in his privileged 36 years has never run any government agency or even worked for one, is now heading up Trump’s White House Office of American Innovation. Jared and his SWAT team aim to run the government like a business, which according to Simon Maloy, writer for the Salon is “one of the dumber and therefore most popular ideas in politics.” The idea is not new; but since Trump and Kushner know a little more about business than they know about government, it seems to them like a good idea. Kushner announced, “The government should be run like a great American company. Our hope is that we can achieve successes and efficiencies for our customers, who are the citizens.” Just one problem there, buddy: If the government is a business—which it’s not—we citizens are the board of directors, and you schmucks answer to us.
  2. In a no-big-surprise move which demonstrates the standard Trump disregard for ethics, the White House announced on Wednesday that 35-year-old Ivanka Trump has also become an unpaid federal employee. She will have her own West Wing office and act as assistant to the “president” because, well, you know, designing women’s clothing and accessories gives her such a wealth of political expertise and wisdom that it would be a shame for her not to share it with the nation. Some savvy people have raised the question of whether Jared and Ivanka’s appointments violate federal nepotism laws; but in a January memo, the Justice Department concluded that those rules don’t apply to the White House—echoing the obvious attitude of this administration that it is above the law. Rules, shmules!
  3. In the most dizzying story of the week, Devin Nunes claims to be in possession of classified information showing that “Trump transition officials had been caught inadvertently in surveillance operations targeting suspected foreign spies, and that their names appeared in internal intelligence reports” (Huff Post). The night before Nunes announced his possession of the material, he ditched his staff, changed cars, and went to the White House to use a SCIF (Sensitive Compartmented Information Facility), purportedly to meet with his source, whom he steadfastly refuses to name. His refusal to name the source, along with the facts that private meeting places are also available at the Capitol, no one just strolls into the White House or uses White House equipment without being signed in and escorted throughout the visit by a White House staffer, and no record exists of who granted Nunes admission to the grounds has led many to believe that 45 himself is the “source” and that the whole escapade was contrived to give some credence to 45’s ridiculous claims that he was wiretapped by President Obama.
  4. On Tuesday, 45 signed yet another executive order, this one reversing President Obama’s climate change measures by severely limiting the Environmental Protection Agency’s ability to enforce climate regulations. Claiming that protecting American jobs is more important than regulating climate change, Trump, who has called global warming a “hoax,” said that the order will “eliminate federal overreach” and “start a new era of production and job creation.” He added that his action “is latest in steps to grow American jobs” [his grammar, not mine] and that his order is “ending the theft of prosperity.” Sadly, our grandchildren will be the judges of his success or failure.
  5. Last week, Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer announced he intended to initiate a filibuster of Trump’s nominee to fill the Republicans’ stolen Supreme Court seat, Neil Gorsuch. His announcement received a lukewarm response at first; but the bandwagon is starting to fill up, as the Russia investigation causes more Dems to believe a “president” under FBI investigation is not qualified to make such a high-level, long-term appointment. However, with the ever-repugnant Mitch McConnell continuing to vow that—by God!—his party will see to it Gorsuch is confirmed, the only thing sure right now is that we’re “headed toward a high-stakes conflict when the Senate takes up the nomination of Gorsuch next week” (Bloomberg Politics).
  6. With the House intelligence committee’s Russia investigation in full disarray, at mid-week, the Senate intelligence committee stepped to the forefront, announcing that they aim to conduct a nonpartisan, non-politicized examination of Russian interference in American politics. In their first public hearing on Thursday, they gave us our big DUH for this week: Russian interference did not end with the election. And why on earth would it? The only reason I can think of that one country would have an interest in who is president of another country is to gain the ability to work through that puppet to further infiltrate and corrupt the government. A CNN article lists specific Russian actions from the primary campaigns right up to this week. It looks as if the Senate committee will actually produce some results; and of course, their one clear advantage is that their chairman is not a double agent for the committee and the persons under investigation. Always a plus!
  7. With the Russia investigation heating up, we’re again going to be hearing a lot about Mike Flynn. On Thursday, Flynn reportedly agreed to testify to Congress in exchange for immunity from prosecution. Flynn’s attorney, Robert Kelner, quotes his client: “General Flynn certainly has a story to tell, and he very much wants to tell it, should the circumstances permit.” There have been conflicting comments about whether the request for immunity has actually been made; but as reporters are seeking the truth on the matter, they are also recalling Flynn’s 2016 statement to an MSNBC interviewer: “The very last thing that John Podesta just said is no individual should be too big to jail. That should include people like Hillary Clinton. I mean, five people around her have been given immunity, to include her former chief of staff. When you are given immunity, that means you have probably committed a crime.” And that’s on tape! On Friday, it was announced that the Senate intelligence committee did in fact receive Flynn’s request and has rejected it because, as the whole world knows, “Where there’s smoke there’s fire!”
  8. Sally Yates, a name not familiar to most people before she was fired for refusing to defend 45’s first travel ban, is now in the news again because she reportedly has information on Mike Flynn, which she would like to share with the public via testimony to the intelligence committees. But Devin Nunes, always looking out for Donald Trump’s best interests, canceled the hearing in which Yates was scheduled to testify, with little notice and even less explanation. According to Gloria Borger, “She was to be part of a heavy-hitting triumvirate — including former CIA Director John Brennan and ex-Director of National Intelligence James Clapper — bringing news about potential Russian connections to the Trump transition.” Why does anyone try to silence a witness unless that witness has some pretty incriminating stuff? Hmmmmmm
  9. On Thursday, the New York Times published an article revealing names of two White House officials who they say acted as the unnamed sources (mentioned in #2) who helped give Devin Nunes the intelligence reports which “showed that President Trump and his associates were incidentally swept up in foreign surveillance by American spy agencies” (NYT). When Sean Spicer was asked about the new revelation, he “neither confirmed nor denied” its validity, in an exchange described in the Huff Post as a “bizarre non-denial.” Nothing new there.
  10. Finally, as further evidence of 45’s severe mental disorders, he is now threatening to campaign against members of his own party in 2018. No, really. Here’s the tweet: “The Freedom Caucus will hurt the entire Republican agenda if they don’t get on the team, & fast. We must fight them, & Dems, in 2018!” The “president” of the United States has threatened to campaign against members of his own party, in retaliation for their failure to support his train wreck of a health care plan, and the Speaker of the House seemed kind of okay with that. You can’t make this stuff up.

Most frustrating of all is the lingering notion among many that Trump simply needs to pivot and start acting more presidential. All of the problems can be fixed if Trump and the other Repubs will simply learn from their mistakes and do things differently from here on out. “’It is a very challenging environment but I think these guys have been in office for 60 days or whatever, they have never done it before,’” said Howard Schweitzer, a former Bush administration Treasury official now with Cozen O’Connor Public Strategies. ‘If they get smarter, they can turn it around.’” (CNN) No, no, no, no, no! Neither you nor I could walk into a medical group, get a job as an M.D., and start performing surgeries on people. Surgery is not a place for on-the-job training, and neither is the presidency. For me to become a surgeon, I’d have to start at the beginning, and it’s pretty late in life for me to do that. Trump is incapable of turning the ship around, because he’s as clueless about government as I am about medicine. He simply doesn’t have the knowledge or the temperament to occupy the office for which he was elected, and there is no magic potion which will give him those qualifications, so everyone please stop saying he just needs to change his ways. He. Doesn’t. Have. Any. Other. Ways. That. He. Can. Change. To.

Let’s see, what was that word again? Starts with “I.” Ah, yes, IMPEACH.

See you next week right back here in the Swamp!

 

Categories
Politics

Trump’s Top Ten Travesties, Week 9

Swamp News, Week 9

When our grandchildren and great grandchildren read about this week in their history books, we’ll be able to say with a sigh, “I remember it well!” I for one have seen things this week I’ve never witnessed before in our country and never dreamed could possibly happen here. Never before have we had a president under investigation for treason; and never have we had a president who is a pathological liar, who every day becomes more ensnared in the web of lies he has spun. David Gergen, who knows a lot about presidents, made the statement, “This may be the worst 100 days we’ve ever seen in a president.” Ya think? Perhaps that’s because 45 is the most unqualified person ever elected to that office, who doesn’t have the knowledge or temperament to achieve so much as a mediocre job performance even if he gave it his best try. We’re only 60+ days into that critical first 100, but from Monday through Friday—FBI report to crash and burn of the Trumpdontcare health care bill–we’ve had a front row seat to watch the making of history.

Let’s take a look back.

  1. On Friday, March 17, German chancellor Angela Merkel visited the White House. She’s been there before, of course, and been warmly received by both President George W. Bush and President Barack Obama. Neither of those two humiliated our country in the eyes of the whole world as 45 did with his rude, churlish, infantile, and dementia-like behavior. The video that’s been circulating on the Internet of 45 and Merkel sitting in the familiar side-by-side chairs prompted Michael Gerson to express the opinion in the Washington Post: “When President Trump and Angela Merkel sat together in the Oval Office, we were seeing the leader of the free world — and that guy pouting in public.” Many writers have echoed the sentiment that it is now Ms. Merkel who holds the esteemed title “Leader of the Free World” and not the POTUS. That to me is the most crushing thing that happened during Week 9.
  2. The calendar week began with FBI Director James Comey’s stunning confirmation on Monday that the FBI has, since July 2016, been conducting an investigation into “whether there was any coordination between the Trump campaign and Moscow while Russia was interfering in the presidential election.” This statement makes two things clear: One, the FBI has already established as fact that Russia interfered in our election and that their efforts were specifically aimed at defeating Hillary Clinton and electing Donald Trump; and two, the question that remains unanswered and which the current investigation hopes to resolve is whether Trump and his associates participated in, coordinated with, colluded in those efforts. If so, I think we know the name for that, right? We call it treason. Here’s the constitution’s definition of treason: “Treason against the United States, shall consist only in levying War against them, or in adhering to their Enemies, giving them Aid and Comfort” (Article 3, Section 3, Clause 1). Oh, yeah, and the penalty for such “high crimes and misdemeanors” is impeachment.
  3. The big DUH for the week comes from that same report by Comey: The FBI finds “no evidence” to support allegations that Trump Tower was wiretapped during the campaign. We know by now, of course, Trump’s never met a fact that can shut down one of his lies; so in his own inimitable way he has continued to defend his claim, making much of his use of quotation marks in the original tweets. “Wiretapped” in quotes doesn’t mean the same as wiretapped without quotes. With the quotation marks, it can mean any form of surveillance; and since his claims can be affirmed retroactively, as with the Sweden statement, any tidbit of information is now fair evidence of his credibility. If this were not so tragic, it would make a hilarious Bill Murray movie, possibly titled “What about Donnie?”
  4. And then there was the time when Devin Nunes, California Republican who chairs the House Intelligence Committee (which has come to sound like an oxymoron), decided it would be intelligent to brief 45 on information regarding the U S intelligence community’s possession of information on Trump’s transition team before updating members (Democrats) of his own committee. Gee, I don’t think that sounds too suspicious, do you? Maybe this means it’s time to turn the case over to an independent investigator?
  5. With the Russia investigation now public knowledge, Paul Manafort returned to center stage this week. You remember him? The guy Sean Spicer said played just a minor role in 45’s campaign. Being campaign manager for roughly 4-and-a-half months is no big deal, right? I’m sure he didn’t have too much influence. Manafort’s ties to Russia are well documented and far too numerous to mention here, but we’ve all heard them. It seems the current focus in his investigation is what he did with all that Russian money he’s earned. The words “off-shore accounts” and “money laundering” have come up, and evidence has led to a bank on the Mediterranean island of Cyprus, “once known as a haven for money laundering among Russian billionaires,” according to the AP. Rachel Maddow will keep us posted on this one.
  6. Evidence of Trump’s Russia connections is also mounting. In contradiction to his vehement denial of having any business dealings with Russia, the Huffington Post reported this week: “But in the United States, members of the Russian elite have invested in Trump buildings. A Reuters review has found that at least 63 individuals with Russian passports or addresses have bought at least $98.4 million worth of property in seven Trump-branded luxury towers in southern Florida, according to public documents, interviews and corporate records.” I’m sure we’ll be hearing more on that.
  7. Monday through Thursday, the spotlight shifted a bit to the Senate confirmation hearings for Neil Gorsuch, 45’s nominee to fill the stolen Supreme Court seat for which President Obama nominated Merrick Garland, the guy all of the Republicans refused to talk to. With the Huff Post describing Gorsuch’s responses as a “steady stream of non-answers,” resentment among Democrats over GOP treatment of Merrick Garland still fresh, and a load of philosophical concerns over trends of the Roberts Court, no one could say the hearings went smoothly. On Thursday, Minority Leader Chuck Schumer threatened to filibuster the nomination and urged his fellow senators to follow suit. An air of inevitability hangs over the process, however, since filibustering is the only hope for a defeat and so far Schumer’s bandwagon is not filling rapidly. The committee is expected to vote on April 3 and the full senate sometime around mid-April.
  8. The one piece of good news this week came Friday afternoon, following a week of desperate pleas by Paul Ryan for the necessary 216 votes to send the American Care Act–or ACHA–on to the senate, threats by 45 of repercussions for Republicans who would choose to vote against the bill, demands by 45 for a Friday vote in spite of the flaws in the bill and the lack of time to make effective revisions, and the overall mania that consumed our capital in anticipation of the first vote on a major Trump campaign promise. Ryan conceded defeat on Friday afternoon and chose to withdraw the bill rather than suffer the further embarrassment and political damage of a failed vote. Yay, one for us!!!
  9. And now that the ACHA is dead, let the Trump spin begin! The whole problem, he says, is that they had no Democrat support. If those darned Dems hadn’t been so stubborn, it could have happened, because Trump and Company had “a very, very tight margin—so, so close”; but they “just couldn’t get there” because no Dems were willing to rob 24,000,000 people of their health insurance. Imagine that! Not a single Democrat would vote to make millions of families miserable and helpless. Now, according to 45, they’re just going to “sit back and watch Obamacare explode”; and the Liar-in-Chief says it’s already exploding, so they won’t have long to wait. And after it explodes, the Republicans will create something “great” to take its place; never mind that they’ve already been working on it for 8 years and couldn’t pass the bill they wrote. Once again displaying his utter lack of understanding of how things work—or how anything works—45 forgot to mention what will happen during the gap between the explosion and the time the GOP finally comes up with this much-anticipated “great” plan. After all, what’s really important is winning, not helping sick people.
  10. The week ended with both a champagne celebration as the AHCA crashed and burned and the discouraging announcement that the administration has given the go-ahead for the Keystone XL pipeline: “’TransCanada will finally be allowed to complete this long overdue project with efficiency and with speed,’ Trump said. ‘The fact is that this $8 billion in investment in American energy was delayed for so long demonstrates how our government has too often failed its citizens and companies over the past long period of time.’”That reverses Obama’s rejection of the pipeline in 2015 on the grounds that “it was not in the national interest and that approving it would undercut the country’s leading role combating climate change.” Once again, big business trumps environmental protection.

Tweet of the Week goes to Senator Bob Menendez: “Hey Republicans, don’t worry, that burn is covered under the Affordable Care Act.”

I think we can expect Week 10 to include a lot of Trump tweet storms, finger pointing, and more lies as 45 tries to cover his large posterior after his humiliating defeat. He’ll probably even throw a couple more “rallies” to restore his wounded ego and feel some love. One thing is certain: It WON’T be boring!

Keep fighting the good fight! The AHCA withdrawal was a “yuge” victory, but the battle is far from over. Keep the calls and letters going! See you next week!

 

Categories
Politics Religion

Christless Christianity and Modern Politics

According to reliable statistics, 81% of white American evangelicals, in the year 2016, used their cherished voting right to help elect Donald Trump to the office of POTUS. I don’t have statistics to show how many of those who helped elect the boy president continue to support him, but it’s my personal observation that there’s little buyers’ remorse among the group and that they continue not only to support but to defend him and his execrable actions since assuming office on January 20, 2017. In the words of The Bard, evangelicals supporting and defending a person who in no way  embodies their professed beliefs is “like sweet bells jangled, out of tune and harsh” (Hamlet Act 3 Scene 1).

How did this happen? “Christians” who profess to believe in the Bible as a literal, inerrant, God-breathed guidebook for the human race elected a thrice-married, adultery-committing, foul-mouthed, uncharitable , lying, swindling, Putin-loving, crotch-grabbing, over-sized child who shows little evidence of having read their Bible and no evidence of making any attempt to live by its precepts.

It’s a fair assertion that without the votes of white evangelicals, Donald Trump would not be sitting in the Oval Office today, so it’s also fair to ask how on earth hundreds of thousands of people would abdicate every belief which they profess to hold dear to help elect someone who is the antithesis of those beliefs. When the alt-right and the Christian right are on the same page, it’s clear that something is rotten in the state of Christendom.

Documentation for much of my information on this subject is personal experience. I was raised in the evangelical tradition; so I have first-hand knowledge of the thinking, beliefs, and lifestyles of the group. It’s also important to note that although all evangelicals profess to be Christians, not all Christians are evangelicals. The evangelical, also known as fundamentalist, tradition exists within mainstream denominations—with heavy concentration in the various Baptist groups—but they are right of center within their denominational theologies.

Most of us would have little reason to care what this subset of Christianity is up to or why they think the way they do were it not for their increasing influence on politics; and since their political actions affect us all, we have good reason to spend a little time delving into how the evangelical mind works because that thinking has played a large role in creating the situation that currently threatens the stability and future of our nation. Their political clout began with the merger between evangelicalism and the Republican Party, which happened in the 1980s. During my youth, I was consistently told that Christians should stay out of politics; church was church, and government was government.

Two changes have occurred, however, over the last several decades. First, there is little distinction in the evangelical mind between religious beliefs and political or philosophical positions. When evangelicals take a position on any subject, it becomes a part of their theology. Take climate change as a prime example. Evangelicals I know scoff at the scientific evidence proving climate change is real and is being caused by human activity as if those who do believe the findings of science are infidels. Second, their beliefs have become more and more detached from the Bible, which they claim as their infallible guide. The result is a systematic theology which is based on cherry-picked parts of the Bible but which stands in direct contradiction to the book’s broad themes and consistent principles.

To win the vote of an evangelical Republican, one need only state opposition to two things: abortion and homosexuality. Both are, in their view, anti-biblical (though they’re rarely mentioned in the Scriptures and never in the way they are cited) and are core issues which allow no room for negotiation. Crotch grabbing and Russia colluding are not related to those two core issues; therefore, crotch grabbing and Russia colluding become tangential subjects, dismissed as annoying obstacles to pursuing their goals of revoking Roe v. Wade and marriage equality. Never mind that the Bible, in its wholeness, says far more related to sexual assault than to abortion or homosexuality, because I daresay most of these avowed adherents to “the whole Word of God” have never read far beyond the cherry pickings which are used as the underpinnings of their beliefs.

A third subject necessary to an understanding of the Christians who elect, support, and defend a morally degenerate “president” is something called the “Rapture,” which they confuse with the second coming of Christ. Theories on how the world will end have abounded ever since the world began. Evangelicals believe that the end of time will be initiated by an appearance of Jesus Christ in the clouds. Jesus will take all of the people who believe the way they believe out of the world, bodily, and whisk them off to heaven in order to spare them from the devastation and destruction about to be wreaked upon the earth. Once the Christians are safely out of the way, the antichrist will take over and things will get really grim for 7 years. At the end of that time, Jesus will establish a long period of peace on the earth. There’s lots more to it, but that’s the short course.

The reward for believing as they do and for accepting the ridicule of those who don’t believe as they do is that they will in the end be vindicated. Jesus will come down and stick it to all of those critics, and the whole of humanity will have to admit that the evangelicals were right all along. They will also be the chosen few who will get to spend eternity in heaven, while doubters will burn (literally) in hell: a great pit filled with “fire and brimstone.”

This belief is supported by the usual string of cherries picked from various parts of the Bible, but the exclusivity of it gives the “true believers” privileged status. They are “in this world but not of this world.” Their other-worldly view allows them to detach themselves from such concerns as whether mentally ill people buy guns or the “president” likes to sexually assault women or a foreign adversary interfered in our presidential election on behalf of the guy who won. All that is important in their view is how these things fit into the “prophecies” of the Book of Revelation, which is probably the most misinterpreted book in all of the 66 of the Bible.

Any world event, however negative to those who live in the real world, is seen through the evangelical glasses only in terms of what it contributes to the fulfillment of those so-called prophecies. So it is possible to see Donald Trump as having been appointed by God, because God is going to use Trump to advance God’s plan of bringing God’s kingdom to Earth. I have personally been told that I needn’t worry too much about concerns for the future, because Jesus is going to come back before those things happen anyway.

Jessica Rettig, in an article titled “The Religious Ties of the Republican Party,” interviews Daniel Williams who explains the history of the merger between religious conservatives and the Republican Party. According to Williams, who also wrote the book God’s Own Party: the Making of the Christian Right, conservative Christians first latched onto the GOP during the 1970s. Although some movement was seen during the Eisenhower years, the major momentum occurred during the Nixon and Reagan eras. Since “the evangelicals were looking for a party that would champion what they viewed as moral values and their interests in the Cold War and the Republican Party was also looking for potential voters,” it was so to speak a marriage made in heaven: win-win. Williams goes on to explain how both the Cold War and opposition to Islam strengthened the political power of Christian evangelicals. They saw the federal government as “acting in the interests of God by fighting against communism internationally and by rooting out communist subversives within the country.” He adds, “In many ways, the war on terror became the new Cold War for evangelicals.”

Jessica Rettig wrote her article in 2010. More recently, Sarah Posner published an article titled “Amazing Disgrace” on March 20, 2017. Posner begins by posing the question “How did Donald Trump—a thrice-married, biblically illiterate sexual predator—hijack the religious right?” Well, that’s just what we’ve been wondering! Rettig says that Russell Moore, “a prominent leader in the Southern Baptist Convention,” began noticing the evangelical trend toward Trump even while many still dismissed Trump’s candidacy as a bad joke. Although Moore “had positioned himself as the face of the ‘new’ religious right,” he of course understood the old religious right’s mindset. In his book Engaging the Culture without Losing the Gospel, Moore writes, “The church of Jesus Christ ought to be the last people to fall for hucksters and demagogues. But too often we do.”

Posner goes on to say,

“As Trump continued gaining ground in the polls, Moore began to realize that the campaign represented nothing short of a battle for the soul of the Christian right. By backing Trump, white evangelicals were playing into the hands of a new, alt-right version of Christianity—a sprawling coalition of white nationalists, old-school Confederates, neo-Nazis, Islamophobes, and social-media propagandists who viewed the religious right, first and foremost, as a vehicle for white supremacy.”

In Posner’s own words, “The religious right—which for decades has grounded its political appeal in moral ‘values’ such as ‘life’ and ‘family’ and ‘religious freedom’—has effectively become a subsidiary of the alt-right, yoked to Trump’s white nationalist agenda.” Once again, we’re looking at the disconnect between the avowed adherence to the Bible as the “infallible, inerrant, inspired Word of God” and the failure to understand and practice even the most basic precepts of that book. The alt-right represents human nature at its most degraded, yet these “Christians” have philosophically joined hands with that movement. In the world of oxymorons, nothing is more extremely ironic than “alt-right Christians.” Yet they’re real and they walk among us.

Opposition to Roe v. Wade has for a generation been recognized as what Albert Mohler calls “the catalyst for the moral revolution within evangelicalism.” Sarah Posner argues, however, that abortion was not the issue responsible for the creation of the religious right; instead, according to Posner, it was the IRS’s revoking of the tax-exempt status for Bob Jones University and other institutions that refused to admit non-whites, which happened in the late 1970s and early 1980s. Posner says, “It was the government’s actions against segregated schools, not the legalization of abortion, that ‘enraged the Christian community,’ Moral Majority co-founder Paul Weyrich has acknowledged.”

Frank Schaeffer Jr., in his 2007 book Crazy for God, agrees that abortion was not immediately a concern for evangelicals; it was only after certain influential leaders “stirred them up over the issue” that evangelicals became politicized. Schaeffer argues that evangelicals have been “played for suckers” by high-profile leaders who have little genuine spirituality and much desire for power.

Sarah Posner writes this stunning statement: “That’s why white evangelicals were the key to Trump’s victory—they provided the numbers that the alt-right lacks. The alt-right supplied Trump with his agenda; the Christian right supplied him with his votes.”

If Sarah Posner and others are correct, the driving force behind the Christian right’s theology and politics is not really abortion or homosexuality—as they say—but deep-rooted racism and white supremacy. Here are a few facts:

“According to an exit poll of Republican voters in the South Carolina primary, evangelicals were much more likely to support banning Muslims from the United States, creating a database of Muslim citizens, and flying the Confederate flag at the state capitol. Thirty-eight percent of evangelicals told pollsters that they wished the South had won the Civil War—more than twice the number of nonevangelicals who held that view.”

Matthew MacWilliams is the author of articles in which he reports the results of his own research into traits which predict support of Donald Trump. He found the usual factors of race, income, and education levels; but those were insignificant compared to the “single statistically significant variable . . . authoritarianism.”

Although authoritarians can be found in all political parties, geographic areas, occupations, and religions, authoritarianism is at the very core of the evangelical religious philosophy; and it helps to explain the disconnect between their avowed adherence to the Bible and the reality of their anti-biblical attitudes and practices. For example, their concern for life is belied by resistance to reasonable gun control and unconcern for the poor—the people Jesus called “the least of these” and said that those who serve them are serving him.

In truth, many evangelicals follow strong leaders more than they directly follow the teachings of Scripture. To name a few of those leaders, James Dobson, Jerry Falwell Sr. and Jr., Rick Warren, Franklin Graham, Bill Hybels, Joyce Meyer, Tim and Beverly LaHaye, and Beth Moore are far more likely to influence the beliefs and practices of evangelicals than is their own personal reading and interpretation of the Bible. In fact, their interpretation of the Bible has most likely been informed by one or more of those people and others who could be listed. And no evangelical with a normal human need to be accepted within one’s tribe would dare contradict the teachings and interpretations of their esteemed leaders.

If authoritarianism is indeed the main common denominator among Trump supporters, it is no longer a surprise to see evangelicals on that list. And there is no way to reason with this group, because in their minds all of their information comes directly from God, they are privy to things the rest of us who don’t enjoy VIP status are not, their leaders hold god-like authority, and then there’s the whole thing about Jesus coming back to wipe out everyone except them and show the rest of us that we’re the ones who’ve been wrong the whole time.

To repeat, all evangelicals profess to be Christians, but not all Christians are evangelicals, and it is unfair to judge the whole lot of us by the actions of that one group. Micah 6:8 sums up Christianity for me:

“He has told you, O mortal, what is good;
and what does the Lord require of you
but to do justice, and to love kindness,
and to walk humbly with your God?”

I still have some work to do; but I’m going to keep striving for justice, kindness, and a humble walk with God and let the fundies (fundamentalists) have their rules and condemnation.

As for what all of this means to the political future of our country, the mergers between evangelicalism and the Republican Party and between evangelicalism and the alt-right mean that this group of “Christians” will continue to wield political influence for the foreseeable future. I wish I could offer a solution, but that’s above my level of influence. All I can say is that understanding a problem is key to addressing it, so I hope this article sheds a little light that may help us as we go forward.

 

PLEASE NOTE: My purpose in writing this article was not to decide the genuineness of anyone’s Christianity; faith is a private matter, so other people’s faith or lack thereof doesn’t affect me and is therefore none of my business. It’s not my job to pass judgment on others, even though some others have passed the judgment that I am not a “real” Christian. My only purpose was to examine the political influence of a large group of my fellow citizens, because their influence on governmental affairs does affect me and IS my business. The truth is that without this group, we would not have the “president” we now have. That means they’ve affected all of our lives, whether we’re mainstream Christians, fundamentalists, or atheists. And that’s a scary reality.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Categories
Politics

Trump’s Top Ten Travesties, Week 8

Swamp News

Microwaves, budgets, bans, ultimatums, health care, and the ubiquitous lies—it’s been a wild ride through The Swamp this week! FYI, make a note to yourself that some dictionary definitions are under revision. “Wiretapping” now “covers a lot of different things,” according to Trump and means “broadly surveillance and other activities,” according to lexicographer Sean Spicer. “Mercy” also has new definitions, which are not yet clear, but Paul Ryan will keep us up to date on that during the coming months. It takes a while for print dictionaries to reflect popular usage, so you’ll want to remember these in order to be in the know on what’s happening in The Swamp.

Here’s Week 8 at a glance:

  1. On Saturday, the House Intelligence Committee gave Trump the ultimatum to put up or shut up about his wiretapping claims, and his deadline was Monday. Well, as expected, Trump neither put up nor shut up. At the Monday press briefing, Sean Spicer did his usual imitation of a pretzel, saying Trump was referring to surveillance in general, not wiretapping specifically, and that he was referring to the administration, not just Obama—even though the last of the three tweets calls Obama a “bad (or sick) guy.” During subsequent press conferences this week, Spicer has called attention to the quotation marks around “wires tapped” and “wire tapping” in the first two tweets as evidence that a broader interpretation of the terms was intended.
  2. Opposition to the Republicans’ proposed replacement for the Affordable Care Act—the American Health Care Act, or AHCA—continues to mount, with Democrats in congress forming a solid block against the bill and an increasing number of Republicans joining the opposition. Paul Ryan can’t afford to lose more than 21 Republican votes to have any hope of passing the bill; and as of mid-week, 37 Republicans are “publicly expressing grave concerns,” according to the Washington Also, 12 Republican senators have criticized the bill, so even if Ryan manages to sway votes in the House, it seems unlikely to pass the Senate. This would, of course, be good news if we were not already shell shocked by the upsets of the past year and the grim knowledge that the most unlikely things can happen. You know, like electing a fascist as “president.”
  3. On Monday afternoon, the Congressional Budget Office released its anticipated report on the AHCA, and it contained no good news. According to the report, 14 million Americans who currently have health care would become uninsured by 2018, 21 million by 2020, and 24 million by 2026. This report has reinforced the perception that the AHCA is really a budget plan masquerading as health care because of the effects its passage would have on the federal economy. The CBO estimates that the bill would greatly reduce federal deficits over the next decade, with the majority of the savings coming from scaling back Medicaid and eliminating the ACA’s subsidies for nongroup health insurance.
  4. On Tuesday, Rachel Maddow showed us the first two pages of Trump’s federal tax returns ever to be publicly revealed. It wasn’t much, just the summary pages of his 2005 return, which was mailed anonymously to investigative reporter David Cay Johnston. Without the attachments, the two summary pages don’t tell us a whole heck of a lot; but it’s a start, and Rachel Maddow and others are issuing an open invitation for more leaks.
  5. On Wednesday, just hours from the time Trump’s second travel ban was set to take effect, two federal judges—one in Hawaii, one in Maryland—ruled to block enactment of the order. The judges cited Trump’s own words from the campaign, in which he emphatically promised to ban all Muslims. According to the judges, those words belie his current assertions that this ban has nothing to do with religion. Never one to be deterred by facts and details, Trump has vowed to take his fight all the way to the Supreme Court if necessary. See you in court, Donald!
  6. On Thursday, the White House released the 2017 budget outline, which didn’t offer too many surprises but which underscored the depth of ignorance, hypocrisy, and outright cruelty that dominates Trump World. The $1.1 trillion dollar budget outline proposes increasing defense spending by $54 billion and paying for that increase by reducing allotments for the State Department, the EPA, and the Department of Housing and Urban Development. In addition to these reductions, other federally funded programs would be eliminated: Public Broadcasting, the National Endowment for the Arts, and other “nonessentials.” In the most obscene proposal possibly ever included in a federal budget, the Community Development Block Program, which operates Meals on Wheels, would be eliminated because the program “has not demonstrated results.” And then White House Budget Director Mick Mulvaney called this compassionate. (Add “compassionate” to your list of words to be updated in the next dictionary revision.) Thursday night on MSNBC, Tom Perez stated emphatically, “Budgets are moral documents.” I agree, and any “president” who expects tax payers to fund his golf weekends and maintain two separate residences for his family but who’s okay with cutting out meals for homebound seniors is unspeakably immoral.
  7. On Thursday, after a two-week wild-goose chase, the Senate Intelligence Committee—along with the speaker of the House and the ranking Democrat on the committee– issued a statement that they’ve seen no evidence to support Trump’s ridiculous claim that President Obama ordered a wiretap on Trump Tower during the 2016 campaign. Never one to be deterred by pesky facts, however, Trump has not retracted the claim; and his faithful lackey Sean Spicer gave a particularly contentious press briefing in which he valiantly attempted once again to defend the indefensible. CNN’s Jim Acosta was the casualty in this week’s battle with the people’s enemy. Friday update: Add the UK to the list of countries the Trump administration has now p—ed off. Desperate to protect himself, Trump suggested that Obama may have had UK’s GCHQ help him out with his alleged surveillance of Trump. Theresa May is not amused and has said through her spokesman that the claims are ridiculous and should be ignored.
  8. Michael Flynn was back in the headlines on Thursday, not that he ever went very far away. We’ve learned that he raked in a cool nearly $70 million from Russian speaking engagements and other services in the months immediately preceding the 2016 election. It’s important to note that even before Flynn became a member of Trump’s team or was appointed as his national security adviser, as a U. S. military officer, Flynn was prohibited from accepting gifts from foreign governments.
  9. Trump threw himself another love fest on Wednesday of this week, this time in Nashville, Tennessee. Still campaigning more than four months after winning the election? He obviously is better at campaigning than at governing, so why not? And there’s nothing like the adulation of a chanting, screaming crowd to put the spring back in your step after a week of defeats and criticism by those mean media people. He told the crowd that the judge’s order blocking his second travel ban makes us “look weak,” that the first ban was better anyway and is the one he really wants to enforce, that he wants to “cut the hell out of taxes,” and that the “catastrophic” Obamacare “is gone.” And just for old times’ sake, he attacked Hillary Clinton, and the crowd gratified him with the familiar chant “Lock her up!” I guess this is that presidential behavior we’ve been hearing about that was hiding inside him all along, waiting for the appropriate time to make the pivot.
  10. Then just as the tumultuous week was screeching toward a close, we learned on Friday afternoon that Tom Price, head of the Department of Health and Human Services, “came under scrutiny during his confirmation hearings for investments he made while serving in Congress” (Huffington Post). The Huff Post article goes on to say that he “traded hundreds of thousands of dollars’ worth of shares in health-related companies, even as he voted on and sponsored legislation affecting the industry.” These actions may have violated the STOCK Act of 2012 as well as the Emoluments Clause of the constitution. Oh, and guess who was investigating Price’s case. Remember Preet Bharara, the U. S. attorney Trump fired last week? Yeah, him.

One of the more disturbing aspects of the current Republican insanity is their insistence that our country must be returned to its roots as a Christian nation. Those of us who stayed awake during history class know that the United States has never been a theocracy and that, in fact, our founders took care to prevent the establishment of a state religion by writing the Establishment Clause into the first amendment to our constitution. But even if we cut the Repubs a little slack on their recall of history,  one would think that anyone attempting to create a “Christian nation” would first take the trouble to find out what Christianity is. Apparently that’s another of those words whose definition is currently in flux, because taking meals away from homebound seniors, taking health care away from people who do the most grueling work but barely make a living, and cutting funding for Planned Parenthood and the EPA (which takes care of things like clean water) doesn’t strike me as “caring for the least of these.” Paul Ryan’s “mercy” is what many of us would call cruelty, depravity, and moral corruption.

Stay strong! Make your voice heard! This is what it means to be Americans.

Categories
Politics

Trump’s Top Ten Travesties, Week Six

This Week’s Edition of the Swamp News

Chaos in The Swamp continues into its sixth week. The slightly better news of the week is that Kellyanne Conway was, for the most part, missing from it. That’s not to say, however, that she didn’t get her usual share of notoriety, this time resulting from a shot by the White House photographer of her sitting in an impressive yoga pose on the Oval Office sofa while the “president” and a crowd of honored guests—leaders of our country’s historically black colleges and universities—were standing around the desk. She looked more like a teenager texting her BFFs from Daddy’s office than a top aide to the president of the United States. Though the outrage over her lack of decorum may seem petty, I don’t have to tell you what my mother would have done had she seen me in such an unseemly position because you’re probably imagining your own mother’s reaction. Enough said.

On to the main events:

  1. On Saturday, the day after the White House had blocked major news organizations from attending a briefing, Trump announced via his usual communication outlet—Twitter—that he will not attend this year’s White House Correspondents’ Association Dinner: “I will not be attending the White House Correspondents’ Association Dinner this year. Please wish everyone well and have a great evening!”So there! Take that, media! I owe you no explanation or courteous chitchat; I’m just staying away. The last president to miss the annual event was Ronald Reagan who did, however, offer an excuse: it was 1981 and he was recovering from bullet wounds received in the attempt to assassinate him. We can only hope Alec Baldwin will accept the suggestion of replacing Trump at the event.
  2. In yet another blatant display of his deep ignorance, Trump declared in exasperation on Monday: “Nobody knew health care could be so complicated.” This followed an announcement that the Republicans have a “solution” in hand that is “really really I think very good” but that “it’s an unbelievably complex subject.” Um, I think what you meant to say, Donald, is “Everybody on the planet except me and a few Republican lawmakers fully understand the complexities of health care and government’s role in it; and we might have known, too, if trashing our previous president’s legacy were not far more important to us than providing lifesaving care to our citizens.” If health care were easy, we’d have had the perfect plan in place decades ago.
  3. In news which comes as no surprise to anyone, Jeff Sessions—our newly anointed Attorney General—may have lied under oath regarding his contacts with Russian officials in the days just preceding the 2016 election. What we now know for sure, according to the Washington Post, is (1) Sessions had two conversations with the Russian ambassador to the U.S. just before the election and (2) he twice denied the contact to his questioners during his January confirmation hearings. Equally unsurprising is the fact that his boss, DJT, is denying Sessions has committed any wrongdoing. Yet many members of congress do not share Trump’s confidence and are calling for Sessions’ resignation, which of course he is unlikely to tender; but he has agreed to recuse himself from the ongoing DOJ investigation into the scope of Russia’s influence on the election.
  4. Whew! And it’s still only Tuesday. Tuesday was the highlight of Week 6 in The Swamp. That evening, Trump gave his first address to a joint session of congress, and it was Reality TV at its finest. On the positive side, 45 managed to give a whole one-hour speech using a moderate tone, without cursing, without calling anyone a childish name, and without directly attacking anyone personally. On the less positive side, he spoke in glowing terms about the future of America (in sharp contrast to the doom-and-gloom talk of American carnage in his inaugural address) yet, as is his habit, forgot to add any specific plans or strategies for implementing that rosy vision. In other words, it was just more empty talk. And in the crowning moment, he recognized the widow of Navy Seal Ryan Owens who died in Trump’s botched raid in Yemen and—in the opinion of many, including me—exploited her in order to defend himself and deny responsibility for Owens’s death. The most surreal part of the evening was the media’s response to the speech: gushing over the “presidential” behavior, warning skeptics that we’d better look out now because there’s a new Donnie in town. So much more to say about that evening but so little space. I move on.
  5. CNN gave us a first glimpse of Trump’s proposed budget plan, which shows a 10% hike in military spending, the cost of which is to be covered by deep cuts to other departments, with the State Department and the Environmental Protection Agency taking especially hard hits. Since spending always reflects values and priorities (I want those super-cute shoes, but the kids need school supplies, so I’ll forgo the shoes this week), a president’s budget is a blueprint for shaping the government he/she wishes to create. And it’s no surprise that Trump’s priorities strike many of us as skewed.
  6. Politico and other outlets have reported that the cuts to the EPA’s budget will be about 25%, accompanied by a 20% reduction in staffing. Environmental concerns which will not be funded are climate change initiatives and programs aimed at preventing water and air pollution, including lead contamination. So at least the children in Flint won’t have to die from enemy attacks; they’ll be killed by their own “president.”
  7. Robert Reich reports: “The number of close Trump associates who have been accused of having undisclosed contact with Russian agents, or who have reportedly been investigated by the F.I., now stands at 7.” He listed Paul Manafort, Michael Cohen, Roger Stone, Carter Page, Michael Flynn, Jeff Sessions, and Jared Kushner. Reich raises the questions why there were so many and such frequent contacts and why the entire campaign and administration felt compelled to deny and conceal the contacts.
  8. CNN reported on Thursday, March 2: “President Donald Trump’s transition team, days before he took office, nixed plans for an orientation class that would have prepared political appointees and White House staff for a series of ethical and legal issues, documents provided to CNN show. The ethics program proposed by the General Services Administration would have helped White House staff and political appointees get through Senate confirmation hearings, work with Congress and corresponding agencies and comply with laws and executive orders — all issues Trump nominees and staff have confronted during their first six weeks in office.” HA! We don’t need no stinking ethics training! We have our own standards, thank you very much.
  9. On Tuesday, Trump signed a bill reversing the Obama administration’s effort to tighten background checks to keep guns out of the hands of unstable people. Thanks to Trump’s generous measure, people who “receive government checks for being mentally disabled and others who have been deemed unable to handle their own financial affairs to the FBI office that runs the national background check database” (around 75,000 in all) can once again purchase firearms. Sleep tight!
  10. And finally, on Friday the 3rd, we learned that Mike Pence used a private email server to conduct state business during his tenure as Governor of Indiana. Gee, why does that sound so familiar? Oh, yes, that’s the same thing Hillary Clinton did and the Republicans lost their minds over it. But relax; Pence says his case was entirely different. No comparison at all. Nothing to see here, folks. Just move along.

In an interesting footnote to this colorful week, Trump made himself a report card. Back in our day, report cards were issued every six weeks, so I suppose it’s appropriate. He awarded himself an A+ for effort, an A for achievement, and a C or C+ for messaging. Yet instead of working to improve the message, he continues to shoot the messenger: the press, whom he has named “the enemy of the people.”

Looks like we’re going to have to wait another week for the swamp draining to begin. I’m not holding my breath.

 

Categories
In the News Politics

Is It Fake? Or Can You Not Handle the Truth?

There’s a name for sensational information and opinion sources posing as news: we call them “fake news.” A writer who identifies as Seminole Democrat offers this definition of the term: “’Fake News’ is a very real thing. It is the publication of hoaxes, propaganda, and disinformation purporting to be real news with the deliberate intent to mislead. Many fake news websites originate from Russia, Macedonia, and Romania” (“Media Bites Back,” The Daily Sentinel).

Anyone who has been marginally conscious during the last month knows one thing above all else about our new “president”: He HATES the media. His hatred extends to any news source, any reporter, and any writing which does not feed his gargantuan ego. He was so discouraged after his first four weeks in office that he felt it necessary to throw himself a great big love fest in Florida, attended by about 9000 enthusiastic rally goers who gave his spirits just the lift they needed.

Having a name for a phenomenon which is clearly a problem is good; readers need to distinguish between what is factual news and what is propaganda, and labels help us sort things out. However, Trump’s media war and his irresponsible attacks on the free press have rendered the term meaningless and left us once again without clear guidelines on what to believe and what to reject in the flood of information we encounter each day. Trump latched onto the term “fake news” like it was a stack of $100 bills and turned it into a convenient slur for any reports that cast him in an unfavorable light, of which there have been plenty.

To be fair, probably everyone reading this article has at some time criticized the media and blamed them for all that is wrong in the world. It’s a national pastime. I’ve done it. So why is it an emergency when the “president” does the same thing? Well, because he’s not really doing the same thing. Most of us have a limited audience for our rantings: a dinner party perhaps, an action group, blog readers, social media friends, students. But when the president speaks, the whole world is listening; and his words shape thoughts, opinions, attitudes, policies, and alliances or conflicts. Our nation’s chief executive is expected to speak publicly with intelligence, judgment, and diplomacy. That’s what we mean when we talk about being presidential, and those who are still expecting this “president” to pivot to presidential behavior are at best naïve.

Much as we may occasionally disdain the media, we live with the fact that without a free press there can be no democracy. What’s the old saying? Can’t live with them, can’t live without them. The press is sometimes referred to as the Fourth Estate. Thomas Carlyle, in his book On Heroes and Hero Worship, attributes the origin of the term to Edmund Burke: “Burke said there were Three Estates in Parliament; but, in the Reporters’ Gallery yonder, there sat a Fourth Estate more important far than they all.” The three estates of Parliament to which Burke refers were the Lords Spiritual (the clergy), the Lords Temporal (the nobility), and the Commons (the commoners).

Visualize that image: Three estates were joined in the governing body, each with a voice in the political process. Removed from that triad was the fourth estate: observing, reporting, but without a direct voice in the political process. They were politically independent and were expected to speak the truth to their readers; so while the other three estates’ purview was politics, the purview of the fourth estate was truth. The fourth estate was said to be “more important far than they all” because they act as the liaison between the government and the governed. Though they have no voice in government, their voice to the governed is invaluable.

Their presence acts as another check on the governing body, providing incentive to behave ethically or face the consequence of having their transgressions made known to the public. That’s not an enviable assignment. It takes courage and conviction to report honestly and hold people accountable, knowing that one’s honesty is not going to be appreciated by those being reported on. Nonetheless, a free and independent press is at the core of any democracy.

Governments that want to shun accountability and transparency and to conduct their operations in secret make the press their first target. Of all the appalling things Trump has done during his campaign and during the first five weeks of his “presidency,” his war on the media is the most significant. He has, in the minds of his followers, so delegitimized the press that the followers will accept his lies as truth and reject the press’s truth as lies. This is a very dangerous situation, and few members of our current congress are going to do anything about it. It’s up to each of us to be informed, to be willing to call a lie a lie every time we hear one, and to stand in solidarity with the honest journalists who devote their lives to bringing us the truth.

To begin, we have to sharpen our critical thinking skills. There really is fake news, and there really is honest journalism. Believing everything one reads and rejecting everything one reads are equally naïve, lazy, and dangerous; knowing what to believe and what to reject is not for the mentally slothful. Let’s look at a completely non-political example to illustrate the differences.

Imagine that you’re 12 years old, and your parents have left you in your grandparents’ care for the day. Your grandparents instruct you at the beginning of the day that you may play unattended, but you must stay close to the house so that they can know where you are at all times. You agree and head outside. After a while, you meet some of the neighborhood kids who join you in your activities; and soon they invite you to go with them to hang out at their house and swim in their pool. That sounds like fun, so you go. An hour later, when you return, your grandparents are upset because they have been unable to find you and have been worried. Because of the safety factor (they don’t know the people whose house you visited) and the trust issue (you didn’t do what you agreed to do), they decide your parents should be informed.

Scenario One: Fake News

You really didn’t do any of this; but your grandparents are still a little miffed at you over something you did the last time you visited, so they fabricate a story for the sole purpose of getting you into trouble with your parents. Or perhaps your grandma went out to check on you, couldn’t see you for a few minutes because you were riding around the block on your bike, freaked out, and then exaggerated and embellished the story to teach you a lesson.

Scenario Two: Biased News

Your grandparents relate the facts exactly as they happened but focus on the fact that the people you visited are a different ethnicity or religion than your family is. They don’t lie, but they seem more concerned about the ethnic or religious difference than they do about the relevant factors of safety and trust.

Scenario Three: Objective Journalism

Your grandparents relate only the facts, leaving your parents to make their own decision about the gravity of the offense and what if any consequences you should incur.

Obviously the first scenario should never happen. It’s mean, unethical, and destructive. Just as obviously, the third scenario is the ideal; however, we all know that kind of reporting is probably the least common these days. The second scenario seems to be the most common. The important distinction, though, is that neither the second nor the third scenario is fake news. Both types report the facts, and a critical reader or listener can usually detect the bias and disregard it. Because fake news is either pure fiction or fiction built around a kernel of truth, and because one of the disturbing realities of our time is the low regard for fact and the high regard for anything that reinforces our previously held opinions, and because propaganda is composed with the intent to deceive, fake news is not so easily detected or rejected.

Although biased news sources attempt to influence readers toward a particular slant on the truth, fake news sources disregard truth altogether. They are operated for the sole purpose of spreading misinformation and propaganda—sometimes favoring the right, sometimes the left. They are characterized by sensational, misleading, and often downright dishonest headlines. The writers make no pretense of having vetted their information, and their readers do not require adherence to journalistic standards of investigation, use of primary sources, and vetting of sources and evidence. These sites exist only to reinforce the prejudices of their readers; and again, some are left and some are right.

CNN is not fake news; and even though I prefer CNN over Fox, I will say that Fox is not fake news. CNN leans a little left, and Fox leans a lot right, but both employ legitimate journalists who report documented information from different points of view. And calling the New York Times, one of our country’s most respected newspapers since 1851, “fake news” is just absurd! I would add that not all of those who host shows on Fox are “legitimate journalists”; but they offer opinions and would, in think, be most accurately categorized as talk shows. Talk shows are not fake news; they are sources of opinion, discussion, and entertainment and should be recognized as such.

So when DJT cries “fake news,” is the news really fake, or can the thin-skinned orange guy just not handle the truth? Well, you know what I think; and if you’ve read this far, you probably agree. Let’s all scream it together: “You can’t handle the truth, Donald!”

Here is CNN’s Don Lemon explaining to a Trump surrogate the definition of fake news:

Trump’s only defense is revenge; when you don’t have intellect, class, or integrity, all you can do is hit back at any perceived opponent. Our (yours and my) best defense, however, is knowledge. Here’s a good link recommended by one of my librarian friends on how to know the difference between fake news and objective or biased journalism: http://blogs.ifla.org/…/01/How-to-Spot-Fake-News-1.jpg

Meanwhile, Trump’s war against the media will go on. In his most shocking and egregious battle so far in that war, his administration barred news organizations from attending a White House briefing session conducted by press secretary Sean Spicer on Friday, February 24. Journalists from The New York Times, CNN, the LA Times, and Politico were told that they could not enter the briefing room because they were “not on the list.” Breitbart News was, of course, among the select groups granted admission. The New York Times’ executive editor said, “Nothing like this has ever happened at the White House in our long history of covering multiple administrations of different parties.”

Never happened before. That makes this decision an historic moment. Dan Rather calls it an emergency:

The time for normalizing, dissembling, and explaining away Donald Trump has long since passed. The barring of respected journalistic outlets from the White House briefing is so far beyond the norms and traditions that have governed this republic for generations, that they must be seen as a real and present threat to our democracy. These are the dangers presidents are supposed to protect against, not create.

For all who excused Mr. Trump’s rhetoric in the campaign as just talk, the reckoning has come.  . .  . What are you going to do about it? Do you maintain that an Administration that seeks to subvert the protections of our Constitution is fit to rule unchecked? Or fit to rule at all?

This is an emergency that can no longer be placed solely at the feet of President Trump, or even the Trump Administration. This is a moment of judgment for everyone who willingly remains silent. It is gut check time, for those in a position of power, and for the nation.

Jen Psaki, who held various positions related to communications during the Obama administration, sums it up well:

The Trump administration wants to continue to delegitimize institutions like the mainstream media. The more they can confuse the lines between facts and truth, legitimate and illegitimate sources of information, the more they will be able to brainwash the small segment of the public they care about reaching.

Because the way an administration interacts with the free press in the United States, through briefings and access to reporters — even those who have reported unflattering, harsh and sometimes unfair stories — sends a message to the rest of the world about how much we value the freedom of the press.

Knowledge is power. Is it fake, is it factual but biased, or is it factual and objective? Know before you share. Our lives depend on it.

 

Categories
Politics Uncategorized

Trump’s Top Ten Travesties, Week Four

Trump’s Top Ten Travesties, Week 4

Well, I’d like to report that our “president” has made progress on his promise to drain the swamp, but in fact, those gators are getting fatter by the day. This week’s Swamp News includes the following events:

  1. Trump fired Michael Flynn, his National Security Adviser, after evidence of his phone calls with Russian Ambassador Sergey Kislyak was made public. Trump had known about the calls for weeks but took action only after the information was leaked to the public.
  2. On Saturday, February 11, while dining with Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe on the open-air patio at Mar-a-Lago, Trump received word that North Korea had launched an intermediate-range ballistic missile. Rather than retiring to a secure location to discuss the crisis, aides huddled around the table—in full view of spouses, wait staff, and fellow diners. One diner posted photos on Facebook, along with commentary on what was happening and even posted a photo of himself with “Rick,” the aide-de-camp who carries the nuclear “football” for Trump. The Facebook account has been deleted, but the damaging photos and comments are still floating around the Internet. And needless to say, the stupidity which led to the mishandling of the situation is still very much intact.
  3. The Office of Government Ethics has recommended disciplinary action against top adviser Kellyanne Conway for giving Ivanka Trump’s clothing and accessory line a free TV commercial on Fox and Friends. Apparently she forgot to read the Emoluments Clause in the Constitution. But who can blame her? Has anyone in this administration read any part of the Constitution?
  4. Trump abandoned decades of diplomacy with Israel/Palestine by announcing that he would consider a one-state solution. This is a devastating blow to Palestinians who suffer under the continued incursions into their territory by Jewish settlers and to the decades of diplomacy that have kept the possibility of an equitable two-state solution alive.
  5. Trump walked out of a joint press conference with Benjamin Netanyahu when he was asked about Michael Flynn and the administration’s ties to Russia.
  6. Trump’s nominee for Labor Secretary, Andrew Puzder, withdrew after it became apparent he could not get the necessary votes for confirmation because of well-founded concern over his past business practices and personal ethics.
  7. Trump has scheduled a campaign-style rally in Florida this weekend to bolster his wounded ego. The screaming, chanting crowds are what he needs to reassure him that everybody likes him and he’s winning. Do we need any more proof that we’ve elected a mentally ill, emotionally crippled, man child to the White House?
  8. Trump’s first choice for a National Security Adviser to replace the fired Michael Flynn was Robert Harward. Harward, however, declined the offer after watching Trump’s chaotic performance in Thursday’s press conference, calling Trump’s offer a “shit sandwich.”
  9. A draft memo which has been circulating for a couple of weeks suggests that as many as 100,000 national guard troops will be militarized to round up immigrants for deportation. The Trump administration has called the report 100% false, but it seems this may be yet another embarrassing leak which they were unprepared to defend.
  10. And the centerpiece of this week’s Chaos in the Swamp is Trump’s first solo press conference since he took office. The conference has been variously described by media outlets as “unhinged,” “chaotic,” “a train wreck”; and his behavior has been called “petulant,” “combative,” “angry.” And these are the kinder descriptions. Aside from utterly humiliating our nation in the eyes of the world with his juvenile tantrums, Trump has declared all-out war on our media, calling such historically respected models of journalism as the New York Times “fake news.” This can’t possibly end well.

So until next week’s edition of the Swamp News, keep watching those waters rise. We’re in for a tidal wave.