Discussions of Donald Trump
as President focus heavily on his lying. NY Times reporters Linda Qiu and
Michael D. Shear highlighted “131
false or inaccurate statements” he made in a 90-minute speech in Wisconsin
this month. It might be more useful to consider that speech as one big lie
repeated in airport hangars across the country. Another way to think about
these performances is to see Trump as the Great Pretender.
He has been pretending his
entire adult life. After taking half a billion dollars from his father, he has
pretended to be an extraordinarily successful businessman. He plastered his
name on buildings all over the world, found people to write books touting his
business genius, and finally landed a role playing a billionaire on “The
Apprentice”.
Despite occasional public
hints that his failures overwhelmed his successes, Trump’s mastery of publicity
and ability to find willing lenders hid the reality of commercial bumbling and
colossal losses. Only after years of dogged digging into his finances by the
press do we discover the truth about Trump – he was and is a business failure,
pretending to be great.
All along Trump has pretended
that he is extraordinarily smart, a rare genius. He
has claimed to know more everything than anyone else: about ISIS, campaign
finance, courts and lawsuits, the visa system, drones, trade, taxes, money,
infrastructure, technology, and construction. But he has shown none of the usual
signs of high intelligence. He rarely reads. His language is simple
and repetitive. Others wrote his books. He did not do well in college. More
relevant to the immediate moment, he has shown no ability to adapt to the
extraordinary circumstances of this election year. Some of his public
interventions have been extraordinarily stupid, such as his first debate
performance and his rejection of another stimulus bill.
Trump pretends that he has
accomplished things that have not happened. He also loves to take credit for
the achievements of others. The Washington Post’s Fact Checker counted 156
times over the past two years that Trump took credit for the Veterans
Choice Act, passed during Obama’s presidency with the leadership of John
McCain. That’s more than once a week.
Trump pretends that any
concern for the environment is stupid. This pretense goes far beyond his claims
that climate change is a hoax. He pretends that low-wattage
light bulbs and low-flow
toilets don’t work, and that wind
turbines are unreliable and kill birds. He doesn’t say much about the
specific anti-pollution regulations his administration has revoked. Of course,
he also pretends to be an
excellent steward of the environment.
Trump pretends to be not just
smart and successful, but greater than any person could be. He describes
himself as a
genius. He pretends that “Nobody
has ever done for the black community what President Trump has done.” He
pretends to be the most
presidential of all Presidents except perhaps Lincoln.
Trump has pretended for years
that he had a health insurance plan much better and much cheaper than the ACA
that he and Republicans have tried to destroy. Both he and Mike Pence repeated
this fiction in the debates this month. There is no plan and there never was a
plan. This pretense involves protecting people with pre-existing conditions,
which has proven much too popular to eliminate. But Trump’s embrace of the
concept of “herd immunity” shows how little protection he offers to Americans
with pre-existing conditions that make the coronavirus especially dangerous to
them.
Sometimes, usually when he
thinks that his words won’t be broadcast, Trump stops pretending. He wasn’t
pretending when he said he thought US soldiers who had died in combat were “losers”
and “suckers”. He wasn’t pretending when he bragged about grabbing
women by the “pussy”. Afterward he pretends he didn’t say those things.
In the song by the Platters, “The
Great Pretender”, Tony Williams admitted that he was just pretending because
the truth was too hard to accept. Trump admits to no pretense. He can’t give up
the role of the great man he is playing, the greatest man ever.
Instead of leadership, Trump
provides pretense. Now Mark Meadows, his chief of staff, has ripped even that
mask off, when he said that the Trump administration is not trying to control
the coronavirus epidemic.
Trump golfs and lies at
rallies, while Americans die. He has been pretending to be president for four
years. Soon the pretense will be over.
Steve Hochstadt
Jacksonville IL
October 27, 2020
At least we're rounding the corner! HA!
ReplyDeleteWe have rounded a corner to see something more frightening than a Halloween creature -- a possible Trump victory.
DeleteSteve