Discussion » Questions » Politics » Bush, Obama, Trump. Of these 3 there are actually people who think Obama is the bad one. Seriously?

Bush, Obama, Trump. Of these 3 there are actually people who think Obama is the bad one. Seriously?


Last modified on Sunday 28 May 2017 11.50 EDT

During Donald Trump’s state visit to the Middle East and Europe, Americans have been playing a sort of bleak party game, asking one another: what is the most tone-deaf remark, the most egregious faux pas, the most historically amnesiac or insensitive gaffe that our president has made in the course of his journey?

Was it the bullying body language he demonstrated at the Nato summit, shoving aside Dusko Markovic, the Prime Minister of Montenegro, a small country of which some have suggested Trump may not have heard?

Was it his apparent unawareness of where Israel is located, an ignorance displayed when he informed an audience of Israelis that he’d “just got back from the Middle East”? Or was it his seeming inability to distinguish between “Islamist” and “Islamic” when he strayed off script during a speech he delivered in Saudi Arabia, a mistake he blamed on exhaustion, though he had only recently left home?

Most people, I imagine, would argue that Trump’s most appalling errors of taste and judgement occurred during his visit to Yad Vashem, Israel’s Holocaust memorial, where he spent a total of 15 minutes and left a startlingly buoyant note in the memorial’s Book of Remembrance – a brief message that some have called more appropriate for a senior signing a high school yearbook, or a satisfied guest recording his impressions in the register of a luxury bed and breakfast: “It is a great honor to be here with all my friends – so amazing and will never forget!”

One can think of any number of adjectives more descriptive than amazing. What about harrowing? Heartbreaking? Or even disturbing?

Many newspapers have reprinted the thoughtful and dignified response that Barack Obama wrote after his tour of the memorial, as if to remind us of what might be appropriate in this context. A few days later, some of what Trump had seen at Yad Vashem might conceivably have prompted him, in some confused and befuddled way, to call Germany “evil, very evil” at the Nato summit, though as it turned out, he was not referring to crimes of the past but rather to German car sales in the United States.
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Meanwhile, it’s been hard to read the accounts of Trump’s trip that have appeared in the foreign press without cringing in embarrassment for this man who is representing our country abroad.

Immediately following the November election, many of us vowed that we would never normalize the Trump presidency, that we would never allow his mindless, kleptocratic style of governance to seem acceptable, ordinary, quotidian. But what we hadn’t counted on was how much bad behavior there would be, how the daily barrage of outrageousness would diminish our capacity for outrage.

Under another presidency, any single one of the things that Trump has done and said during his journey might have sparked an international scandal; any one of these incidents might have inspired discussion, debate, response and, presumably, an apology.
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But each regrettable and ill-advised remark and action has followed closely upon the other with no real consequence, in part because Trump’s missteps are so numerous, and in part because no one seems to takes him and his clownish behavior seriously.

And all of this has become so normalized that we have been lulled, or almost lulled, into overlooking the fact that this is our president, that this man who lacks even the most basic idea about the geography of the Middle East possesses the nuclear codes.

Meanwhile one can only assume that Mitch McConnell, Paul Ryan and the other powerful Republicans in Congress are thoroughly delighted by the attention being paid to Donald Trump’s convincing and almost parodic imitation of the most ill-informed and brutish American tourist.

As we chuckle over footage of Trump’s awkward participation in the hypermacho ritual of the Saudi sword dance, his fellow Republicans continue to work to undermine and dismantle our educational system, to threaten our most basic freedoms, and to deny health insurance to those who need it most.


Recently, I watched the brilliant British mentalist and magician Derren Brown demonstrate the power of misdirection and distraction. He placed a banana on the far edge of the stage and promised that, at some point during his performance, a man in a gorilla suit would appear on stage and steal the banana, which the audience – thoroughly engaged by Brown’s showmanship – would fail to notice. And that is precisely what happened. Before the intermission, Brown directed our attention to the side of the stage. The banana was gone.

A more serious and consequential version of that clever magic trick is happening every day. While Trump is off on his travels, playing the buffoon is one country after another, we are too busy watching him to pay sufficient attention to what is transpiring back in Washington.

As we chortle over the clips of Melania Trump briskly swatting away her husband’s hand every time he tries to touch her, the Republicans are slyly and effectively slipping their hands into the pockets of the American people.

Posted - June 4, 2017

Responses


  • 16792
    Obama is black. That's why he's the bad guy in the minds of those people.
      June 4, 2017 12:13 AM MDT
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  • 46117
    Well YEAH!!!!!   Of course!!!!! 
      June 4, 2017 12:15 AM MDT
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  • 1233
    The only meaningful thing you said was -

    "....his fellow Republicans continue to work to undermine and dismantle our educational system, to threaten our most basic freedoms, and to deny health insurance to those who need it most."

    It's wrongheaded of course, but at least this asserted something of substance.

    The U.S. should not be concerned with what other people think of America or what other people think of the Trump. Pandering to what people think of you is what weak servile people do. America is a superpower. The rest of the world can form a long line and kiss Trump's ass as far as I'm concerned.

    The rest of the world doesn't give a sh*t about the personal qualities of Donald Trump. The powers that be simply pursue their interests. If Trump behaved exactly the same but was a good little globalist they would love him.

    I think Bush and Obama were equally bad. I hate Bush more. RINOs are even more contemptible than open leftists.

    See what I did there? I have a complete separation between what is reality, and how I feel about that reality. I hate Bush more, though for all practical purposes they are identical.

    The powers that be are opposing Trump because his policies run counter to their agenda of socialism and globalism. They're not emotional thinkers. They just seek to manipulate those who are.

    So can you please just be real and say you don't like his politics instead of talking sh*t? Are you really so superficial that you let personality politics shape your entire world view?

    This post was edited by Zeitgeist at June 4, 2017 5:20 AM MDT
      June 4, 2017 1:48 AM MDT
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  • 16792
    The number 2 "power that is" highly approves of Trump, because it's in their interest to do so. That power is Russia, they got him elected because Trump lets them have reams of classified and is hell bent on weakening NATO.
      June 4, 2017 2:43 AM MDT
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  • 1233
    You have no evidence that Russia did the hack. Even if Russia did do the hack, you have no evidence that it made any significant difference to the election. It's just one of literally thousands of factors in play. Accusations of Russian backing would have damaged Trump too. So the impact of the hack was neutral or at least insignificant.

    Hillary on the other hand had massive financial backing from foreign interests like Saudi Arabia.

    Russia will have mixed feelings about Trump. They will like the fact that he is not a globalist because Russia wishes to remain an independent country, but they know he will make America so strong they won't be able to compete. Trumps pro coal policies will cost the Russians trillions by undermining gas exports. Russia wants the west to stay reasonably left wing to keep it weak.

    If anyone has undermined NATO it is the Europeans by their sense of entitlement to American protection. All Trump wants is for them to pay their way.

    Mutually assured destruction has kept the peace and will continue to do so. This post was edited by Zeitgeist at June 4, 2017 5:27 AM MDT
      June 4, 2017 5:24 AM MDT
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  • 5354
    @"The U.S. should not be concerned with what other people think of America or what other people think of the Trump. Pandering to what people think of you is what weak servile people do. America is a superpower. The rest of the world can form a long line and kiss Trump's ass as far as I'm concerned."

    That is just classic :-D ~ You are a perfect Trump supporter.
      June 4, 2017 3:02 AM MDT
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