Rusty Inman

Lives on Congaree River across from Columbia, S.C. Father. Democrat. Skeptical Christian. Gamecocks, Terriers, Redskins, Braves, Federer fan. Tennis. Kayak. Dogs.

PUTTING A SMILE ON JAMES BUCHANAN’S CORPSE

During the joint news conference that put an end to today’s faux-summit in Helsinki between Vladimir Putin and his American puppet, Donald Trump, the latter was asked by an American journalist, in front of the entire world, whether he believed the findings of the entire intelligence/law enforcement community of the United States that Russia, with intent, interfered with the basic foundation of our democracy during the 2016 elections.

In other words, Donald Trump was asked a question that left him with a binary choice:  (1) Do you believe the incontrovertible evidence painstakingly revealed by the dedicated and often dangerous work of your own country’s intelligence and law enforcement communities—and reinforced by the indictments of 12 Russians handed down by the Special Counsel this Friday past—that Russia interfered with America’s 2016 electoral process or (2) do you believe the denials of the former KGB/GRU thug, killer and now dictatorial leader of our country’s most dangerous enemy, Vladimir Putin?

Donald Trump’s response?

“Hillary…,” of course.

And, echoing the despicable moral equivalency he drew following the tragic events in Charlottesville nearly a year ago:

“We are all to blame…both made some mistakes.”

Indeed, Trump’s refusal to defend the United States—THE COUNTRY OF WHICH HE IS PRESIDENT!—was made even more outrageous by his claim that the investigation by our intelligence and law enforcement communities into attempts by Russia to destabilize our democracy is the very thing that has “kept us [the U.S. and Russia] apart.”

But, why should we be surprised?  Using his Twitter account—would someone please take his phone away from him?—earlier in the day, The Orange Fool asserted that the U.S. was entirely responsible for the breach in U.S./Russia relations:  “Our relationship with Russia has NEVER been worse thanks to many years of U.S. foolishness and stupidity and now, the Rigged Witch Hunt.”

The Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs quickly noted Trump’s anti-American, pro-Russian position by retweeting The American Twit’s tweet and approvingly adding “We agree.”

Jesus Christ!

The only smile as broad as that of Vladimir Putin following Trump’s traitorous performance in Helsinki earlier today is plastered on the face of a corpse interred in the Woodland Hills Cemetery in Lancaster, Pennsylvania.  The corpse is that of James Buchanan, the 15th president of the United States and the man almost universally considered by historians to be “the worst president in American history.”

Until today, that is, when he was rescued from that inglorious designation by one Donald J. Trump.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

PUTTING A SMILE ON JAMES BUCHANAN’S CORPSE Read More »

JOB CREATION NUMBERS: TRUMP JUST CAN’T ESCAPE OBAMA’S SHADOW

Donald Trump spoke to a group of small business owners in Washington this morning.

It was a safe group for #PresidentSnowflake.  We know that because the only groups to which he speaks are those that he knows will give him a fawning, groveling display of allegiance.  There isn’t a chance that Trump will show up in front of a group that won’t predictably humiliate itself in an outsized display of praise & thanksgiving for the #EmperorWannabe.  Given his recent private conversations with North Korea’s Kim Jong Un, who once had a general executed for not applauding with “sufficient vigor,” they might be hesitant not to.  

This group did not disappoint, giving him a standing ovation as he entered with hands outstretched and palms turned upward as if he were either (1) Pope Francis giving the crowd a blessing or (2) a comedian comically asking the crowd to keep ramping up its applause.  Basking in the moment, Trump then went #BizarroWorld on us—walking over to an American flag hanging limply from a small flagpole on the stage and literally wrapping himself in it.  He embraced the flag and its supporting pole as he might have embraced Melania before she began telling him to get his tiny hands off of her.  For just a moment, I thought he was going to give the flag a big, wet kiss.

Trump didn’t spend much time talking about issues related to small businesses—surprise, surprise—choosing instead to take the room with him on an extended visit to the other side of the looking glass where he could, with no dissenting opinions, lie with impunity about his “many great achievements” during his first 18 months in office.  Because, of course, it’s never about the concerns of those to whom he’s speaking.  It’s always about propping up what must be the most fragile ego on the planet.

To wit…

Trump trumpeted that, under his watch, 3.4 million jobs had been created during the 18 months since his election.  And, to be fair, that’s not bad.  One just wishes he would stop trying to make it seem better than it is by repeating the false narrative that, relative to the economy, he “inherited a mess” from President Obama.  That’s a lie—or, “alternative fact”—that both he and Kellyanne Conway seem obsessed with perpetuating.  

The truth?  President Obama “inherited a mess” when he took over the reins of the economy during the deepest economic crisis since the Great Depression.  Trump’s economy is built on the shoulders of an economy that Obama rescued from real peril and gave stability to.  

More truth?  While Trump bragged about “inheriting a mess” and still creating 3.4 million jobs in the 19 months since his election, the fact of the matter is that the Obama administration had created 3.7 million jobs in the 18 months before that.  Which puts the lie to Trump’s claim that “nobody would have believed in November, 2016” that he could have put up such numbers—it would have been expected that, given a strengthening economy, he could put up at least such numbers.  It also puts the lie to Trump’s insinuation that his jobs numbers represent some kind of turnaround in the jobs market—they don’t.  And, finally, it puts the lie to his and Kellyanne’s claim that he “inherited a mess”—he obviously didn’t.

I once thought that the towers of Manhattan cast the biggest shadow over The Grifter from Queens.  I’ve changed my mind.  It is the towering figure of Barack Obama that casts the biggest shadow over Donald Trump.  Though, quite honestly, I don’t believe he’ll ever get out from under either of them.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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PRESIDENT #SNOWFLAKE

We shouldn’t have been surprised when, on the day before Donald Trump was scheduled to fly to Quebec for the G-7 Summit, the White House floated the possibility that he might not go at all.  It was, of course, a trial balloon sent up to test how the public—or, better, his 32% base of aggrieved white people—would respond if he were to be a no-show at this gathering of some of our oldest allies and/or biggest trading partners.  The “base”—along with the amateurs, poseurs, grifters and media hangers-on who populate the White House precincts and provide a steady, 24/7 diet of groveling approval to the president’s fragile ego—would no doubt have given him a standing ovation for his “America First” (which, interpreted per this administration’s policies, more closely resembles “America Alone”) tendencies.  Fortunately, there are a few fact-based, reality-based professionals—an “endangered species” in this administration—left who convinced him that not attending was not an option.

Or, perhaps, unfortunately.  We—as well as our gathered allies and trading partners—might have been better off had he not attended.

It was clear from his pre-summit tweets that the first Juvenile President in American history was not planning to “play nice” with our country’s best friends from around the globe.  And his presidential pout/petulance was on full display when he was a conspicuously late arrival on Friday evening, a conspicuously late arrival for a working breakfast on Saturday morning and a conspicuously early departer at midday on Saturday—skipping Saturday afternoon’s plenary session, during which the group was scheduled to discuss such, uh, insignificant and irrelevant and low-impact issues as the Paris Climate Accord, Gender Equality and the Iran Nuclear Deal.   All together now, in unison:  Classic Passive-Aggressive!

Why the reluctance of this president to “play nice” or, God forbid, actually participate in what became the G6+1 Summit?  What’s up with the presidential pout?  The presidential petulance?

Easy.

Donald Trump was afraid.

Or, as my cousins who populate and farm the deeps of the South Carolina coastal plain might put it, he was “skeered.”

Trump likes to project the image of a Tough Guy, a Strongman Autocrat whose “deal-making” abilities are superior to anyone on the planet. But he does so from the safety of his lonely White House bedroom where, pathetically, his bully-pulpit is a cell phone and a twitter feed. Or, from the safety of one of his adulation fests where committed, servile mobs wearing “Hillary Is A C**t” t-shirts (they don’t use the asterisks) gather to listen and applaud and cheer his lie-filled rally-rants against… 

(1) “the Fake News media,”

(2) “the Failing New York Times,”

(3) “Amazon’s sweetheart deal with the USPS” (read, “the Washington Post and, by extension, Jeff Bezos”),

(4) “Crooked Hillary” (Trump has been a principal in over 3,500 litigations, Ms. Clinton has never been a principal in a court action save those in which she served as counsel for a litigant),

(5) “Lyin’ Jim Comey,”

(6) “the Mueller Witch Hunt/Hoax,”

(7) “Mueller’s thirteen angry Democrats,”

(8) “Turncoat John McCain,”

(9) the “sons-of-bitches who should be fired” from their NFL teams” for “disrespecting The Flag,” “disrespecting The National Anthem,” “disrespecting our Mighty Military,” “disrespecting our Veterans,” and “disrespecting Mom, Apple-Pie, Christmas and the Easter Bunny” when they #TakeAKnee,

(10) immigrants from “s**thole countries” as opposed to, uh, Norway,

(11) and the Democrats who should be “charged with treason (aww, why not?)” for not giving him standing ovations when he so poorly/stiffly read from the teleprompter the applause-lines his speechwriters wrote into his first State of the Union address this past January.  Apparently he has not been briefed on the fact that his new Bestie—the murderous North Korean punk/dictator, Kim Jong Un—had one of his generals executed for not applauding one of his speeches with, well, “appropriate vigor.”  And his critique of Democrats not applauding him with, well, “appropriate vigor” also provides a bit of context to his almost wistful observation that, when Kim Jong Un speaks, “his people sit up and pay attention.”  That followed by some really scary wishful thinking:  “I wish ‘my people’ did the same.”  [MEMO TO THE #EMPERORWANNABE:  Americans are not “your people.”  There may well be some who get up each morning and drink the Kool-Aid that renders them far more loyal to you than they are to our country—I’ll let you claim them as “yours.”  But, anyone who is more concerned about protecting you than protecting our country is a cultist, not a patriot.  The vast, vast majority of us pledge our allegiance not to you but “to the Republic for which [the Flag] stands.”  Let me say it again:  Americans are not “your people.”]   

Little Big Man is accustomed to Cabinet meetings that more often resemble worship services than the serious policy/action gatherings of previous presidents.  The televised versions have been   characterized not by a measured, calibrated exchange of and debate over differing policy opinions but by the highest-ranking members of the Executive Branch bowing, scraping and generally debasing themselves—in the instance of Mike Pence, humiliating himself—as they praise the Dear Leader.  And Trump has shown an unnerving appreciation and equally unnerving fondness for foreign leaders who relentlessly fete him when he visits—offering puke-inducing praise, projecting his multi-colored image on the largest buildings of their capital cities, putting on fireworks shows in his honor, inviting him to “review the troops” when they hold military parades (thanks a lot, Emmanuel Macron!) and, in general, conning him into believing that they really consider him to be #The Man Think, Saudi Arabia.  Think, the glowing orb.  Think, the sword dance.

But he knew that wasn’t the kind of welcome awaiting him at the historic Le Manoir Richelieu that grandly looks down on the St. Lawrence River as it pursues its course through the magnificent landscapes of Charlevoix, Quebec.

This president is beginning to realize, to his surprise and perhaps horror, that most members of the international governance community—allies and adversaries alike—have long had his number. These are highly-intelligent, highly-sophisticated and highly-experienced “deal-makers” who have done their “deals” on a stage far larger and far more significant than an office in Trump Tower or the Boardwalk of Atlantic City.  They know a Carnival Barker when they see one and, unlike Trump’s visceral, reflexive base, are most definitely not given to suffering gladly the pitch of a snake-oil salesman.  Neither a lot of time nor candlepower was required for them to size up Donald Trump as a rank amateur relative to deal-making beyond his world of New York and Florida construction/real-estate grifting.

Worse, he knew that his recent blustering, bloviating and intentionally confrontational comments/tweets/threats per trade policy had not gone over well with the allies and trading partners who would be attending the G-7.  Needless to say, Trump was uncomfortable-to-the-max with the idea that he would be met by a room full of serious world leaders who owe him nothing, see him for who/what he is and are more than willing to respond to his Big Bully act by, in the vernacular, giving him a piece of their own minds.

He would not be in the safe confines of the gaudy Main Ballroom at Mar-a-Lago.  Nor would he be in the safe company of the sycophantic, rich swells who hang out at Mar-a-Lago and to whom he has delivered 83% of the benefits of what he has falsely claimed to be “the biggest tax cut in history” and what he falsely claimed would be “tax cuts for the middle class that won’t make rich people a penny richer.” 

Instead, he would be in unfamiliar surroundings.  He would not be The Main Attraction but one player among several.  And he would be surrounded by men and women whose heft doesn’t owe to money but to history and power.  He would be surrounded by men and women who are not only his equals but arguably more-than-his-equals—possessed of more intelligence, more savvy and far, far more knowledge of the complexity and nuance of foreign policy and trade.  Most threatening to Trump, however, was the fact that he would be surrounded by men and women who, having grown weary of Trump’s incessant attacks and lectures, would have no qualms about holding The Troll-In-Chief accountable for his embarrassing twitter habits.  And, as we know all too well, The Donald doesn’t like being held accountable—for anything.

Hence, he was “skeered.”  And “got out of town,” so to speak, as quickly as he could, claiming that his early departure would give him more time to, uh, “study up” for his imminent summit with Kim Jong Un of North Korea.

The world laughed.

I mean, Donald Trump “studying up” for something?  The man doesn’t read and has the attention span of a mosquito.

The world laughed even harder when it was revealed that, upon reaching Singapore, he wanted to “move up a day” his scheduled summit with the North Korean Pariah because he was “bored.”  Wait, Donald, we thought you left the G-7 early because you needed time to “study up” for your Extended Photo-Op with your new Bestie.  Wasn’t that the reason given us by your honest-to-a-fault press office?

People, Donald Trump is not #The Man.  He’s not Tough.  He’s a criticism-averse, thin-skinned Faux Bully, a Lion with no Teeth, just another Internet Troll too cowardly to say face-to-face what, hidden behind closed bedroom curtains, he uses his tiny fingers to tap out on Twitter.  He’s the “400 pound guy” with incoherent hair, orange skin, a poorly tied tie, a suit coat he can’t button up because he’s so porked up, “sitting on his bed” trying to undo the democratic norms upon which our country is built, splinter the Western Alliance so his autocratic faves will give him a seat at their table, and essentially change the world for the worse via the web.   

The President of the United States is nothing but a damned #Snowflake.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

PRESIDENT #SNOWFLAKE Read More »

WEAPONIZING THE FLAG

Combining another of his egregiously un-American attacks on the First Amendment with yet another dose of his disgusting demagoguery and divisiveness, Donald Trump recently proffered a veritable buffet of options as to what/who it is that National Football League players are “disrespecting” when, using his own classy, presidential verbiage, these “sons of bitches” who should “be fired” #TakeTheKnee during the pre-game playing/singing of the national anthem.

It wasn’t that he couldn’t make up his mind as to what/who it is that the players are “disrespecting”–to pretend that Trump gives this or any issue that much thought is laughable.  He is not, to put it kindly, a critical thinker.  He is, to put it bluntly, a reflexive, visceral whirlwind of unleashed id for whom the unqualified agreement, unconditional affirmation and raucous applause of his shrinking tribe–now down to 32%–is as essential to his fragile sense of self as mother’s milk or some variation thereof is to an infant.  And for whom any hint of disagreement or criticism unleashes a raging sewer of anger worthy of comparison to one of J.K. Rowling’s Obscurials–though, to be clear, Obscurials did not have access to a Twitter account.

The trotting out of various possibilities as to what/who it is that the players are “disrespecting” was, instead, emblematic of Trump’s penchant for creating/manipulating a divisive issue (most often one with racial/ethnic undertones) and then finding its sweet spot–the word or phrase that gins up the most outrage and grievance in his sad, shrinking and clueless base of #PerpetuallyOutraged and #PerpetuallyAggrieved white voters.

Hence, the NFL players who decided to exercise their First Amendment rights and #TakeTheKnee in protest against racial/social injustice were alternately characterized by #TheManWhoWouldBeEmperor as being “disrespectful” to (1) The Flag, (2) The National Anthem, (3) The Country, (4) First Responders, (5) Law Enforcement Personnel, (6) Military Vets, and (7) Military Personnel Currently Serving.

Given more time, one wonders if he would have utilized those tiny twitter fingers to imperiously announce that those who #TakeTheKnee had also “disrespected” (1) Kindergarten Teachers, (2) Santa Claus, (3) the Easter Bunny, (4) Moms, (5) Apple Pie and/or, in a nod to his heinously hypocritical evangelical herd, perhaps even (6) The Almighty Himself/Herself.

But, with the clock running and an ever-lengthing list of Gold Star families and fellow Republicans to demean and degrade, #TheMoron–as a courtesy to the sitting Secretary of State as well as the tender sensibilities of some readers, I have deleted the adjectival expletive used by Mr. Tillerson to modify the noun “moron”–finally settled on #TheFlag as that which is primarily being “disrespected” by NFL players when they #TakeTheKnee.

THE FLAG:  RESPECT, DISRESPECT

October 16 marked the 49th anniversary of the day that two African-American Olympians–sprinters Tommie Smith and John Carlos–stood on the winners’ podium at the Mexico City Olympics to receive their respective gold and bronze medals for having finished first and third in the men’s 200-meter finals.  Each wore, on his track jacket, an Olympic Project for Human Rights badge.  So did the silver medal recipient, Peter Norman, a courageous, young, white Australian sprinter.

As the national anthem was played and the flag of the United States raised, both Smith and Carlos bowed their heads and raised a black-gloved fist.

The photograph capturing that moment has rightly become iconic, as has the moment and the act itself.  For, without uttering a word, Smith and Carlos made one of the most visible, powerful and controversial statements of latter 20th-century American history about our country’s continuing failure to live up to its promise of full equality for all people.

Smith and Carlos were immediately–and, predictably– subjected to personal vilification, a variety of threats and accusations that they had disrespected their country, their national anthem, and #TheFlag.  The same vilification, threats and accusations have been directed at black athletes such as Muhammad Ali, Bill Russell, Colin Kaepernick and present NFL players who, in the ensuing years, have used their athletic successes as a platform from which, like Smith and Carlos, to hold the country accountable for its unwillingness to rise to the ideals enshrined in its own Constitution.

So, the question is begged:  Were Tommie Smith, John Carlos, Muhammad Ali, Bill Russell and the rest disrespecting the American flag?  Was Colin Kaepernick disrespecting #TheFlag when he first knelt on the sideline during the playing of the national anthem?  Are NFL players who now #TakeTheKnee disrespecting #TheFlag?

That’s an easy question to answer:  No.

#TheFlag of the United States of America is a powerful symbol.  It points beyond itself to the values, ideals and promises–many of them still not realized, still not fulfilled–that lie at the core of the American Experiment.

But #TheFlag does not incarnate those values, ideals and promises.  It symbolizes them.  It points beyond itself to them.

When we recite the Pledge of Allegiance, we acknowledge that #TheFlag “stands for” our Republic.  However, in doing so, we also acknowledge that #TheFlag is not the Republic itself.  It “stands for” the vision of a Republic that, by the embodiment of those values, ideals and promises, becomes, in actuality, “one nation…indivisible…with liberty and justice for all.”

Get my drift?

In and of itself, separated from those aspirational values, ideals and promises, separated from the inspirational vision of a Republic that can honestly boast of being “indivisible…with liberty and justice for all,” #TheFlag is just a piece of cloth and #Patriotism an empty sentiment.

Exercising their First Amendment rights, Tommie Smith, John Carlos, Muhammad Ali, Bill Russell, Colin Kaepernick and present NFL players who #TakeTheKnee were/are protesting the fact that the promises and dreams to which that flag points have not yet been fulfilled or realized for all.  They were/are not disrespecting #TheFlag.  They were/are patriotically holding it up before all of America as a mirror and hoping that we had/have the individual and national character to not only admit our shortcomings but to use that admission as a launching pad for demanding equal justice, equal freedoms and equal opportunities for all–that for which #TheFlag ultimately stands and that to which #TheFlag ultimately points.

After all, since when is it unpatriotic to hold one’s country accountable for not, by using every constitutional means necessary, exposing and stifling those elements that prevent it from achieving its self-proclaimed destiny?

Smith, Carlos, Ali, Russell, Kaepernick et al have given #TheFlag its proper due.  They have, at great personal and professional risk, paid a heavy price to remind us that respect for #TheFlag has less to do with “standing for it” than with understanding and committing oneself to “what it stands for.”

DONALD TRUMP

On the other hand…

Donald Trump has, in his response to the NFL players whose chose to #TakeTheKnee, shown a disrespect for #TheFlag that is not only contemptible but beneath the dignity of a United States president.

#TheFlag of the United States of America should never be used as a political weapon against anyone, even and especially the citizens it represents.  It is soiled when a president weaponizes it and uses it to attack American citizens exercising their First Amendment right to demand that our country live up to its ideals.  It is soiled when a president wraps himself in it and, thusly encased, engages in a rhetorical exercise whose intent is not to unite but divide.  It is soiled when a president figuratively holds it aloft and appeals not to our brightest angels but to our darkest ones.

Donald Trump simply saw an issue he could manipulate to his political advantage per a  shrinking base of voters and made #TheFlag the centerpiece of his demagogic schtick.  In reality, he doesn’t give a rodent’s backside about “respecting” or “disrespecting” #TheFlag.  For him, it is nothing but a prop.

Remember that this is a man who, instead of condemnation, offered a big, wet kiss to Neo-Nazis, white supremacists, white nationalists and other assorted societal dregs in Charlottesville who were carrying American flags accessorized with swastikas sewn into the middle.  Many of them, he said, were “fine people.”

My father and my stepfather were both World War II veterans who saw combat against Axis powers.  Let me assure you that they would have disagreed with The Donald about racists and bigots carrying swastika-branded American flags being “fine people.”

Bigly.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

WEAPONIZING THE FLAG Read More »

THE GLOBAL COMMUNITY IS PRETTY MUCH ONTO TRUMP

Donald Trump’s European trip began this morning in Warsaw, Poland, where he briefly met with Poland’s president, held a brief joint press conference–at which, incredibly for an American president on foreign soil, he took swipes at American institutions such as the media and the intelligence community as well as a former president, Barack Obama–and spoke to a cheering crowd at the site of the Warsaw Uprising during WWII.

It likely will be the last cheering crowd he sees this week, unless Angela Merkel, generally considered the Leader of the Free World since Trump’s abdication of the position, mimics the actions of Poland’s president and buses in thousands of paid, cheering rally-goers who were given a paid day-off to attend.

Foreign leaders have figured out how to play The Donald, haven’t they?

Ms. Merkel, who has a genuine distaste for and distrust in President Trump, is unlikely to order up a few thousand rally-goers or bathe the buildings of Hamburg in projected images of The Grifter, a la the laughable scene in Riyadh. Indeed, given Trump’s dismal favorable ratings among the German public–he is at a robust 11%, compared to President Obama’s 86% at the end of his presidency–one guesses that he will be kept safely out of sight.  

The dislike of and distrust in Donald Trump and his “brand” is world-wide.  And, unfortunately for the rest of us, his “brand” has brought the “brand” of the United States down with it.

The Pew Research Center recently released its biannual survey that tracks global attitudes and trends in 37 nations as to their confidence/trust in the United States and its president “to do the right thing in world affairs.”  It’s not a pretty picture.

According to the Pew survey, “a median of just 22% has confidence in Trump to do the right thing when it comes to international affairs.”  A full 74% expressed “no confidence” in Trump.  One wonders if Trump’s advisors have told him that, in the final years of President Obama’s second term, a median of 64% “expressed confidence in Trump’s predecessor to direct America’s role in the world,” with only 23% expressing “no confidence.”

Perhaps not, fearing a tweetstorm of epic proportions and another round of “Barack Obama is to blame for me being me.” 

The decline in favorable opinions between the Obama-era and the Trump-era has resulted in a similar decline per favorable opinions of the United States on the part of the global community.  At the close of the Obama presidency, “Views of the U.S.” were at 64%/26% on the favorable/unfavorable spectrum.  After only five months of the Trump presidency, they were at 49%/39% on the same spectrum.

Free fall.

Of even greater concern than the macro view, however, is the perspective held by America’s closest allies on Donald Trump as compared to their perspectives on Barack Obama as measured just six months ago. 

Only 10% of the Swedish people currently have confidence in Donald Trump “to do the right thing regarding world affairs.”  This compared to 93% who expressed confidence in President Obama at the end of his second term.

Germany?  Trump inspires confidence in 11% of the population.  Six months ago, Obama’s number was at 86%.

In Spain, Trump enjoys the confidence of 7% of the population while, six months ago, then-President Obama enjoyed the confidence of 75% of the people.

The Trump/Obama favorable ratio in France is 14%/84% and, in the UK, it is 22%/79%.

The two NATO members most trending toward becoming right-wing autocracies–actually, they are already there–are Poland and Turkey.  Respectively, the Trump/Obama favorable ratios are 23%/58% and 11%/45%.

And our North American neighbors, Mexico and Canada, weigh in at 5%/49% and 22%/83%.

The good news for President Trump is that there are two countries where he inspires more confidence than President Obama:  Israel and Russia.  In Israel, the Trump/Obama favorables are 56%/49%.  And, in Russia, the disparity is enormous, with the People of Putin weighing in at 53%/11%.

However, the Pew survey has even more disturbing news for Donald Trump.  

Confidence in the president “to do the right thing in world affairs” was measured against confidence in three other prominent world leaders:  Angela Merkel, Xi Jinping and Vladimir Putin.

This is going to hurt The Donald’s feelings, but Merkel far outdistanced all of the other three, enjoying the confidence of 42% of those in the 37 countries surveyed.  Xi Jinping was at 28% and Putin was at 27%.  The leader of what was, until six months ago, the Beacon of the Free World?  He enjoyed the confidence of a miserly 22%.

People, America is going dark.

Though I’m sure The Donald would call that Fake News.

 

 

 

 

THE GLOBAL COMMUNITY IS PRETTY MUCH ONTO TRUMP Read More »

TRUMP GETS THE WHITE HOUSE, COAL COUNTRY GETS THE SHAFT

  McDOWELL COUNTY, WEST VIRGINIA  

In the run-up to the 2016 presidential election, the most fertile soil for the planting and cultivating of demagoguery was perhaps to be found in the population of McDowell County, West Virginia.

The people of McDowell County either have vivid memories of or have heard multitudinous stories about “back then when times were good.”  But, over the past three decades or so, they have been metaphorically standing on train tracks watching, powerless and paralyzed, as a speeding train bearing “bad times”—and, by extension, the end of “good times”—bore down on them.

“Back then when times were good,” McDowell County was arguably the coal capital of America.  Decades of decline in coal use, however, led to a steep, irreversible drop in coal demand.  And any drop in demand for a commodity implies a proportional drop in the jobs needed to produce it.  Which, for McDowell County, meant that coal jobs left and, with them, “good times.”

McDowell County, which was once considered the coal capital of America, is now the poorest county in West Virginia, which itself ranks among the poorest states in the country.  Over 50% of the households claim less than $25,000 in annual income compared to 25% nationally.  The median annual income is only $22,500, compared to a national figure of $52,000.  Nearly 35% of McDowell County families live in poverty and 60% of families with children under five don’t meet the poverty threshold.

Population has declined by 80,000 since the 1950’s and the county has lost 38% of its residents in just the past two decades—symptomatic of an unemployment rate that is now more than twice the national average.

The life expectancy for men in McDowell County is 64 years—roughly comparable to the life expectancy for men in Namibia.  The life expectancy for women is just over 73 years—roughly comparable to that of women in Mongolia.

Unsurprisingly, McDowell County has not escaped the substance abuse issues—opioids, cocaine, heroin, fentanyl, you name it—that beset so many communities in coal country.  Indeed, its population has the highest rate of drug overdose deaths in West Virginia.

Thus did a perfect storm of factors make the people of McDowell County fertile ground for the seeding of demagoguery: The collective memory of “good times,” the collective experience of feeling helpless and powerless to stop the transition from “good times” to “bad times,” the angry sense of grievance at losing what has been lost, the need to blame and even demonize someone/something for the losing of that which has been lost, the sense of hopelessness and desperation about both present and future prospects, the perception that those in power are blind to their plight and a willingness to believe the cognitively-dissonant promises of a bombastic demagogue whose claims that he would “take care of you” and bring back the “good times” were at the edge of being messianic in nature—“Only I can fix it!”

More than willing to suspend logic and reason in favor of magical thinking, McDowell County rewarded Donald Trump’s messianic/autocratic demagoguery by giving him 91.5% of the vote in the Republican primary—by far the largest percentage he received in any one county during the primary season.

TRUMP’S PROMISE

Hence the cruelty of Trump’s bogus promise to the people of McDowell County and others in the equally-devastated coal communities of Appalachia:  A miner’s hard hat carefully placed on his incoherent coiffe,  he would, to raucous cheers at one of his campaign adulation-fests, tell the people of coal country that “we are going to put coal miners back to work.”

It was an almost heinous thing to say, a promise made ugly and cynical by the fact that Trump knew all the while—and was told by executives in the coal industry—that he was making a promise he could not keep.  It was akin to promising starving people that loaves of bread would arrive via truck at 3 p.m. on Tuesday and then leaving town so as not to be there when the people gathered and the promised truck bearing the promised bread didn’t show up.

Trump knew that coal wasn’t coming back.  And it isn’t.

The coal mining jobs that, when “Coal was King,” fueled the “good times” in McDowell County?  Trump knew they weren’t coming back, either.  And they aren’t.

BLAMING BARACK OBAMA

Donald Trump’s infantile insecurities are never more on display than when he—on an almost daily basis—points an accusatory finger at his predecessor, the cerebral, articulate and scandal-free Barack Obama, who seems to cast a shadow longer than Manhattan over The Grifter from Queens.

His demagogic attempt to demonize President Obama in coal country generally took the form of blaming the fall of “King Coal” on Obama’s environmental policies; i.e., (1) his advocacy of energy sources—including renewables—that might mitigate the effect of massive fossil fuel use on climate change, (2) his executive orders that established environmental protections for the waters, wetlands and woodlands of coal country, (3) his executive orders that established environmental protections for federal land and national parks, and (4) his leadership in bringing the global community together in a non-binding agreement—the Paris Accord—that sought to reduce on a world-wide basis the degree to which human agency is fomenting climate change.

Of course, blaming the crisis in coal country on President Obama’s environmental policies is absurd on its face.

For one thing, the trend-line decrease in coal use/coal production/coal jobs far pre-dates the Obama administrationcoal-related jobs fell by 2/3 just between 1948-1970. For another, I have yet to find a non-partisan industry analyst who doesn’t lay the precipitous drop in both coal demand/production and traditional coal mining jobs on the doorstep of (1) technological innovations in automation and mechanization, (2) new strip mining techniques, (3) increased competition from the natural gas industry (read, fracking), and (4) the rapidly developing renewable energy industry.

Gary Cohn, Trump’s own chief economic adviser, recently told reporters that “Coal doesn’t even make that much sense anymore as a feedstock.  Natural gas…is such a cleaner fuel.  If you think about how much solar and…wind power we’ve created in the United States, we can be a manufacturing powerhouse and still be environmentally friendly.”

But, treating reality as “Fake News” or “Alternative Facts,” Trump has pushed ahead to end Obama-era environmental policies, still claiming that his evisceration of environmental protections will “put coal miners back to work.”  He has even announced, in a statement so breathtakingly false as to make one’s head spin, that the unspoiled federal lands and national parks he plans to make available for drilling and mining “will be better off and even more beautiful than they are now because of what we’re doing.”

Whaaaaa?

I can’t wait to take a selfie of myself standing next to a drilling rig hard by Old Faithful in Yellowstone National Park.  And I’m placing bets on whose head they will cut off just above the eyebrows when they start strip mining atop Mount Rushmore.

I mean, C’mon, Donald.

LYING THAT THE PROMISE WAS KEPT

Against all the evidence, however, Trump’s EPA chief, Scott Pruitt, who has a long history of carrying water for the Koch Brothers, keeps trying to push the false narrative that Trump is already fulfilling his promise to “put coal miners back to work.”

During a recent appearance on Meet the Press, he made the astonishing claim that “since the fourth quarter of last year, until most recently, we’ve added almost 50,000 jobs in the coal sector…In the month of May alone, almost 7,000 jobs.”

Uh, no.

Data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics indicates that there were, at the beginning of Q1-2017, only 50,000 coal jobs in the entire country.  It further indicates that only about 1,000 jobs had been added in the first four months of the Trump presidency and only 400 in the month of May.  And, much, I’m sure, to the chagrin of both Pruitt and Trump, the data indicates that more than 1,400 coal jobs had been added in the last four months of the Obama presidency.

Ouch!

The Washington Post’s fact-checker, Glenn Kessler, gave Pruitt’s claim the maximum Four Pinocchios.

Check out these three facts that I suspect Mr. Kessler would rate “True”:  (1) Coal hasn’t come back, (2) Coal isn’t going to come back and (3) Donald Trump knowingly lied to the people of coal country when he told them that it was.

EPILOGUE (1)

The realization that Trump lied to them about the return of “good times” has added another layer of despair to the hopelessness that hangs over McDowell County like a dense fog.

It gets worse.

Under the Affordable Care Act Medicaid Expansion, over 75,000 West Virginians gained access to affordable health care, the medicines they had needed for years but couldn’t afford and even treatment for alcohol and drug abuse.

When Donald Trump showed up during the campaign and promised to “repeal Obamacare” and “replace it with a big, beautiful health care plan that will cover every American and lower the cost of premiums and deductibles,” many of those who had gained coverage through the ACA were unnerved.  Having been unable to access medical care for years before President Obama’s health care law became the law of the land, they wondered why Trump and his Republican friends were calling them “victims of Obamacare.”  And wondered what could conceivably be done to make it better.

Still, they had put their eggs in Donald Trump’s basket and trusted him to do what was in their best interest.  However, as millions of Americans have discovered since the details of #TrumpCare were released, trusting Donald Trump to do anything he has promised to do and believing he gives a damn about the “best interest” of anyone other than himself is a sucker’s bet.

The massive gains made in health care accessibility for the people of McDowell County and the state of West Virginia will, if #TrumpCare is passed and signed into law, fade like a wisp of smoke into a people’s history shaped by misplaced trust and broken promises.  

The temptation for many is to point an accusatory finger at coal communities such as McDowell County and say something along the lines of “You got what you asked for” or “Elections have consequences and now you get to live with them.”

But to do so is to demean and diminish the degree of desperation that permeates these communities and to not understand the attraction that magical thinking has for the hopeless.

It is also to ignore the danger posed by a demagogic snake-oil salesman taking advantage of the powerless with a faux populist message of hope that may well be cognitively-dissonant on its face but comes to the beleaguered like manna from heaven.  Tyranny, after all, is given birth by nothing more than a group of people who can no longer see the distance between what they want to hear and the truth as the rest of the world knows it.

EPILOGUE (2)

During the five mission trips I have made to McDowell County over the years—accompanied by bright, fresh-faced college students who, at the end of a week of distributing cases of bottled water, boxes of good food and rebuilding bathrooms and bedrooms and porches and steps, as oft as not asked me, “Who will help them when we’re gone?”—I have come to know these wonderful people as one of the “forgotten tribes” upon whose strong shoulders America was built.

I have listened to their stories and laughed so hard that I had to wipe tears from my eyes.  I have listened to their stories and had to turn away so they wouldn’t see the tears in my eyes.  I was once drafted to preside over a hastily-arranged wedding between two young people who wanted to make sure they were “properly married with a preacher and all” before their first child was born.  When one of the pallbearers for an old miner’s funeral was too sick to attend, I quickly filled in—jeans, t-shirt, boots and all.

The memories are so thick I almost have to push them aside like a dense spider-web to get to ones I want to talk about.

But one memory is so powerful that I don’t have to dig deep to find it.

We were rebuilding an old widow’s living room—tearing out ceiling tiles and sheetrock, ripping moulding off and pulling up flooring and then replacing it all.

I had gone to her home early that first morning to survey the landscape and, all dressed up in her Sunday-go-to-meetin’ clothes, she wanted to serve me coffee in the very living room we would soon be tearing out.  She brought out her best silver coffee service and her best china for the occasion.  I was touched and humbled.

There were three framed pictures hanging side-by-side on the wall above the living room couch.  One was the rendering of Jesus that one once found on the old fans handed out by funeral homes during the heat of summer.  To the left of it was a magazine cover picture of John F. Kennedy.  And to the right of it was a magazine cover picture of Lyndon Johnson.

It seemed, at first, an incongruity of monumental proportions.  Jesus.  John Kennedy.  Lyndon Johnson.

And then, from the deeps of my memory, I remembered the history.  

When John Kennedy campaigned in McDowell County in the run-up to the historic 1960 election, he had been so personally affected by the poverty he saw that he made a promise:  When elected, he was sending help to them.  He followed through on his promise and did so in a big way.  His first executive order established the foundation of the modern Food Stamp program.  And the first recipients were the people of McDowell County.

Lyndon Johnson was thinking of the terrible conditions he had found in McDowell County and the rest of Appalachia when he declared “war on poverty” in 1964.  Thousands of people were lifted out of subsistence living by the federal programs that served as the ammunition for LBJ’s “war”:  Medicare, Medicaid, free school lunches, the list goes on and on.

When we came back later that day to begin work, I carefully took those framed pictures down and tucked them safely away.  And when, a couple of days later, we were done, I carefully put them back in their places of honor.

Jesus.  John Kennedy.  Lyndon Johnson.  Three men honored by an old widow because she believed that they had kept their promises to her and her neighbors in McDowell County, West Virginia.

Something which has proven, over the years, to be the exception to the rule.

 

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