Wednesday, July 21, 2021

A Movie President

Where is President Andrew Shepherd when we needed him?

Back in 1995, a great fictional president named Andrew Shepherd, played by Michael Douglas in the movie The American President, addressed this very problem.

President Shepherd took to the podium in his White House press room to say this at one point:

"Being president of this country is entirely about character. ... Everyone knows America isn't easy. America is advanced citizenship. You gotta want it bad, 'cause it's going to put up a fight. ... We have serious problems, and we need serious people to solve them. And whatever your particular problem is, friend, I promise you, Bob Rumson [the opposing candidate in the film] is not the least bit interested in solving it. He is interested in two things and two things only: making you afraid of it and telling you who's to blame for it. That, ladies and gentlemen, is how you win elections."

President Shepherd

And sadly, former president Trump is a Bob Rumson-wannabe.
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thehill.com     07/17/2021

Tuesday, July 20, 2021

A Trio of Books

This summer features a spate of books offering revelations on President Donald Trump's last year in office:


I Alone Can Fix It  -  Carol Leonnig and Philip Rucker

Mike Pence provided enough anecdotal detail for a dramatic, newsworthy account of his last-minute acquisition of a spine in the face of Trump’s attempt to bully him into stopping the electoral college certification. As rioters breached the Capitol and roamed the hallways shouting, “Hang Mike Pence!,” the vice president was evacuated to “a secured subterranean area,” the authors report. But when the head of his security detail, Tim Giebels, tried to persuade him to wait inside an armored limousine, Pence refused, suspecting that the Secret Service would try to drive him to safety, making him look like either a conspirator or a coward unwilling to carry out his constitutional duty to ratify Joe Biden’s victory.

Some readers may balk at seeing Bill Barr get credit for anything, and with good reason. The former attorney general deserves to be forever remembered for helping Trump falsely claim exoneration by the Mueller report and for corrupting the Justice Department in the service of protecting the president’s friends and pursuing his partisan aims. After the election, in key public statements and in several tense private confrontations, Barr drew the line at supporting the “big lie,” depriving Trump of backup in his desperate attempt to mount legal challenges to voting results in the states that put Biden over the top. “We’ve looked into these things and they’re nonsense,” Barr told the president about his election fraud tirades in one of their last meetings, before he conveniently resigned just in time to avoid association with the January 6 riot.

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The Washington Post  07/15/2021

Friday, July 16, 2021

Trump’s Lies About the Coronavirus

Barry, John M.    The Great Influenza: The Story of the Deadliest Pandemic in History, ©2018,
updated edition with a new Afterword. Originally published 2004.

“Afterword”

As horrific as the disease itself was, public officials and the media helped create that terror -- not by exaggerating the disease but by minimizing it, by trying to reassure. … If there is a single dominant lesson from 1918, it’s that governments need to tell the truth in a crisis. … You don’t manage the truth. You tell the truth.

In 1918 the lies of officials and of the press never allowed the terror to condense in the concrete. The public could trust nothing and so they knew nothing.

Those in authority must retain the public’s trust. The way to do that is to distort nothing, to put the best face on nothing, to try to manipulate no one.

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Too bad Trump did not heed this advice. Instead he led with lies which he possibly thought were reassuring. But his attempts at reassuring were merely efforts to fend off criticism of his lack of leadership.

Trump’s Lies About the Coronavirus
Much of this info is from The Atlantic, 11/02/2020.
Trump’s words are in the quotation marks.

February 27, 2020  -  The outbreak would be temporary: “It’s going to disappear. One day, it’s like a miracle—it will disappear.”

February 2020  -  “Now the Democrats are politicizing the coronavirus.” The outbreak is “their new hoax.”

March 2, 2020  -  Pharmaceutical companies are going “to have vaccines, I think, relatively soon.” The first vaccine in the U.S. was given December 2020.

March 6 and May 11, 2020  -  “Anybody that needs a test, gets a test. We—they’re there. They have the tests. And the tests are beautiful” and “If somebody wants to be tested right now, they’ll be able to be tested.”  The U.S. did not have enough testing.

March 26, 2020  -  This kind of pandemic “was something nobody thought could happen … Nobody would have ever thought a thing like this could have happened.”  Experts both inside and outside the federal government sounded the alarm many times in the past decade about the potential for a devastating global pandemic.

May 8, 2020  -  The coronavirus is “going to go away without a vaccine … and we’re not going to see it again, hopefully, after a period of time.”

May 11, 2020  -  America has “developed a testing capacity unmatched and unrivaled anywhere in the world, and it’s not even close.”  The United States was still not testing enough people and was lagging behind the testing and tracing capabilities that other countries had developed.

May 2020  -  “Coronavirus numbers are looking MUCH better, going down almost everywhere,” and cases are “coming way down.”

June 17, 2020  -  The pandemic is “fading away. It’s going to fade away.”

July 2, 2020  -  The pandemic is “getting under control.”

July 4, 2020  -  “99%” of COVID-19 cases are “totally harmless.”  The WHO has said that about 15 percent of COVID-19 cases can be severe, with 5 percent being critical.

Multiple times  -  America is “rounding the corner” and “rounding the final turn” of the pandemic.

Multiple times  -  “What happens is, you get better” after being sick with COVID-19. “That's what happens: You get better.” Also, “You get better and then you’re immune.”

Trump finally declared a national emergency more than seven weeks after the first domestic COVID-19 case was reported, in Washington State.

Friday, July 9, 2021

Talk Is Who He Is

Trump is, retroactively and publicly, admitting that he shouldn't have given interviews to the various reporters writing these books.

This, for those of you new to Trump-ology, is a regular refrain for Trump. He gives reporters some of his time and they don't write the story like they should. Somehow, though, he never learns and always seems to find time for that next book author!


Here's why:

1) Trump doesn't really hate the media.

He, more than just about anyone, understands what positive press coverage (or, really, any press coverage) can do for someone. He also likes the banter, the back-and-forth. Notice how Trump knew every reporter's name who covered him regularly -- and called on them by first names? Because he craves the attention that they -- and their publications -- can provide him.

2) Trump believes he is the greatest salesman ever.

To Trump, each interview with a book author or any other reporter is a chance to convince that person that a) he is awesome and b) he has always been right about everything. Despite lots (and lots) of evidence that his powers of persuasion are not what he believes them to be, Trump just keeps at it -- talking and talking and talking.

The Point: Trump will NEVER stop talking to reporters, authors, random Mar-a-Lago visitors or anyone else who happens to be in earshot. Talk is who he is. It's all he is.

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CNN  07/09/2021