Tone-deaf enablers and sycophants are a threat to Trump's re-election
By: Rachel Marsden
VANCOUVER, British Columbia — It was like Moses parting the Red Sea – except
with blasts of tear gas. After authorities had attacked peaceful protesters with
a chemical irritant, cameras followed President Donald Trump as he walked over
and stood in front of a church near the White House. (It had earlier been
damaged by a small fire in the unrest following the death of George Floyd at the
hands of Minneapolis police.) Trump thrust a Bible into the air above his head,
looking out at the cameras like a child expecting his parents’ approval after
scribbling on the walls.
The charade smacked of something that the U.S. State Department would sanction a
foreign leader for doing in violation of citizens’ basic human rights.
Accompanying Trump were communications aides who were either too incompetent and
tone deaf — or too sycophantic — to tell him that the staged photo op would be
unappealing to anyone with an emotional quotient higher than drywall.
Unable to read the room amid the social unrest, Trump came off as insecure and
desperate to recapture the eroding support of evangelical voters. The blatant
pandering suggested that Trump thinks religious voters can be won over by
superficial gestures. It reduces them and their values to an insulting
one-dimensional caricature.
Trump’s attorney general, William Barr, who ordered the attack on protesters
before accompanying the president, later found himself splitting hairs over
whether or not the chemical used on them was an irritant. Instead of haggling
over semantics, perhaps Barr’s next interview could settle the debate with a
blast in the face with whatever was used on the protesters to see if he finds it
irritating? Or maybe Barr can consult the State Department to see whether the
same chemicals used in his attack on Americans would warrant punitive action –
or at the very least, a stern lecture — by the U.S. if used by authorities in
Syria, Iran, Hong Kong, or Venezuela.
Barr should have invested more energy upfront in convincing Trump that this idea
for an outing was a bad one. The same goes for Pentagon brass who accompanied
Trump. What were they even doing there, besides riding shotgun as Trump’s poor
optics led them all off a political cliff?
Defense Secretary Mark Esper has said that he thought they were heading out to
visit with the troops. He now claims that the church stunt came as a surprise to
him. Even if that’s the case, it’s bad enough that Esper thought that it was a
good look for Pentagon leadership to be hanging out with the troops in the same
area where a crackdown was taking place on peaceful protesters objecting to
abuse and overreach by authorities. Worse, Esper reportedly told state governors
on a phone call to “dominate the battlespace,” referring to U.S. streets. Trump
later parroted the term in a public statement. “It’s called dominate the
streets,” Trump said, suggesting that he didn’t come up with this approach all
by himself but had been egged on.
Joint Chiefs chairman Mark Milley, also part of Trump’s entourage for the event,
dressed up for the trip to the church in camo-style battle fatigues, as though
he were heading out on the town like a regular Fidel Castro.
U.S. militarism has finally come home to roost – and so now has the perception
of domestic conflict resolution through a lens of brute force rather than
thoughtful diplomacy. The opposition (in this case, the protesters) is
considered a one-dimensional, homogeneous enemy to be dominated or subdued. It’s
a view that has been reflected in statements made by Trump and his entourage
conflating the vast majority of peaceful protesters with relatively minor
extremist elements on both the right and left that have opportunistically
exploited the protest movements to pursue their own agenda.
The Trump administration is displaying the kind of simple-minded approach to
domestic affairs that has long been honed by the U.S. abroad. In the eyes of the
government, foreign leaders that fail to kowtow to U.S. interests are tyrants,
and the opposition is an ally. “The people” of these foreign countries are
considered monolithic, and generally assumed to be in opposition to their
leader. It’s a gross distortion of reality, but there’s little room for nuance
when there’s an agenda to pursue.
Trump, like his predecessors, has bought into some of the worst knee-jerk
foreign policy dogmatism. He has defended representatives of terror, sponsoring
states while attacking and sanctioning those fighting against them, leaving
little room for critical thought that strays from longstanding dogma. And now
Trump is grafting that same lazy ideological approach onto American politics in
the context of a presidential race, with average concerned citizens being
mischaracterized and squared away into little political boxes. In an election
where the winner will most likely be decided by the independent-minded voters
rather than by party bases, this kind of intellectual laziness risks being a
costly strategy.
COPYRIGHT 2020 RACHEL MARSDEN