Maureen Dowd of The New York Times:
Before the
orange cyclone hit town, Washington was a far more staid place.
Al Gore
loved to host small dinner parties focused on scholarly topics. One dinner was
devoted to the meaning of metaphor. “I l-i-i-ke metaphors,”
Gore drawled to The Washington Post when he was vice
president. “The more complex and arcane the better.”
What must
Gore make of the unsanctioned, ahistoric, abominable destruction of the East
Wing by Donald Trump? It’s the most remarkable metaphor we’ve ever seen in the
nation’s capital. It’s not complex or arcane. It’s simple and visceral. It
slams you in the face — metaphorically speaking.
“He’s
saying, ‘I can do whatever the hell I want and you can’t stop me!’” said David
Axelrod, who worked in the Obama White House. “In this case, it’s sundering
history.
“If you
worked in the White House, you have a reverence for every wall of that place.
Tattered as it may have been, there was a dignity to it. It was a quietly
stately citadel of power in America, not a palace for a mad king. Trump has a
manic desire to tear down history and write his own.”
A Jackie
Kennedy garden was plowed over by the bulldozers. The woman with the best
taste in the history of the White House was rubbished by the man with the worst
taste in the history of the White House.
Many of
his voters wanted to see Trump take a jackhammer to Washington, but I’m not
sure they meant it this literally.
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Melania
probably doesn’t care. As The Times’s Katie Rogers reported in her book about
first ladies, “American Woman,” Melania only dropped by the East Wing, which
held the offices for the first lady and her staff, a couple of times in the
first term. She hasn’t been around much this term either.
Treasury
Department employees, who work opposite the razing, were warned not to share
pictures of it. There must be a sense that it’s profane, as it was in 1980 when
Trump smashed Bonwit
Teller’s limestone friezes, which he had promised to the Metropolitan Museum of
Art, to build Trump Tower. The friezes had little artistic merit, said a “vice
president” of the Trump company, identified as “John Baron” — a fake name Trump
used, he acknowledged while testifying in
a lawsuit over his use of hundreds of illegal Polish immigrants for the
demolition.
But Trump
has so little respect for this 123-year-old symbol of American history
that he didn’t check with federal planning officials or
Congress before he obliterated one side of the White House. As if he’s tearing
down a gas station.
When I
visited the White House with my mom as a kid, we loved overhearing foreign
tourists ooh and ahh about how relatively small and modest the house was. Its
simplicity was part of its charm. We didn’t have the grand castles of the
European nobility we were trying to shed. It was just a nice house with good
curb appeal.
Trump does
not do small or modest. He does big, flashy odes to self. The joke when Trump
was first running was that he’d slap his name on the White House facade as he
did with all his other properties. And now it’s happening. White House
officials are saying Trump will name the ballroom after himself.
It’s
another example, as Rahm Emanuel says, that Trump wants to rule, not govern.
“He
believes that the only thing you can do wrong is that which is not in your
self-interest,” Axelrod said.
The
president has the kind of blot-out-the-sun narcissism that spurs him to do
whatever it takes to keep all eyes on him. He ignores the law, procedures,
consequences.
It’s a
slam-dance presidency that delights in transgressing and provoking.
Build a
$300 million, 90,000-square-foot gilt ballroom — which will overshadow the
central edifice — while the government is shut and people have been thrown out
of work; plaster tacky gold all over the Oval; sue everyone willy-nilly; put
foes through legal torture; send troops to American cities; shrug off due
process and blow alleged drug runners out of the water.
“I think
we’re just going to kill people that are bringing drugs into our country, OK?”
he said Thursday. “We’re going to kill them.”
Trump’s
talent is finding wormholes in the system that he can exploit for his own
satisfaction or financial gain — things that are not specifically outlawed
because it never occurred to the founders or anyone else that a lowlife could
rise so high.
Bloomberg’s
Tim O’Brien wrote that in seeking private funding for the
ballroom, Trump may encourage influence-peddling — grifting off the presidency
even more.
After
turning the Justice Department into his own vigilante posse, Trump now wants to
warp the once-esteemed department even more. He has made a cockamamie demand that
Justice give him $230 million as compensation for previous federal
investigations of him. The Times editorial board called it
“a breathtaking act of self-dealing.”
Trump once
thought nothing of aiming to overthrow the government he ran. Now he thinks
nothing of threatening to sue the government he runs if he isn’t allowed to pay
himself a quarter-billion dollars.
“We the
People” is quaint. Now we are governed by the whims of one person.
Trump stopped trade
talks with Canada on Friday because he did not like an ad commissioned by the
province of Ontario that quoted from a radio address President Ronald Reagan
made that criticized tariffs.
Trump, who
posts fake A.I. slop, called the ad “FAKE.” (Reagan’s quotes were accurate but
were in a different order.) The Canadians paused it.
It was
like when Trump levied a
50 percent unilateral tariff on Brazil because it had the temerity to prosecute
Jair Bolsonaro, who also tried to steal an election when he was president. Or
when Trump mused about bailing out his right-wing ally in Argentina,
potentially to the tune of $40 billion, and promised to
quadruple the amount of Argentine beef allowed into this country at a lower
tariff rate — infuriating struggling American ranchers.
Trump can
indulge any crazy impulse and nobody is able to check him.
“The
Congress is adrift,” Senator Lisa Murkowski told The
Times’s Carl Hulse, on overseeing Trump’s legally questionable military moves
and vindictive tariffs. “It’s like we have given up. And that’s not a good
signal to the American public.”
Congress
is adrift. The White House is a shipwreck. Trump is marauding in the Caribbean.
James Comey and Letitia James are being forced to walk the plank, and next up
could be Jack Smith and Adam Schiff.
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