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Madness and potty mouth prerequisites for presidency

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TRUMP derangement syndrome (TDS) is alive and well. Take Hawaii’s false alarm of an imminent missile strike on Sunday. The alarm was triggered by an employee of the state based Hawaiian Emergency Management Agency (HEMA).

The unnamed emergency worker chose poorly from a drop-down box offering him the possibility of a test or the real thing. A slip of the mouse led to an hour of two of panic on the islands with the unfortunate worker frogmarched off to the dreaded counselling.

It had nothing to do with federal emergency response systems, let alone President Trump but CNN breathlessly reported on Trump’s every move throughout the accidental crisis (he was on the golf course at Mar-a-Lago) while other media outlets focused on Trump’s geopolitical sabre-rattling which again was irrelevant.

Those in the know say the greatest likelihood of a nuclear catastrophe will not arise from executive orders uttered in the White House but of systems failures of an ageing ICBM network that literally could go off at any minute by complete accident. If you understand that — and maybe it’s better you don’t — you won’t sleep well at night, I assure you. “Oops, sorry, we turned your country into a radioactive puddle.” I guess the good news is there won’t be too many people left to receive the official apology.

Even if we accept some of wilder claims in Michael Wolff’s Fire and Fury and the almost interminable street corner shrink Op-Eds in The Washington PostThe NY Times and LA Times, that the POTUS is a narcissist (name one politician who isn’t), a sociopath, or a drooling man-baby, how does Trump measure up against his predecessors in the mental health stakes?

While a prodigious political talent, Teddy Roosevelt liked war just a little bit too much. Preceding and following Teddy, were presidents so lamentable it gives rise to The Simpsons’ tribute to the mediocre presidents — “We are the mediocre Presidents, you won’t find our faces on dollars or on cents. There’s Taylor, there’s Tyler, there’s Fillmore and there’s Hayes. There’s William Henry Harrison — ‘I died in 30 days.’”

By the beginning of Nixon’s second term he was a gibbering paranoid. We know now that Reagan had early onset dementia, and this probably was hastened by the assassination attempt late in his first term but at the time, Reagan was considered merely a doddery old man.

President Lyndon Johnson used fruity language pretty much all the time. He is widely regarded as a very fine president, albeit stuck in a conflict thrust upon him by JFK’s presidency, compounded by poor advice and dismal military leadership which thrust the US further into the bloody quagmire of Vietnam.

Madness and potty mouth are not likely to have a POTUS hurled from office. On the contrary they appear to be prerequisites for the job.

The fall of Trump via the 25th Amendment — where the vice-president and the majority of the Trump cabinet determine the POTUS is unfit to hold office — is a fantasy.

The other source of unhinged hope for a premature end to Trump’s presidency is the outcome of the Mueller investigation. This is a great unknown. So many opinionistas think themselves exclusively capable of unravelling the largely secret investigation before it actually unravels. It is more speculative fluff.

There is one reality you can bank on. No one besides special counsel Robert Mueller and a few of his most senior associates know where the investigation is headed.

This largely false hope provides a delusion for the Democrats, too. While Trump’s often odd behaviour is scrutinised ad nauseam, the Democrats have their own problems. If I must be thrust into the business of long distance psychoanalysis, I would say the Democrats are suffering a collective Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder and remain in deep denial after Hillary Clinton’s failed candidacy 15 months ago. Little has changed. Failed players, Nancy Pelosi, 77, and Chuck Schumer, 67, remain at the helm and show no sign of wandering off into the sunset. The Clintons won’t take the hint and go away either.

It’s not unlike the Soviet politburo in the 1970s where a septuagenarian might be considered a whippersnapper.

Al Franken has left the stage. While many would say that he copped his right whack in the #metoo stakes, the most important element of his departure from the US Senate is that he was exposed by members of his own party, his congressional Democratic colleagues. That alone speaks of a party mired in factional and personality-based conflict.

As the November midterm congressional elections loom, the paucity of talent within the party is so stark that Oprah Winfrey sped to the top of a short pile of improbable Democrat presidential candidates after giving a speech to actors in a room where it was almost impossible not to get a standing ovation.

Oprah Winfrey as a Democrat presidential candidate? I can see it now. Oprah standing at the Democrat National Conference in 2020, and shrieking, “Everyone gets a car!!!”

The pickings are so thin the Democrats have at least pondered the temptation to replace one three ring circus with another rather than winning through voter engagement via ideas, force of policy and substance. You know, politics the old-fashioned way.

The mid-terms beckon in November. Perhaps the Democrats will win majorities in both houses. Perhaps they won’t. It is worth remembering that every two term President since Reagan has faced the same circumstance, a lame duck presidency. If the Democrats fall short of a congressional majority, it would be a spectacular failure.

If they do manage to gain a majority in both houses and pursue a process of removing Trump from office, where would this leave the rock solid 33 per cent of American voters who support Trump come hell or high water? How would they regard Democrat attempts to hurl Trump from office? The loss of confidence in political institutions, the courts and in the federal system of government would be catastrophic.

It’s difficult to envision where it might lead but it would not be good for the shining example of democracy the US has been to the world.

Regardless of where it ends and what one thinks of Russian interference in the American political system, the possibility of collusion between the Russians and the Trump camp, the great unknowns of the when, the how and most importantly the who, it is safe to say Vladimir Putin is rubbing his hands together with glee.

This article was originally published in The Australian 17 January 2018.

142 Comments

  • Boadicea says:

    Good to see that Kyrgios has matured and is playing great tennis . Fantastic game against Tsonga. No losers in this match.

    • Jean Baptiste says:

      Aw geez Boadicea, Nick will be over the moon when he hears that. It’s exactly the fillip he needs to make him into not just a superstar but a shining role model for aspiring young sports boys and girls
      .
      Go on, send him a card and a bunch of roses, you know you want to.

  • Trivalve says:

    What on earth is going on with our one-day cricket? Seriously weird.

  • Dismayed says:

    Frydenberg with is usual dishonesty quickly twitted about the price rise in SA even though the whole market spiked and the rise was due to coal fired plants crashing. FN disgrace. No Surprises.

  • Dismayed says:

    Coal fired power generations crashes in heat sending prices soaring. But why don’t the news publications report this with hysteria? It is the 13th time this year alone a coal fired plant has shut down unexpectedly. As I have said there is only one form of intermittent power in this country coal power. No Surprises.

    • Carl on the Coast says:

      Because they’re leaving all the wildly uncontrolled emotional bits up to you Dismayed. You’re so good at it and you make some of us laugh.

  • Dismayed says:

    “I alone can do it.” These five extraordinary words kept coming back to me as I reflected on Donald Trump’s first year as president of the US. He made this claim during his speech accepting the Republican nomination in July 2016. At the time, it struck me simply as a delusional expression of his grandiosity. Looking back, I also hear the plaintive wail of a desperate child who believes he is alone in the world with no one to care for him.”
    https://www.theguardian.com/global/commentisfree/2018/jan/18/fear-donald-trump-us-president-art-of-the-deal

  • Not Finished Yet says:

    What does make Trump different is his public qualities, not his private ones. Nobody with his public qualities could have got anywhere near the presidency in the past. I don’t know if that is to be interpreted as suggesting a decline in standards of public civility more generally or not. Regardless, those qualities in themselves do not threaten American democracy.

    The person at the top is only one element of a robust democracy. Other strands include universal suffrage, one vote one value, independent oversight of elections, rigorously upholding the separation of powers, a free and diverse press and a public service with high ethical standards. If those elements are in place, a democracy can continue to function quite well with chaos at the top.

    And that is where Trump does threaten American democracy. He has shown himself to be almost contemptuous of the separation of powers. I don’t think he believes in the concept at all. He is certainly unsupporting of a diverse press. I really don’t want to hear the term fake news one more time. Either something is true or it isn’t. He is equally dismissive of most of the American public institutions that have provided an essential bedrock to American democracy for so long. I know some here, such as HB, have a high opinion of him. Personally I find him repellent (Trump, I mean, not HB), but that is irrelevant. Being a petulant narcissist of gross appetites is not what makes him dangerous.

    • Razor says:

      NFY,
      Agree with plenty of what you say here and particularly your first paragraph. You have nailed the essence of a robust democracy. I do get why Trump runs with the fake news stuff though. Repeatedly he has been proven to be right. In my view this brings into account the issue of a free and independent press. Yes it is a requirement but what is the sanction for wilfully publishing stuff that is untruthful in an attempt to distort democracy? It’s a fine balance and I know I do not have the answer.

      Cheers,

      Razor

    • Penny says:

      Totally agree NFY. I still like to think that democracy still works in America. I get very sick of the absolute obsession regarding Trumps behaviour from the media. He is a petulant narcissist with gross appetites, but that’s what appealed to the people who voted for him. They thought he would be good in the job because he offered a totally different perspective from the previous incumbents and let’s face it he wasn’t Hilary Clinton.
      What will happen now is anybody’s guess, but like JTI and Dwight ( and millions of other people too I would think) I wish the Clintons would just go away. As long as they still think they are relevant to the Democrats then the situation won’t change.
      Most of my American friends and colleagues are still going through a “wait and see” period with Trump, but they are now realizing the importance of involving themselves in trying to make change at their local level.

  • Henry Blofeld says:

    Hilarious comedy take on POTUS Trumps health, Mr Insider. Wonderful to live in a Democracy where we can practice free speech and expression, unlike say North Korea where a clip like this of Kim Jong-un would be the last thing you ever did.
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CTEy6Y9MYoc

  • Henry Blofeld says:

    POTUS Trump finishes his first year in office more popular with his own party than Barack Obama or Bill Clinton were at the same point, Mr Insider and is set to go on to 7 more fabulous years of “Making America Great Again”. The USA was spared a political bullet when Grandma Clinton stuffed up big time.
    https://tinyurl.com/ybszermf

    • Penny says:

      Being popular within your own party means bugger all. Trumps popularity within America (important) and globally (not so important) is lower than any American President in their first year, ever.

      If you want to put this at an Australian level, Peter Dutton is considered as popular within the LNP……with the general population?……nah

  • Wissendorf says:

    The price of tulip bulbs is in free fall and they can’t blame the Turks this time.

    • Boadicea says:

      Hmmm Wiss. Heard one guy who reckoned he’d made 500 big ones from an initial outlay of 20 in just 16months. Don’t think he’s seen them in the flesh though. Another who had lost big time.
      If it’s too good to be true its too good to be true!
      I reckon no one really knows what they’re really dealing with.
      Lots of scam potential perhaps.

    • Razor says:

      Was always going to be Wiss. Just like the carbon markets. Selling stuff that is backed by nothing. Always open to speculation and eventual disaster.

    • Milton says:

      I went shopping with one of those the other day and I didn’t even need a wallet. Mind you the change was a bastard.

    • Carl on the Coast says:

      And they can’t blame Tiny Tim either. He finished his tip-toeing 22 years ago.

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