Showing posts with label Trump. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Trump. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 20, 2019

Extractions from "One Nation After Trump"

One Nation After Trump

A Guide for the Perplexed, the Disillusiioned, the Desperate, and the Not-Yet-Deported.
by
E.J. Dionne, Jr.
Norman J. Ornstein
Thomas E. Mann

I recently finished reading this book that I borrowed from the county library.  I thought the book was Excellent.

This post is includes a few extractions from the book.

Fake News - page 54

The road to "fake news" was paved by the disdain in a large part of the conservative movement for real news. The trail to "alternative facts" was blazed by a mistrust of those whose jobs and professional ethics required them to report and rely on real facts.

Election of Donald Trump - p. 175

... But his [Donald Trump's] election ought to jar those who make up our nations's governing class. They now know that Americans in large numbers were so disaffected that they embraced a candidate whose temperament and behavior were plainly ill suited to the requirements of the nation's highest office.

Lessons - p, 220

Among the many lessons to take away from the Trump campaign is how destructive a candidate who capitalizes on and encourages a lack of empathy can be.

Community p. 223

Writing about the devastation of a seemingly indestructible mountain culture in a West Virginia community struck by flooding in 1972, the sociologist Kai Erikson described the human role of community as clearly as anyone has, "It is the comminity that cushions pain, the community that provides a context for intimacy, the community thar represents morality and serves as the repository for old traditions." His classic Everything in Its Path: Destruction of Community in the Buffalo Creek Flood underscored how fragile community can be.

Citizen Involvement - p. 246

Getting more citizens into the democratic fray is essential to defending and repairing our republic.

But as Ivins would insist, democracy is not for wimps or for those who seek purity in all things.  Ours is a complex, pluralistic, representative democracy, one in which political parties play an essential role in elections and policy making.  People pursue their right "to petition the Government for a redress of grievances" in many ways, some of them boisterous and inconveniet.  Powerful group identities shape the relations between representatives and the represented.  Getting into the fight will mean devoting outselves to the often-hard work of politics, even when it makes us uncomfortable.  It will require recognizing that we will not always be successful but that each experience will sharpen our skills. It will demand creative approaches to effecting change.  It will mean becoming involved with some of the oldest forms of political action, inside parties and at the precinct level, while at the same time being willing to embrace new political alliances.

Electoral College - p. 257

Why should Americans who choose to live in California be punished by having their electoral power reduced? Should it not be more troubling that 4.27 million voters in California mattered far less than 10,704 voters in Michigan, 22,748 voters in Wisconsin, and 44,292 voters in Pennsylvania? Either we are a democratic republic, or we are not.  We either believe in one person, one vote, or we don't. 

Consider Trump - p, 286

Consider the aspects of Trump’s persona and approach that incite such disquiet and rage: the ease with which he demonizes whole groups of Americans; his indifference to fact; his willingness to lie with impunity; his lack of even elementary knowledge or intellectual curiosity about policy; his proclivity toward shifting positions again and again; his quest to tote up “wins” without any concern about the content of the proposals he is pushing; his lack of any historical sense; his belief that everything is about a “deal”; and his refusal to acknowledge any need to separate his personal financial interest from his public duties. 

Dick Henthorn
20 Aug 2019


Thursday, March 15, 2018

The President's Primary Problem


The President's Primary Problem

“The president's primary problem as a leader,” Peggy Noonan stingingly remarked,

is not that he is impetuous, brash or naive. It's not that he is inexperienced, crude, an outsider. It is that he is weak and sniveling. It is that he undermines himself almost daily by ignoring traditional norms and forms of American masculinity. He's not strong and self-controlled not cool and tough, not low-key and determined; he's whiny, weepy and self-pitying. He throws himself, sobbing on the body politic.

He's a drama queen.
(Quoted by David Frum, in Trumpocracy - The Corruption of the American Republic, p. 226-7)

Dick Henthorn
15 March 2018

Sunday, March 11, 2018

Bill of Rights


What we are seeing is a grant of permission from millions of people to the president of the United States to diminish, discredit, corrode, and ultimately subvert what the authors of the US Bill of Rights listed among the very first freedoms necessary to their great experiment in self-government.
(David Frum, Trumpocracy - The Corruption of the American Republic, p. 123)

Dick Henthorn

11 March 2018

Monday, December 18, 2017

A President Must

A President Must

A president "... must be willing to listen to his advisers and department heads; must encourage consideration of conflicting views; and must acknowledge errors and learn from them ... must be disciplined, control emotions, and act only after reflection and careful deliberation ... must maintain cordial relationships with leaders of countries of different backgrounds and must have their respect and trust," and must be able and willing "to separate truth from falsehood" ..
(Diane Jhueck, L.M.H.C.,D.M.H.P., chapter “A Clinical Case For The Dangerousness of Donald J. Trump,” in the book, The Dangerous Case of Donald Trump by Brandy Lee, p. 191)

Dick Henthorn
18 Dec 2017

Sunday, December 17, 2017

Trump & Violence

Trump & Violence


… one final clarification is in order. Trump is now the most powerful Head of State in the world, and one of the most impulsive, arrogant, ignorant, disorganized, chaotic, nihilistic, self-contradictory, self-important, and self-serving. He has his finger on the triggers of a thousand or more of the most powerful thermonuclear weapons in the world. That means he could kill more people in a few seconds than any dictator in past history has been able to kill during his entire years in power. Indeed by virtue of his office, Trump has the power to reduce the unprecedentedly destructive world wars and genocides of the twentieth century to minor footnotes in the history of human violence. To say merely that he is “dangerous” is debatable only in the sense that it may be too much of an understatement. If he even took a step in this direction, we will not be able to say that he did not warn us - loudly, clearly, and repeatedly. In that case, the fault will not be his alone it will also be ours.
(James Gilligan, M.D., chapter “The Issue is Dangerousness, Not Mental Illness,” in the book, The Dangerous Case of Donald Trump by Brandy Lee, p. 178)

Dick Henthorn
17 Dec 2017