(Washington Post)
At
various times over the past three and a half years, many of us have asked what
would happen if President Trump truly went over the edge or if his behavior
became so frightening that his unfitness for the most powerful position on
Earth could no longer be denied.
But
the human capacity for denial is apparently almost infinite. Let’s review what
our president has been up to in the past few days:
·
In a Twitter spasm on Saturday and
Sunday, Trump retweeted mockery of former Georgia gubernatorial candidate
Stacey Abrams’s weight and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s (D-Calif.) looks, along
with a tweet calling Hillary Clinton a “skank.”
·
Eager to start a new culture war
flare-up, he urged churches to open and gather
parishioners in a room to breathe the same air, threatening that he would
“override” governors whose shutdown orders still forbade such gatherings. The
president has no such power.
·
He all but accused talk show host Joe
Scarborough of murdering a young woman who died in 2001 in the
then-congressman’s district office, bringing untold torture to her family from
the conspiracy theorists who will respond to his accusation.
·
He has repeatedly insisted that the
upcoming election is being “rigged” because states run by both Republicans and
Democrats are making it easier to vote by mail, seeking to delegitimize a vote
that has yet to occur, despite the substantial evidence that mail voting
advantages neither party.
By trying to reassign seats in the White House briefing room,
the Trump administration is attempting to stifle real journalism, says media
critic Erik Wemple. (Video: Kate Woodsome, Joshua Carroll, Erik Wemple/Photo:
Jabin Botsford / WP/The Washington Post)
The
truth is that Trump is not much more despicable of a human being than he has
always been; it’s just that standard Trumpian behavior becomes more horrifying
when it occurs during an ongoing national crisis. It is reality that changed
around him, and he was incapable of responding to it.
We
all know this. In public, Republicans may say that the real villain in the
pandemic is China, or that all those deaths — and the tens of thousands yet to
come — were inevitable, or that it is essential to get the economy moving. But
they know as well as the rest of us do what a catastrophic failure Trump has
been.
They must own the moral choice they now make. In 2016, they said Trump
would grow serious and sober once he was faced with the awesome
responsibilities of the office. There was little reason at the time to think it
would happen, but it was at least possible.
No
one can say that now. Not only do we know who Trump is, we know who he will
always be. And we know that reelecting him will be disastrous in a hundred
ways.
If
you gave many Republicans in Washington truth serum, they’d say, “Of course
he’s unfit to be president. Of course he’s corrupt, of course he’s incompetent,
of course he’s the most dishonest person ever to step into the Oval Office. But
I can live with that, because him being reelected means Republicans keep power,
we get more conservative judges and we get all the policies we favor.”
they’d still vote for Biden, not just because
Trump has been credibly accused of sexual misconduct by no fewer than two dozen women, but also because even if
Biden turned out to be guilty, it would still be unfortunate but necessary to
choose him over the most dangerously unfit president in American history. And some, showing a forthrightness Republicans have not been willing to
muster, said that even if they came to believe Reade’s story was true,
In
the days since, so many questions have been raised about
Reade’s story that she has few defenders left; her own lawyer dropped her as a client. That has left
Democrats breathing a sigh of relief, as they seem to have been excused from
making a painful but necessary choice. Nevertheless, they grappled, candidly
and publicly, with what it would mean for them if Reade were telling the truth.
The
Republicans who support Trump have seldom done that, perhaps because there is
no way to do so without acknowledging how morally indefensible that support has
been. And as we approach another election, they’ll tell themselves that Trump
isn’t as bad as he looks, or that Joe Biden is a monster, or that all that
matters is winning.
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