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The Establishments war on Donald Trump Title: Trump is something the nation did not know it needed Looking, as prudent people are disinclined to do, on the bright side, there are a few vagrant reasons for cheerfulness, beginning with this: Summer love is sprouting like dandelions. To the list of historys sublime romances Abelard and Heloise, Romeo and Juliet, Elizabeth Bennet and Mr. Darcy add the torrid affair between Anthony Scaramucci and President Trump. The formers sizzling swoon for the latter is the most remarkable public display of hormonal heat since here a melancholy thought intrudes Jeff Sessions tumbled into love with Trump. Long ago. Last year. Sessions serves at the pleasure of the president, who does not seem pleased. Still, sympathy for Sessions is in order: What is he to do? If dignity concerned him, he would resign; but if it did, he would not occupy a Trump-bestowed office from which to resign. Such are the conundrums of current politics. Concerning which, there is excessive gloom. To see what is in front of ones nose, George Orwell wrote, needs a constant struggle. An unnoticed reason for cheerfulness is that in one, if only one, particular, Trump is something the nation did not know it needed: a feeble president whose manner can cure the nations excessive fixation with the presidency. Executive power expanded, with only occasional pauses (thank you, Presidents Taft and Coolidge, of blessed memory), throughout the 20th century and has surged in the 21st. After 2001, The Decider decided to start a preventive war and to countenance torture prohibited by treaty and statute. His successor had a pen and a phone, an indifference to the Constitutions take care clause (the president shall take care that the laws be faithfully executed) and disdain for the separation of powers, for which he was repeatedly rebuked by the Supreme Court. Fortunately, todays president is so innocent of information that Congress cannot continue deferring to executive policymaking. And because this president has neither a history of party identification nor an understanding of reciprocal loyalty, congressional Republicans are reacquiring a constitutional a Madisonian ethic. It mandates a prickly defense of institutional interests, placing those interests above devotion to parties that allow themselves to be defined episodically by their presidents. Furthermore, todays president is doing invaluable damage to Americans infantilizing assumption that the presidency magically envelops its occupant with a nimbus of seriousness. After the president went to West Virginia to harangue some (probably mystified) Boy Scouts about his magnificence and persecutions, he confessed to Ohioans that Lincoln, but only Lincoln, was more presidential than he. So much for the austere and reticent first president who, when the office was soft wax, tried to fashion a style of dignity compatible with republican simplicity. Fastidious people who worry that the presidents West Virginia and Ohio performances the alpha male as crybaby diminished the presidency are missing the point, which is: For now, worse is better. Diminution drains this office of the sacerdotal pomposities that have encrusted it. There will be 42 more months of this presidents increasingly hilarious-beyond-satire apotheosis of himself, leavened by his incessant whining about his tribulations (What dunce saddled me with this silly attorney general who takes my policy expostulations seriously?). This protracted learning experience, which the public chose to have and which should not be truncated, might whet the publics appetite for an adult president confident enough to wince at, and disdain, the adoration of his most comically groveling hirelings. Speaking of Scaramucci, and in his defense: His love interest, the president, was elected for his persona rather than his principles. Hence there is a vacuum at the center of the person who is at the center of the countrys absurdly president-centric conception of government. Therefore, loyalty inevitably manifests itself as sycophancy. Nevertheless, the smitten Scaramucci is himself evidence of something encouraging: Upward social aspiration is still as American as Jay Gatsby. When plighting his troth to Trump, Scaramucci repeatedly confessed his love for his employer, thereby exceeding Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchins comparatively pallid testimonial to the presidents superhuman health. Scaramucci grew up in Port Washington, the Long Island community that is East Egg in F. Scott Fitzgeralds The Great Gatsby. Gatsby lived in West Egg, yearning to live across the water, where shone the beckoning green light at the end of Daisys dock. Scaramuccis ascent to a glory surpassing even that available in East Egg shows that the light on the lectern in the White House press room is, at last, something commensurate to his capacity for wonder. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 8.
#1. To: Tooconservative (#0)
Whatever any President does is Presidential. By definition. It may be different, but it's still Presidential.
I didn't care much what Will was writing, just checking in now that Trump has cast him into the outer darkness. Will got dumped from his sweet gig at ABC that he had for decades, for decades the sweetest pundit slot on network TV. They dumped him. Then his NeverTrumping got him dumped from his gig of regular appearances on Fox News. Krauthammer clearly played his hand much smarter and drew a line on his NeverTrumping. Will never did and now he's gone. Now all he has is baseball and his syndicated WaPo column.
I'm thinking that if my choices were writing for WaPo and welfare, I'd pick welfare. Some say there's no dignity in welfare. Well, WaPo is negative dignity.
I read an aphorism recently. "A poor man can't afford principles, a rich man doesn't need them."
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