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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsThe Atlantic: The Malignant Cruelty of Donald Trump
https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2020/05/malignant-cruelty-donald-trump/612097/The president is defaming the memory of a woman who died nearly 20 years agoand inflicting pain upon her family today.
MAY 26, 2020
Peter Wehner
Contributing writer at The Atlantic and senior fellow at EPPC
. . .
That Donald Trump would resort to conspiracy theories to attack his perceived enemies is hardly a revelation. After all, Trump employed a racist conspiracy theory against Barack Obama, which helped him gain political prominence in the Republican Party, and later claimed that President Obama had wiretapped his phones. During the 2016 primary, Trump linked Ted Cruzs father, Rafael, to the assassination of President John F. Kennedy and retweeted a supporter who claimed that Marco Rubio was ineligible to run because his parents were not natural-born U.S. citizens. Trump suggested that the suicide of Vince Foster, a former aide to President Bill Clinton, and the death of former Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia were murders; that childhood vaccines cause autism; and that windmills cause cancer. Hes claimed that climate change is a total and very expensive hoax by Chinas government, that a cybersecurity company framed Russia for election interference, that Ukraine was hiding Hillary Clintons missing emails, and that voter fraud cost him the popular vote in 2016. (Business Insider provided a useful summary of more than two dozen of Trumps conspiracy theories in October.)
Conspiracy theories have long been evidence of Trumps twisted psychology. He has always traveled quite easily from the real world to the twilight zone, depending on which reality suits his needs at the moment. And when someone holds him accountablewhen someone calls him out for his incompetence and ethical wrongdoingconspiracy theories often become his weapon of choice. At such moments, conspiracy theories are fine, but conspiracy theories with the added element of cruelty are even better. Which brings us back to the heartbreaking letter from Timothy Klausutis.
Donald Trump doesnt merely want to criticize his opponents; he takes a depraved delight in inflicting pain on others, even if theres collateral damage in the process, as is the case with the Klausutis family. Theres something quite sick about it all.
A lot of human casualties result from the cruelty of malignant narcissists like Donald Trumpcasualties, it should be said, that his supporters in the Republican Party, on various pro-Trump websites and news outlets, and on talk radio are willing to tolerate or even defend. Their philosophy seems to be that you need to break a few eggs to make an omelet. If putting up with Trumps indecency is the price of maintaining power, so be it. Will Trumps white evangelical supportersFranklin Graham Jr., Robert Jeffress, Eric Metaxas, Mike Huckabee, Ralph Reeddefend his behavior as the perfect embodiment of the New Testament ethic, the credo of Jesus, the message from the Sermon on the Mount? Blessed are the brutal, for they shall inherit the Earth.
Some people will argue that Trumps promotion of this conspiracy theory is just his latest distraction, a shiny object to pull our focus away from the human and economic cost of COVID-19. Maybe. But Im not at all convinced that this will help Trump politically.
Remember, Trumps approval rating was often well under 50 percent even when the economy was doing well and America was at relative peace abroad. Theres plenty of evidence, including the 2018 midterm elections, that Trumps dehumanizing tactics erode his support, especially among white suburban women. And I rather doubt that people will have forgotten Trumps reckless handling of the pandemic by November; defaming the memory of a woman who died nearly two decades ago and causing renewed grief for her family isnt likely to help him with most voters, either.
But whatever the political ramifications of this current lie being promulgated by the president, the rest of us need to name it, and to make Trump supporters own it. They are his, and he is theirs.
That Donald Trump would resort to conspiracy theories to attack his perceived enemies is hardly a revelation. After all, Trump employed a racist conspiracy theory against Barack Obama, which helped him gain political prominence in the Republican Party, and later claimed that President Obama had wiretapped his phones. During the 2016 primary, Trump linked Ted Cruzs father, Rafael, to the assassination of President John F. Kennedy and retweeted a supporter who claimed that Marco Rubio was ineligible to run because his parents were not natural-born U.S. citizens. Trump suggested that the suicide of Vince Foster, a former aide to President Bill Clinton, and the death of former Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia were murders; that childhood vaccines cause autism; and that windmills cause cancer. Hes claimed that climate change is a total and very expensive hoax by Chinas government, that a cybersecurity company framed Russia for election interference, that Ukraine was hiding Hillary Clintons missing emails, and that voter fraud cost him the popular vote in 2016. (Business Insider provided a useful summary of more than two dozen of Trumps conspiracy theories in October.)
Conspiracy theories have long been evidence of Trumps twisted psychology. He has always traveled quite easily from the real world to the twilight zone, depending on which reality suits his needs at the moment. And when someone holds him accountablewhen someone calls him out for his incompetence and ethical wrongdoingconspiracy theories often become his weapon of choice. At such moments, conspiracy theories are fine, but conspiracy theories with the added element of cruelty are even better. Which brings us back to the heartbreaking letter from Timothy Klausutis.
Donald Trump doesnt merely want to criticize his opponents; he takes a depraved delight in inflicting pain on others, even if theres collateral damage in the process, as is the case with the Klausutis family. Theres something quite sick about it all.
A lot of human casualties result from the cruelty of malignant narcissists like Donald Trumpcasualties, it should be said, that his supporters in the Republican Party, on various pro-Trump websites and news outlets, and on talk radio are willing to tolerate or even defend. Their philosophy seems to be that you need to break a few eggs to make an omelet. If putting up with Trumps indecency is the price of maintaining power, so be it. Will Trumps white evangelical supportersFranklin Graham Jr., Robert Jeffress, Eric Metaxas, Mike Huckabee, Ralph Reeddefend his behavior as the perfect embodiment of the New Testament ethic, the credo of Jesus, the message from the Sermon on the Mount? Blessed are the brutal, for they shall inherit the Earth.
Some people will argue that Trumps promotion of this conspiracy theory is just his latest distraction, a shiny object to pull our focus away from the human and economic cost of COVID-19. Maybe. But Im not at all convinced that this will help Trump politically.
Remember, Trumps approval rating was often well under 50 percent even when the economy was doing well and America was at relative peace abroad. Theres plenty of evidence, including the 2018 midterm elections, that Trumps dehumanizing tactics erode his support, especially among white suburban women. And I rather doubt that people will have forgotten Trumps reckless handling of the pandemic by November; defaming the memory of a woman who died nearly two decades ago and causing renewed grief for her family isnt likely to help him with most voters, either.
But whatever the political ramifications of this current lie being promulgated by the president, the rest of us need to name it, and to make Trump supporters own it. They are his, and he is theirs.
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The Atlantic: The Malignant Cruelty of Donald Trump (Original Post)
CousinIT
May 2020
OP
No, it was the article which precisely identified him as "unmanly" - still a boy, psychologically
muriel_volestrangler
May 2020
#3
MyOwnPeace
(16,937 posts)1. So.......
is THIS the article that made him say "That's good news" when told that 20% of the Atlantic staff is now out of work?
He never lets up, does he?
November 4 is not going to be a pleasant time to be around him (not that any time really is.....).
muriel_volestrangler
(101,355 posts)3. No, it was the article which precisely identified him as "unmanly" - still a boy, psychologically
https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2020/05/donald-trump-the-most-unmanly-president/612031/
He thinks not caring about other people is fine, so this article won't enrage him. But being pointed out as still a thin-skinned spoiled brat who cannot concentrate on anything and is totally unfit to hold down a normal job, let alone president, stuck at his narcissism.
He thinks not caring about other people is fine, so this article won't enrage him. But being pointed out as still a thin-skinned spoiled brat who cannot concentrate on anything and is totally unfit to hold down a normal job, let alone president, stuck at his narcissism.
MyOwnPeace
(16,937 posts)4. Oh, sorry...........
you mean they actually had something else to say about him that he didn't like? Good thing he's so popular - he could never keep up if he had some others that didn't like him - and he's to busy with "serious stuff" to have time for petty things like that.
Laelth
(32,017 posts)2. Hear! Hear! k&r n/t
-Laelth