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Brett Stephens' Trump Dilemma
00:09:11
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| You owe it to yourself and you owe it to everyone in your life to send this article, to read it, read it carefully, read it twice. | |
| Almost every line is brilliant. | |
| It is written by Brett Stephens of the New York Times, formerly of the Wall Street Journal, formerly of the Jerusalem Post. | |
| He is the one remaining conservative, but he is a Trump-hating conservative. | |
| But he has done the impossible, almost. | |
| He has explained Trump's appeal and said calling him a racist and all these other things and lying about him isn't going to help. | |
| Trump and his supporters called all this out talking about how much our institutions have betrayed us. | |
| And he is... | |
| Bret Stephens is in agreement with virtually everything that Donald Trump stands for. | |
| That's the irony. | |
| But he hates the man. | |
| Like I care if I like the person. | |
| Bret Stephens is an honorable good man. | |
| And I'm happy he's writing. | |
| So, this is not meant as a personal attack. | |
| It's not at all meant as such. | |
| But there is a narcissism to the idea, Trump is right, but I hate the man. | |
| Who gives a damn what you think about the man? | |
| Do you know how little in my whole life I have concerned myself with do I like? | |
| The politician or the leader? | |
| This is such a 60s thing. | |
| Are you likable? | |
| Yes. | |
| It's important in certain arenas of life, like to your friends. | |
| You should be likable to your friends. | |
| Do you ask if your surgeon is likable? | |
| Then why do you ask it about your president? | |
| A few readers might nod their heads in partial agreement. | |
| Then they'll ask, what about the election denialism? | |
| What about January 6th? | |
| What about the threat Trump poses to the very foundations of our democracy? | |
| All disqualifying, in my view. | |
| That is my Bret Stephens' view. | |
| But it's also important to stretch one's mind a little. | |
| By the way, I just want to say, I don't fully believe Bret on this. | |
| Not that he's lying, but... | |
| I think he's fooling himself. | |
| He hated Trump before January 6th. | |
| January 6th has nothing to do with it. | |
| But it's also important to stretch one's mind a little and try to understand why so many voters are unimpressed about the, quote, end of democracy argument. | |
| For one thing, haven't they heard it before? | |
| And with the same apocalyptic intensity? | |
| In 2016, Trump was frequently compared to Benito Mussolini and other dictators, including by me. | |
| And he even has a link. | |
| That's one of the great lines of this piece. | |
| The comparison might have proved more persuasive if Trump's presidency had been replete with jailed and assassinated political opponents, rigged or canceled elections, a muzzled or captured press, and Trump's still holding office today rather than running to get his old job back. | |
| The election denialism is surely ugly, but it isn't quite unique. | |
| Prominent Democrats also denied the legitimacy of George W. Bush's two elections, the second one no less than the first. | |
| Yeah, right, that doesn't count. | |
| Election denialism! | |
| Anyway, he points out something I say almost every day or every time I talk about Trump. | |
| And the New York Times' lies about his being a threat to democracy and a dictator. | |
| He was president four years. | |
| Where were his dictatorial trends, policies then? | |
| Many rank-and-file Republicans regard the January 6th assault on the Capitol as a disgrace and the lowest point of Trump's presidency. | |
| But they also believe that it wasn't so much an insurrection as it was an ugly temper tantrum by Trump and his most rabid supporters, which never had a chance of succeeding. | |
| One reason for that is the judges Trump appointed to the federal bench and the Supreme Court rebuffed his legal efforts. | |
| And he had no choice but to accept the rulings. | |
| An American version of Vladimir Putin? | |
| He simply is not. | |
| That's why warnings from Biden and others about the risk Trump poses to democracy are likely to fall flat even with many moderate voters. | |
| If there's any serious threat to democracy, doesn't it also come from Democratic judges and state officials? | |
| Listen to this. | |
| This is gutsy stuff. | |
| If there's any serious threat to democracy, doesn't it also come from Democratic judges and state officials who are using never-before-used legal theories which even liberal law professors like Harvard's Lawrence Lessig regard as dangerous and absurd to try to kick Trump's name off ballots in Maine and Colorado? | |
| Yes. | |
| That might be the Democrats. | |
| Brett Stephens in the New York Times are writing, the Democrats, including all his colleagues at the New York Times, maybe they are the greater threat to democracy. | |
| When liberal Protestants try to suppress democracy in the name of saving democracy, they aren't helping their cause politically or legally. | |
| They are merely confirming the worst stereotypes about their own hypocrisy. | |
| As it is, the 2024 election will not hinge on questions of democracy, but of delivery. | |
| Which candidate will do more for voters? | |
| That will turn on perceptions of which candidate did more for voters when they were president. | |
| How's that? | |
| Yeah, who did more for you, Biden? | |
| Or Trump? | |
| Who did more for you, fellow Americans? | |
| I know who did more for the elites. | |
| For the fanatics of the feminist movement, of the LGBT movement, of the environmentalist movement. | |
| But who did more for you? | |
| Biden supporters are convinced that the president has a good story to tell, but they also think that Trump has no story at all. | |
| Only a pack of self-aggrandizing lies. | |
| That's liberal self-delusion. | |
| The only problem with this article is if you highlight some sentences for your kid who thinks you're a racist for supporting Donald Trump, you'll be highlighting the whole article. | |
| No, I'm serious. | |
| It's a problem. | |
| Excluding the pandemic, a once-in-a-century event that would have knocked almost any sitting president sideways, Americans have reasons to remember the Trump years as good ones. | |
| For that line alone. | |
| OMG. Whoa. | |
| Americans have good reasons, have reasons to remember the Trump years as good ones. | |
| That was printed in the New York Times. | |
| Wow. | |
| And good in a way that completely defied expert predictions of doom. | |
| Wages outpaced inflation, something they have just begun to do under Biden. | |
| That's only because of the phony inflation numbers. | |
| Stocks boomed. | |
| Unemployment fell to 50 years lows. | |
| Inflation and interest rates were low. | |
|
Semi-Anarchy After Floyd
00:00:59
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| He appealed to Americans who operated in the economy of things, builders, manufacturers, energy producers, food services, and the like, rather than in the economy of words. | |
| Another brilliant line. | |
| Lawyers, academics, journalists, civil servants. | |
| And he shared the law and order instincts of normal Americans, including respect for the police, something the left seemed to care about on January 6th. | |
| But was notably less concerned about during the months of rioting, violence, and semi-anarchy that followed George Floyd's murder. | |
| George Floyd was not murdered, and I expect one day Brett Stephens will write about that. | |
| He might have been killed, but he wasn't murdered. | |
| If you don't know the difference, read my commentary on the Ten Commandments in my Rational Bible. | |
| As for foreign policy, it's worth asking. | |