By SJ
Otto
It is
hard to figure out what the anonymous
New York Times op-ed writer actually
thought he/she was accomplishing. Was it intended as a put down of President Donald Trump? Was it a call for
help? Was it just a warning to the country what might happen with such an
unstable man as the president?
According
to an article, by Jennifer Rubin,
in The
Washington Post:
"The president, we are repeatedly told by people close to
him, is nonfunctioning, irrational and unfit to such a degree that he’s not
fulfilling his job in a meaningful way."
We
have to make a few obvious assumptions. This anonymous writer is working with
and for the President, so he is probably a loyal Republican. He/she must have
had some loyalty to Trump at least in the beginning.
Despite
the public being told that Trump is immoral and irrational, the president has
promoted the Republican agenda and he has accomplished a lot of what his party
wanted him to do. He has nearly destroyed Obamacare (Affordable Care Act
or ACA), leaving millions of Americans with out insurance or health care of any
kind. He has lowered taxes for the wealthiest $millionaires and $billionaires. As
with Ronald Reagan, George W. Bush and just about every Republican president,
he has shifted much of the tax burden to the poorest Americans. He has trashed almost
every law that protects the environment and he has protected some of the worst
businesses in the country, including predatory
lenders. So what ever anonymous writer is worried
about, it can't be the political environment. Creepy conservatives and crooked
corporations have never had it better.
In foreign
affairs, there has been some inconsistencies. At times Trump has hinted at nuking
(Democratic People's Republic) North Korea . Later he actually defended North Korea 's
leader Kim Jong Un. Trump threatened the North Atlantic Treaty Organization
(NATO) as obsolete, then negotiated a deal where European countries had to pay
more for their share of NATO's cost. Up until then, NATO has acted a welfare
system for small countries to get free or extra cheap weapons. It is possible
that foreign affairs are a major concern for anonymous writer. Much of Trumps
policies are just what Republicans want, such as his attacks on Venezuela
(economic sanctions and CIA support to President Nicolás Maduro's opponents
and enemies) and continued occupation of Iraq
and Afghanistan .
Ironically while former PresidentBarack Obama has been campaigning for the Democrats to win elections this
fall and put some brakes on Trump, Democrat and Republican foreign affair
policies are
about the same. None of the things I just mentioned are policies that Obama
didn't endorse when he ran the country.
The results of writing that article has been that Trump is going crazy trying to find out who is against him among his staff. He was paranoid before and now he is really paranoid. With other sources, such as the Bob Woodward book, "Fear: Trump in the White House" we have to assume there is some truth to anonymous writer's claims. Is the purpose of anonymous writer's article to suggest we remove Trump? If so, how much danger is really there and what would the results of removing Trump really be?
For
those of us on the left, we have to consider that we have never been all that
comfortable with past presidents. London Johnson was the last real liberal
president we had and he was about the only president in the last 60 years to
care at all about poor people or fighting poverty. At the same time he was an
anti-communist and war hawk in foreign affairs. Jimmy Carter was the last
president to have any morality or concern for human rights in US foreign
policy. Carter mostly protected human rights in Latin America and he ignored
the human rights abuses in Iran, under Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi. Ronald
Reagan made a point of ignoring human rights abuses by US allies. Every
president after him did the same thing.
"The American presidency has never been inhabited by the
likes of Donald Trump. He constantly and increasingly
imperils our system of democracy. His flouting of the Constitution sets
hazardous precedents that weaken the rule of law. His volatile and irrational
temperament, combined with his disregard for international alliances and
friendliness with autocrats and dictators, jeopardizes the safety of all of us.
Pence’s politics, while thoroughly conservative, fall in line
with the basic Republican orthodoxy of the last 40 years. That’s an agenda
worth resisting, for sure, but it’s one that Democrats will be well equipped —
even emboldened — to block, especially if they claim a majority in the House
this fall, as appears likely."
Young
admits that a lot of people disagree with him and believe that Pence would
actually be worse than Trump. When Young writes "He
constantly and increasingly imperils our system of democracy," Some
of us are thinking that our system of democracy is not all that democratic, so
there isn't all that much to imperil. The "rule of law" that Young
shows concern for is designed to protect the wealthy ruling classes at the expense
of the poorer, less wealthy classes.
Trump
is a cruel, insensitive man, who disrespects women. He has waged a class war on
America 's
poor and working poor. While he was championed as a working class president, he
has never been a part of the working class. He has provided some jobs for the
working class, but that is where his championship begins and ends. Republicans
are right that he lacks any moral character. He is a con man.
He
was an outsider and many people who voted for him, did so because he was not
part of the political establishment. He was seen as the outsider. Many
Republicans would be happy to see Pence in the White House.
For
those of us on the left there really isn't much of an advantage to removing
Trump from the White House. Pence would certainly not be a big advantage for
us. His policies would be largely the same. He would be smoother and he may
even accomplish more of what Trump wants to accomplish. What Pence wants is not
what most of us on the left want. It is true that there would be some
satisfaction to see Trump humiliated and removed, but there are few real
advantages to removing him in the long run.
For
most of us on the left, removing Trump is a non-issue. Trump is dangerous to
the political establishment in Washington
DC . That establishment does not
serve us, so we have little or no desire to preserve it.
Pix
from HuffPost.
They
both broke the law. Will they both be removed from office?
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