Poseur for president
by Tom Sullivan
During one sequence in Buster Keaton's comedy The General, the hapless train engineer Johnnie Gray (Keaton) finds himself caught in a battle between Union forces and Confederate Army friendlies. Finding a sword, Johnnie discovers that when he brandishes it (the way officers do) Confederate soldiers mistake him for someone actually in charge.
That also works for Donald Trump: posture as if you are a leader and people will think you are. He's just better at it than his fellow poseurs.
Washington Monthly's Nancy LeTourneau believes Trump is what you get when you follow Republican rhetoric "to its logical (?) conclusion":
What is it that Trump is suggesting he would do on the issues the Republicans are so concerned about. When it comes to Obamacare, he’d “repeal it and replace it with something terrific.” Sounds good, huh?
And when it comes to the 11 million undocumented workers in this country, just round ‘em up and get rid of them. If you think that Mexican immigrants are nothing more than rapists and murderers, that sounds good too, doesn’t it? But don’t bother fretting your pretty little head about how to go about doing that. Donald will “manage” it.
As I said, this is the “logical” conclusion of the path Republicans have taken. Climate change…deny it. Iran nuclear deal…oppose it. Terrorism…talk tough, but don’t get into specifics. Their own party leaders are admitting that their agenda is being set by a conservative media that “doesn’t give a damn about governing.”
Governing requires compromise, and compromise is for wusses like Alexander Hamilton, the subject of a new musical:
Ron Chernow, whose biography of Hamilton inspired the musical, said that compromise was the timeliest theme in the musical. “What Lin is showing is that it’s very easy when you’re in the political opposition to take extreme ideological positions, but when you’re dealing with real power, you have to engage in messy realities and compromises to move forward,” Mr. Chernow said.
Trump supporters such as last week's New Hampshire focus group don't want leaders who school them in messy realities. They want to feel "strength and power." They want a wise-cracking, Daddy Warbucks action figure, someone to step in, talk tough, and solve problems with a punch or a roundhouse kick. They don't just want to vote for Trump; they want to be him.
LeTourneau writes, "They have an idealized view of America where white men are in charge, authority is unquestioned, and the world bows to our dominance. The fact that things are more complicated than that pisses them off." Trump is the big, swinging d*ck who can fix anything with a wave of his, uh, hand.
Daddy Donald is just the ticket, a more manly version of these kiddie-show problem solvers: