This week in weird

This week in weird

by digby




My Salon column this morning:

Daniel Dale of the Toronto Star has the unenviable task of tracking President Trump's lies. Last week he had the second-most-dishonest week since becoming president, with 129 false claims, almost beating his record of 133 set in August. Dale's weekly tallies show that Trump's lying has escalated rapidly since June of this year raising a lot of questions about what may be precipitating it. It's possible that he's just found that there is no price to be paid for his lies so he's just letting his freak flag fly. It's also possible that the stress is getting to him and he just can't stop. This week's events certainly lend some evidence that his agitation is growing.

We started off with the truly unnecessary spectacle of our new Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh in a White House ceremony thanking Republican supporters by name while he promised to be a fair, impartial judge. Trump then took a big handful of salt and rubbed it in the nation's wounds, telling the most unpopular new Justice in history:
"On behalf of our nation I want to apologize to Brett and the entire Kavanaugh family for the terrible pain and suffering you have been forced to endure...you sir, under historic scrutiny, were proven innocent."

Needless to say, he was not "proven innocent." Sadly, that may have been the most normal thing to happen all week. On Tuesday morning, UN Ambassador Nikki Haley abruptly resigned reportedly to the total surprise of the White House. (Trump said he'd known about it for six months but nobody believed him because he lies a lot.) They held a little love fest in the White House where Haley promised not to primary the president in 2020 and then bizarrely gave tribute to Ivanka and Jared Kushner, calling him a "hidden genius" and her a "great friend."

Trump's manic rally schedule continued, with two events this week featuring the president imitating Senator Dianne Feinstein as a confused, old, lady, reminiscent of his odious impression of the disabled reporter Serge Kovaleski during the campaign. His crowd loved it of course, and at the second rally broke out into a rousing "lock her up" chant, much to the president's delight. The focus in both gatherings showed a slight shift away from Trump bragging incessantly about his personal greatness to a very sharp attack on the Democrats:

TRUMP smears Democrats: "Democrats. You see it happening right now. [Crowd boos] They are determined to take back power by using any means necessary. You see the meanness, the nastiness - they do not care who they hurt, who they have to run over in order to get power and control" pic.twitter.com/JF3C7s21MR
— Aaron Rupar (@atrupar) September 29, 2018


As Peter Baker of the New York Times put it:
From the pot-and-kettle department of politics, the president is trying to turn the tables on his opponents this fall. A master of divide-and-conquer campaigning who gives critics belittling nicknames, calls his foes “evil people” and has encouraged supporters to “knock the crap” out of protesters, Mr. Trump hopes to convince the public that his opponents are the ones who are “totally unhinged.”

This strategy is not his alone. All the Republicans are repeating the words "angry mob" like a bunch of parrots, obviously trying to psych out the Democrats and get them to distance themselves from their energized base and suppress their own vote. But there's a febrile quality to Trump's approach that's manifested itself in other ways this week.

New York Magazine's Olivia Nuzzi had a very odd experience at the White House this week, in which the president unexpectedly pulled her in for a one on one chat. She provided the transcript of their conversation which consisted of Trump doing his usual incoherent sales pitch but also seeming to have set up some sort of phony tableau consisting of Kelly, Vice President Mike Pence, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and Deputy Chief of staff Nick Ayers wandering in to try to convince her that Ayers was not being groomed to take Kelly's place. The end of the interview had Ayers and Kelly hugging one another proclaiming themselves to be best friends. It could not be weirder.

Meanwhile, the horrifying probability of Washington Post journalist Jamal Khashoggi being murdered and dismembered by a Saudi Arabian hit team seems not have bothered the president all that much. At first he said he really didn't know any details but on Thursday unconvincingly asserted that he doesn't "like it at all" and mentioned twice that Khashoggi isn't an American citizen, clearly vexed that he has to worry about such a ridiculous thing. He bridled at the suggestion that the US might put sanctions on Saudi Arabia because he doesn't "like stopping massive amounts of money that's being poured into our country," clearly signaling that he won't lift a finger.

The man who surely ordered the attack, Jared Kushner's good bud Prince Mohammed bin Salman, probably never doubted it. After all, Trump had very famously defended Vladimir Putin's assassinations of journalists during the campaign, telling Joe Scarborough:
I think our country does plenty of killing, also, Joe, so, you know, there's a lot of stupidity going on in the world right now, Joe. A lot of killing going on. A lot of stupidity. And that's the way it is.
You can't blame Trump's pals for thinking he wouldn't care if they killed a critical journalist or two.

As all this was going on,  what they are calling the third strongest hurricane to ever hit the United States slammed into the Florida panhandle leaving whole towns in a pile of rubble in its wake. The president held one photo op on Wednesday morning and then took off for his rally in Pennsylvania claiming he didn't want to disappoint all the people who had been waiting for days to get in. (There were no people waiting for days.)

The split screen of a grinning president and his ecstatic followers holding signs and cheering on one side with 150 mile an hour winds tearing through Florida towns was surreal. But it wasn't nearly as surreal as the split screen the next day when we saw miles and miles of the devastation in the daylight juxtaposed with President Trump in the oval office sitting across the resolute desk from Kanye West as West held court wearing his MAGA hat and rambling incoherently on a number of topics. A sample:

Kanye decries "trap door of the 13th amendment" and how his sleep disorder was diagnosed as bipolar disorder. pic.twitter.com/PNwtSkVdSb
— Josh Marshall (@joshtpm) October 11, 2018



There have been many bizarre moments since Trump took office but this one will go into the pantheon.

As I surveyed this week in Trumpland I wondered why Trump seems more disordered and frantic than usual. The midterms are almost upon us so maybe that has him spooked. The pressure coming from various investigations and betrayals could be taking its toll. But then I read something that explains why he's more nervous than usual. A Politico headline blared the bad news: "Trump, no longer ratings gold, loses his prime-time spot on Fox News." They aren't showing his rallies in full anymore. He's having to call in to get on the air, which he did several times this week. Apparently, even his most fervent followers are finally getting tired of his schtick.  Somehow, I don't think having Kanye West hug him in the oval is going to help with that.



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