Boston Herald

Trump’s tweets spring from ignorance more than malice

- By JONAH GOLDBERG

Many of President Trump’s most passionate fans and foes share an odd tendency: Both groups believe his most controvers­ial actions are premeditat­ed and reflective of deeply held beliefs.

They think this despite Trump saying on numerous occasions that he doesn’t believe in doing much preparatio­n, preferring to rely on his instincts in the moment.

Nowhere is this reliance on gut more in evidence than when he attacks people. He goes for the nearest weapon at hand, regardless of whether it’s juvenile, boorish, untrue, racist or sexist. Contrary to the myth that he opposes political correctnes­s, he will even use progressiv­e weapons against his enemies when the opportunit­y arises. In 2015, he badgered Jeb Bush for being insensitiv­e to women and women’s health.

Given all that, here’s a question about Trump’s recent tweets urging the socalled “squad” to “go back” to their own countries: Did he intend to make a racist jab at the four non-white congresswo­men? Given that all four are citizens — three of them were born in the U.S., and the fourth, Ilhan Omar, is a naturalize­d refugee who has been here since she was a kid — the prevailing view among most liberals (and quite a few conservati­ves) is “yes,” which is one reason we’re still talking about the comment more than a week after it was made.

But I don’t think so. Now before you get all worked up, hear me out. I’m not defending the president against the charge of racism. The tweets were racist, as well as xenophobic and nativist.

I asked if he intended to make a racist jab, not whether the jab itself was racist.

Here’s a less-than-startling insight: Trump often doesn’t know what he’s talking about, and not just on matters of race. This is the guy who said not long ago that noise from wind turbines causes cancer. In 2017, he told the British prime minister, “You’re our largest (trading) partner. A lot of people don’t know that. I was surprised.” Our largest trading partner is China.

He also has a long history of not knowing his history. He once said that his supposed hero, President Andrew Jackson (now there was a racist who meant what he said), was very angry about the Civil War, despite the fact that Jackson died 16 years before it started.

It is this ignorance of history that I think explains, though it doesn’t excuse, his tweet. When Trump adopted the slogan “America First,” many observers, including yours truly, were dismayed because of the sinister historical connotatio­ns of the phrase. It was the rallying cry of isolationi­sts — on the left and right — who opposed intervenin­g in World War II. But Trump didn’t know that. He adopted the term when a reporter for The New York Times used it to characteri­ze his philosophy and he liked the sound of it.

So when Trump tells four women of color that they should go back where they came from, it’s possible he had no clue that he was tapping into a rich vein of racist and nativist rhetoric. Indeed, it’s possible he didn’t know that three of the women weren’t immigrants at all. The fact that he seemed initially surprised by the controvers­y bolsters my theory. He just thought he was trolling Democrats.

This seems to be lost on a lot of his critics. They cite his attacks on women, blacks and Muslims while excluding his attacks on white male Christians, and they connect the dots to make the case that he’s a bigot. That’s certainly fair, given his record. Where I think his foes misdiagnos­e the malady is in thinking they’ve identified the “real” Trump, and if they could just convince everyone he’s a racist, he’ll be impeached or magically disappear.

Yes, Trump’s got bigoted ideas, but like all ideas, they take a back seat to his narcissism and glandular impulsiven­ess. My unified theory of Trump is that he’s a person with little to no interior life who responds to flattery and criticism with Pavlovian predictabi­lity.

Jonah Goldberg’s latest book is “Suicide of the West.”

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