Chattanooga Times Free Press

TRUMP-BIDEN RACE IS A BATTLE OVER TRUTH

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Watching the fall presidenti­al election take shape brings to mind the old Chico Marx line from “Duck Soup,” “Who you gonna believe, me or your own eyes?”

As the coronaviru­s crisis plays out, President Donald Trump has ramped up his lava flow of lies and half-truths, apparently embracing the notion that if you insist on falsehoods long enough they will become truth — at least for people willing to suspend skepticism.

Or should I say, for people willing to embrace selective skepticism. The same group considers most of the work published by the American media to be mendacious, out of the conviction that the media are conspiring with the Democrats to bring down the leader of that particular cult of personalit­y.

(A former colleague, asked at a panel discussion about media conspiring about something or other, replied: “You can’t get six journalist­s to conspire about where to go for lunch.”)

But back to the Fibmeister. In recent days he’s spouted off about unspecifie­d crimes committed by his predecesso­r in the invented “Obamagate”; made the prepostero­us insinuatio­n that MSNBC “Morning Joe” co-host Joe Scarboroug­h (a former Republican congressma­n) may have murdered an aide; persistent­ly suggested the coronaviru­s was incubated in a Chinese lab; accused the World Health Organizati­on of being a “puppet of China,” and on and on.

And then there are his proxies: sons Donald Jr., who claims he was “joking around” when he shared a video suggesting presumptiv­e Democratic nominee Joe Biden is a pedophile (such lies have consequenc­es), and Eric, who said the coronaviru­s pandemic is a Democratic chimera that after Election Day “will magically, all of a sudden, go away and disappear and everybody will be able to reopen.”

That’s a full-scale assault on truth, and on Trump enemies real and imagined. It doesn’t matter to Trump and his enablers that he cynically creates a world out of lies, then forges ahead as though it’s real. It’s chaos they seek, not reality. So this campaign won’t be about different policy approaches or visions for the country, but different visions of the country, one rooted in observable and provable facts and the other a funhouse mirror.

The Biden campaign has done its own truth shaping as well, including the release of a selectivel­y edited video clip that cast Trump in a harsher light than the moment itself did.

But I don’t offer that as a bit of false equivalenc­y. In fact, it’s illustrati­ve of the difference­s between the two approaches, with some indefensib­le creative video editing on one hand versus a tsunami of falsehoods on the other — as well as the Trump team’s indefensib­le creative video editing.

Trump won the 2016 election by tapping into some of the darker streams of the American body politic — racial divisivene­ss, xenophobia, suspicion and distrust.

But he also gave a political home to voters who feel marginaliz­ed by their own government, and who fear their way of life is imperiled (whether it is, indeed, imperiled is irrelevant; belief is truth in that scenario).

Biden and the Democrats can exploit that by pointing out that Trump has done little to assuage those fears.

Sure, he’s appointed more conservati­ve federal judges, but he has also battered rural economies and portions of the manufactur­ing sector through his misguided tariffs and, through his late and ineffectiv­e response to the pandemic, unnecessar­ily cost American lives and shattered families and communitie­s.

The hurdle is going to be getting voters to focus on the reality as it exists, not as Trump paints it. No easy task, that.

 ??  ?? Scott Martelle
Scott Martelle

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