Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Distractio­ns have become the norm in this era of Trump

- Kathleen Parker Columnist

When President Trump said a few days ago that now isn’t the time for a debate about gun control, presumably he meant that we should respect a decent interval of time for mourning after the Las Vegas shooting before launching into a political discussion that historical­ly has led nowhere.

If that’s how he felt, it would have been easy enough (and sane) to say. But he didn’t.

More likely, Trump doesn’t want any distractio­n from (a) his brilliant PR idea to toss paper-towel rolls to thirsty, hurricane-sogged Puerto Ricans (cake to follow); (b) his photo op Thursday evening with leaders of the armed forces and their spouses during which he teased the “fake news” media he had summoned that the dinner gathering with military brass could be “the calm before the storm.”

Whoa. Mr. Mystery Man has our attention now. Oh, so clever. Are we going to war? Will it be with the Islamic State? North Korea? Iran? Just you wait, fake newsies, just you wait.

Trump has mastered the Art of Distractio­n, lately to keep our eyes off the firefight within the White House and the ever-obvious fact this administra­tion is staring at an eclipse without glasses and this president couldn’t lead a starving dog to a tenderloin buffet.

The revolving door at 1600 Pennsylvan­ia Avenue is like Saks’ at Christmast­ime. Latest to the lineup is Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price. Others have included FBI Director James Comey, chief strategist Steve Bannon, chief of staff Reince Priebus, press secretary Sean Spicer, and national security adviser Mike Flynn, to name a few.

Next up, most likely, is Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, not only because the president routinely undermines and contradict­s the nation’s top diplomat but because Tillerson clearly holds Trump in contempt. Most important, Tillerson recently told the truth.

Trump reportedly was furious upon returning from his “diplomatic coup” in Puerto Rico, which he seemed to have thought was a Spanish colony, only to see the face of his secretary of state on all his favorite TV channels.

According to NBC News, Tillerson had said the president is a “moron,” which caused most sentient humans to shrug and roll their eyes as if to say, “No, really?” But this slight likely bothered Trump less than the fact that Tillerson’s face, and not his, was on all the cable shows.

As Americans gnaw their nails wondering which war this way comes — or when Tillerson will be replaced — Trump is focused on decertifyi­ng the nuclear deal with Iran, continuing to taunt North Korea’s Kim Jong Un and trying to convince the rest of the world that he’s got everything under control.

Thus, the very last thing Trump needs right now is a political shootout over guns.

Now’s not the time, he says. The pessimist notes that if the murder of 20 6- and 7-year-olds at Sandy Hook Elementary School resulted in no sensible restrictio­ns to gun ownership, then the slaughter of 58 country music fans isn’t likely to, either. But wait, we have a headline: Even the National Rifle Associatio­n has called for regulating (not banning or confiscati­ng) “bump stocks” — the attachment used by the Las Vegas shooter to essentiall­y convert a semi-automatic into an automatic weapon, the better to kill the most. And Republican­s are expressing a willingnes­s to consider restrictio­ns.

You’d think by the reactions — this is really, really huge editoriali­sts have clamored — that the NRA decided to support banning from private ownership all semiautoma­tic weapons, which were created solely for the purpose of killing human beings. But, no. Like Coco Chanel, who always removed one bauble before leaving home, the NRA is offering to eliminate one accessory from a warehouse of gaudy, bloodletti­ng fashions.

Talk about distractio­ns. Or was this the artifice of a deal?

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