Inland Valley Daily Bulletin

Trump needn’t be taken out of context

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Former President Donald Trump says a lot of plainly absurd and ridiculous things, as even his own supporters will concede. But recently, national media outlets have curiously chosen to take a particular line out of context.

Over the weekend, in Ohio, Trump took to the stage and spoke at length in his characteri­stic rambling style.

This is a lengthy quote from that speech to read, but here’s what he said:

“Let me tell you something, to China, if you’re listening, President Xi ... those big, monster car manufactur­ing plants that you’re building in Mexico right now, and you think you’re going to get that, you’re going to not hire Americans and you’re going to sell the cars to us? We’re going to put a 100% tariff on every single car that comes across the line, and you’re not going to be able to sell those guys if I get elected. Now, if I don’t get elected, it’s going to be a bloodbath for the whole — that’s gonna be the least of it. It’s going to be a bloodbath for the country. That’ll be the least of it. But they’re not going to sell those cars, they’re building massive factories.”

Read or heard in full, it’s not a particular­ly complicate­d line of rhetoric from the former president.

Trump is appealing to auto workers with promises to keep the American car-making industry competitiv­e by imposing very costly taxes (tariffs) on imported vehicles.

Trump suggests that if he loses, American car manufactur­ers will be outcompete­d and will suffer drastic economic consequenc­es.

It’s standard Trump economic populism with standard Trump hyperbole.

But you read, listen to or watch many media outlets, you’d think that Trump was advocating for national bloodshed.

“Trump says country faces

‘bloodbath’ if Biden wins in November” declared the normally more sober Politico.

“Trump defends his warning of a ‘blood bath for the country’” declared the New York Times.

Trump has said and done many outlandish and disqualify­ing things as a candidate and as president. The sloppy or deliberate mischaract­erization and hysterical pearlclutc­hing over what he said in this specific instance, however, is glaringly apparent to anyone who bothers to invest a few minutes of their time.

As even the Washington Post has conceded, “Trump might indeed have been speaking metaphoric­ally in this case.”

Well, yes. That’s because he was. It is doubtful he was literally referring to a national slaughter as a result of Chinese car manufactur­ers outcompeti­ng American car manufactur­ers.

As National Review’s Jeffrey Blehar notes, “It isn’t just selfdefeat­ing, it’s offensive: January 6 was real enough, and enough of an enormity, that any attempt to raise a false alarm about Trump’s rhetoric only diminishes the impact and importance of what he has actually done.”

Yes, Trump’s rhetoric is routinely over the top and damaging to national discourse. Yes, Trump appeals to the worst instincts of his fiercest supporters.

Oh, and by the way, the 100% tariff idea on foreign cars is a simply terrible, economical­ly indefensib­le one.

But Trump, like any politician, should be criticized and challenged without cutting corners and leaving out basic context.

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