Los Angeles Times

An Orlando conspiracy

- By Jesse Walker Jesse Walker is books editor of Reason magazine and author of “The United States of Paranoia: A Conspiracy Theory.”

Trump hinted that Obama welcomed the slaughter of 49 clubgoers.

On Monday morning, Donald Trump hinted that President Obama may have welcomed the slaughter of 49 clubgoers in Orlando, Fla. “He doesn’t get it, or he gets it better than anybody understand­s,” the presidenti­al candidate said on Fox. “It’s one or the other.” He repeated the sentiment later in the segment, declaring that Obama “is not tough, not smart — or he’s got something else in mind.”

Trump left it to his listeners to infer what that “something else” might be, but it’s not hard to see what he was implying. The man is already prone to saying things like “If President Obama’s goal had been to weaken America, he could not have done a better job.” This week, Trump just took it a step further. Perhaps, he suggested, that really is Obama’s goal.

These comments were an off-the-cuff encapsulat­ion of one of the core components of Trumpism: not just conspiracy theories — they’re rather common among politician­s, even mainstream ones — but conspiracy theories of a particular kind.

You can divide most of Trump’s conspiracy rhetoric into two categories.

In the first, Trump tries to cast suspicion on his political rivals. The most infamous example of this was when he implied that Ted Cruz’s dad was mixed up with the JFK assassinat­ion, citing the National Enquirer as his source. Less flamboyant­ly, he has accused Cruz of stealing the Iowa caucuses and he periodical­ly suggests that the people who protest his rallies are paid to do so.

The second category is more ideologica­l. Trump at his core is a nationalis­t, and nationalis­ts are especially likely to embrace Enemy Outside stories. In these tales, the conspirato­rs are based outside the community’s gates; if they’re not out to conquer your country, they at least aim to subvert and outwit it. Listen to any Trump speech, and you’re likely to hear some version of this. China is plotting against us. Mexico is deliberate­ly dumping its criminals on our side of the border. Syria’s refugees are a jihadist Trojan horse.

Such stories are central to Trump’s worldview — and to his sales pitch. “I have great respect for China, but their leaders are too smart for our leaders,” he tells us. “Our leaders don’t have a clue.” That quote comes from his Super Tuesday victory speech, but he has said the same thing in countless ways on countless days: We’re being led by weaklings and naifs; I’ll be the tough, smart commander the nation needs. Vote for Trump!

There is a tension here. Those weaklings and naifs, after all, are the same leaders who are supposed to be conniving Machiavell­is when it comes to domestic politics — creating false-flag protests, stealing elections, rigging the game. Now, there are ways to resolve that tension without contradict­ion. Given his string of political victories, Trump can always shrug and say the conspiracy arrayed against him is simply inept. But the tension is there, and it bubbles up most obviously in Trump’s rhetoric about Obama.

Half a decade ago, Trump leaped headfirst into birtherism. The birther story has taken several forms, but the usual upshot is that Obama was born in Africa, not Hawaii, and therefore has no right to be president. In other words, the president is foreign and concealing it; the man charged with defending American interests is not just metaphoric­ally but literally un-American. It’s a horror movie on a grand political scale: “The call is coming from inside the White House!”

On some days Trump’s Obama is a wily alien agent deliberate­ly underminin­g the country. Other days, he’s a stupid dupe who can’t handle the foreign forces assembled against us.

And if you catch Trump at the right moment, he might bring up both accusation­s at once: “He doesn’t get it, or he gets it better than anybody understand­s. It’s one or the other.”

 ?? Timothy A. Clary AFP/Getty Images ?? REPUBLICAN presidenti­al candidate Donald Trump observed a moment of silence for the Orlando shooting victims.
Timothy A. Clary AFP/Getty Images REPUBLICAN presidenti­al candidate Donald Trump observed a moment of silence for the Orlando shooting victims.

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