Telling the truth about Trump
Re “British envoy excoriated by Trump quits after memo leak,” July 11
With the resignation of Britain’s ambassador to the United States, it should be apparent even to Donald Trump’s die-hard supporters what his unique qualifications for the presidency are.
He brings an unerring lack of diplomatic tact, an unmatched ignorance of the world, and an unqualified sense of self-importance. That he is so proud of these qualities speaks volumes about him.
Unfortunately, it does the same for the lemmings who mindlessly follow him.
Michael D. Mauer
Los Angeles
Has there ever been a more high-profile illustration of Freud’s notion of projection than our president’s schoolyard bullying tweets?
Although there’s a long list of infantile examples to choose from, Trump’s tweet calling Britain’s now-former ambassador to the U.S. “wacky” and “a very stupid guy” may take the proverbial cake.
Vincent Brook
Los Angeles
In order to form appropriate foreign policy, a leader needs a succinct and accurate assessment of other countries’ governments. A leader relies on his or her ambassadors to provide that.
So I put forth the question: How does one write a politically correct message that accurately portrays a foreign leader who is erratic, unpredictable, selfish, bigoted and egotistical?
Gregg Ferry
Carlsbad
In law school we learned that “truth is an absolute defense.”
Perhaps it’s not diplomatically, but in this case, it is “absolutely defensible.”
Tom Hilt
Sherman Oaks