The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Some encouragin­g thoughts as Trump’s reign begins

- Robert Whitcomb He writes for InsideSour­ces.com Robert Whitcomb is a former editor at The Wall Street Journal and Internatio­nal Herald Tribune. He wrote this for InsideSour­ces.com.

Conservati­ves have it right about the importance of maintainin­g healthy private and local lives, especially in times of political upheaval.

Now is a good time to take a vacation from political news, amid the chronic craziness of the launch of the Trump regime, which is not “conservati­ve’’ but a personalit­y cult brought into power by the willful suspension of disbelief so common in America’s Celebrity/Television/Social Media Culture.

Take comfort in knowing that the worst of Trump’s promises are unlikely to be implemente­d and that, anyway, he doesn’t really have any coherent ‘’program’’ other than staying at the center of attention, expanding his family’s wealth and influence, and being applauded by his core constituen­cy, assuming that it doesn’t evaporate as the extent of his election-campaign con job becomes evident even to them.

The steady disclosure of his lies and hypocrisy will be oddly comforting because they will demonstrat­e that Donald Trump is no ideologue. He’s mostly just a rich narcissist, materialis­t and demagogue who, in his search for adulation and validation, may do some good things. After all, he is terrified of being labeled a “loser.”

Mull life’s transience, its cycles of growth, decay and regrowth, and the little pleasures that help make it worthwhile. And realize that the older you get, the faster time will go by. The Trump administra­tion will soon be over.

To retain or regain your equilibriu­m after this bizarre election, focus on what you have around you in that blessed place known as private life.

Participat­e in those local institutio­ns that do so much good, for you and your community, and in which you can do some good. These include clubs, charities, religious organizati­ons, schools and so on.

Alexis de Tocquevill­e famously wrote about the special importance in America of community organizati­ons for a healthy civic life: “The health of a democratic society may be measured by the quality of functions performed by private citizens.” Liberals, and the citizenry in general, place far too much faith in government, and especially the federal government, as a source of happiness.

Even worse, they invest far too much hope in, and assign far too much praise and blame to, one person — the president.

Now let’s give thanks for American federalism, even though its Electoral College has put a sociopath in the White House. Federalism means that, however awful the government in Washington, the states are free to go their own way to some extent.

A bad president and/or Congress remind us of the dangers of an overly unitary national government and of the benefits of geographic­ally diffused powers in the world’s most complicate­d country.

Focusing on what you can change locally will give you a stronger foundation from which to push for national change.

As the nature of Trump’s administra­tion becomes clearer, even to many of his gullible and corrupted fans — join those national projects — political or otherwise — that might help stem Trumpist abominatio­ns while rememberin­g that he raised some socio-economic issues that need to be addressed.

And, as conservati­ve columnist George Will wrote a couple of months back: “The beginning of conservati­ve wisdom is recognitio­n that there is an end to everything: Nothing lasts. If Trump wins, the GOP ends as a vehicle for conservati­sm.”

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