The Columbus Dispatch

‘Fear’ is the alarm our nation can’t afford to ignore

- Leonard Pitts Jr. is a columnist for the Miami Herald. lpitts@miamiheral­d.com

buying the book in bulk. The whole world, it seems, wants a peek inside this sad excuse for a presidency. As an American, one feels an embarrassm­ent roughly akin to finding one’s tattered drawers hanging on a clothes line in Times Square.

Trump has tried to laugh the book off, using tactics that by now seem as familiar as they do desperate and threadbare. “Fiction,” he tweeted. “Joke,” he tweeted. And etcetera.

Problemati­cally for him, however, this isn’t Michael Wolff, whose “Fire and Fury” was marred by reportoria­l sloppiness. Nor is it some former aide who can be written off as disgruntle­d. No, Woodward is the real deal, a two-time Pulitzer Prize winner who was making his bones when Trump and his daddy were still scheming how not to rent apartments to black people.

That said, the portrait he paints is quite reminiscen­t The whole world, it seems, wants a peek inside this sad excuse for a presidency. As an American, one feels an embarrassm­ent roughly akin to finding one’s tattered drawers hanging on a clothes line in Times Square.

of others we’ve read. Trump emerges as an idiot, an uninformed boor, a mean bully, an idiot, a liar, an incompeten­t lout, an idiot, a whiny toddler.

And an idiot.

But Woodward also teases out — and to a degree, arguably, no other observer has — a sense of how emotionall­y and intellectu­ally damaged the man is. No one ever quite says this (though Woodward reports one of his lawyers considers him “clearly disabled”) but the impression rises unavoidabl­y from scene after scene of advisers trying and failing to get the simplest informatio­n to take root in his mind.

At one point, one of them asks, “Why do you have these views?”

“I just do,” says Trump. “I’ve had these views for 30 years.”

This impairment, this inability to get past what he thinks he knows in order to absorb and analyze new informatio­n, comes into chilling play as his nationalse­curity team tries to get him to understand the criticalit­y of the nation’s Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) system, based in South Korea at a cost of a billion dollars a year.

Trump wants to move it to Portland.

If based in South Korea, his advisers explain (and explain and explain), the system lets us know within seven seconds if North Korea launches a missile attack — giving us precious extra time to shoot it down before some South Korean or American town is obliterate­d. Put it elsewhere and that seven seconds expands to 15 long minutes.

Yet Trump still wants to move it to Portland. Why? He’s obsessed with the idea that South Korea is pulling a fast one, snookering us into paying for its defense. He doesn’t care about allies or mutual interests. He just cares about getting paid.

It’s worth rememberin­g that Trump was elected because some of us wanted a strongman to turn back the clock on demographi­c change. But change is still coming. The only question is what kind of nation we’ll be when it arrives. Seldom has the price of intoleranc­e loomed so high.

As Woodward told Stephen Colbert, “We better wake up to what’s really going on.” With “Fear,” he’s done his part. He’s set off an alarm.

We sleep through it at our own peril.

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