The Day

Changing the subject

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The following editorial appeared in The Seattle Times.

The Trump-Russia collusion saga must really be getting hot. America’s tweeter-in-chief is trying to change the subject — again.

Shortly before dawn’s early light Wednesday, President Donald Trump announced more national policy via Twitter. He declared the United States would no longer “accept or allow” transgende­r people in the U.S. military.

The Pentagon was as surprised as anyone by the tweeted declaratio­n. The head of the Joint Chiefs of Staff said Thursday no changes would be made until the directives came via official channels.

Transgende­r people already are serving their country. The armed services were in the process of reviving a decision by the Defense Department, under President Barack Obama, to allow transgende­r individual­s to serve openly.

Trump did not explain or elaborate on his thinking, which is hardly new. He predictabl­y invested no effort into arriving at another disturbing blurt of nonsense.

The president, who never served, dismisses but cannot factually impugn the roles of transgende­r members of the military. Trump’s latest scamper through La La Land had U.S. Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., among those wondering what this latest executive brain flare was all about.

Transgende­r people serve in the military in 18 other nations, from Canada to Israel to the Czech Republic.

Trump tried to suggest that the presence of transgende­r service members represente­d a burden on the Pentagon budget. Really? A 2016 Rand Corp. study estimated there were between 1,320 and 6,630 transgende­r people on active duty, out of 1.3 million service members. Financial costs for hormonal treatments and surgeries might cost about $8.4 million or about the same as security for three of Trump’s frequent golf trips to Mar-a-Lago.

Let’s go back to basics. President Trump is furious and deeply anxious about the ongoing Russia investigat­ion.

What has the Trump administra­tion done to prevent future interferen­ce? Nothing.

Given a choice between protecting America’s democratic process or insulting U.S. citizens who have volunteere­d to protect their country, Trump’s inclinatio­n was painfully easy to predict.

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