The Denver Post

Trump vs. Mueller is a battle for America’s soul

- By Max Boot

Reading The Washington Post’s extraordin­ary article comparing the lives of special counsel Robert Mueller and President Donald Trump made me realize that the war between the two men is not just a struggle over the fate of this presidency.

It is a battle for the soul of America, because each of them represents a recognizab­le American archetype.

Mueller was born to wealth and attended elite institutio­ns — St. Paul’s School, Princeton University, the University of Virginia School of Law — but felt compelled to serve his country. During the Vietnam War, when most of his classmates

were avoiding the draft, he volunteere­d for the Marine Corps and earned numerous decoration­s leading a rifle platoon in fierce combat.

Returning home, he became a prosecutor and eventually ran the Justice Department’s criminal division. In the 1990s Mueller went into private practice. It was lucrative, but he hated it. Watching the spike of drug-driven murders in the District of Columbia, he volunteere­d to become a line prosecutor in the U.S. attorney’s office. It was as if a retired general had volunteere­d to serve as a private in wartime.

Later, as FBI director under Presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama, Mueller became the embodiment of the old-school G-man who only wore a white shirt with a red or blue tie — never a blue shirt, because that would signal dangerous frivolity. He “avoided the limelight” and “frustrated his speechwrit­ers by crossing out every ‘I’ in speeches they wrote for him. It wasn’t about him, he told them: ‘It’s about the organizati­on.’ “

Mueller embodies the ideals of probity, service and self-sacrifice that trace back to the Pilgrims who came to America in search of a “city upon a hill.” The Puritans preached devotion to the Almighty and had nothing but contempt for vanity and luxury — no blue shirts for them. Over the centuries, their religious fanaticism leached away, leaving behind in American culture a residue of obligation to serve not just God but also mankind.

Their spiritual offspring included Mueller’s fellow St. Paul’s graduate Charles “Chip” Bohlen and the other “Wise Men” who created post-world War II U.S. foreign policy. Their credo was Luke 12:48, a favorite Bible verse of the Kennedys: “For unto whomsoever much is given, of him shall be much required.” They felt an obligation to serve — and not boast about it. World War II heroes such as George H.W. Bush and Bob Dole were notoriousl­y reticent to talk about their wartime experience­s. Mueller just missed being a baby boomer, but he has a Greatest Generation ethos.

Trump is Mueller’s opposite in every meaningful respect save that he was also born to privilege. He has much in common with the land promoters who bamboozled English immigrants into coming to the New World in the 17th century with fanciful tales of riches — what Trump would describe as “truthful hyperbole.” He is the kind of charming con man who peddled patent medicines in the 19th century and then, in the 20th century, penny stocks and time-shares. These scofflaws and scammers were the inspiratio­n for the phony duke and dauphin in “The Adventures of Huckleberr­y Finn,” Jay Gatsby and the Wizard of Oz.

Trump combines the hedonism of the 1970s with the bigotry and sexism of the 1950s: the worst of both worlds. His consciousn­ess was not raised in the 1960s, but his libido was. He did not take part in the civil rights or antiwar movements and won five draft deferments — including one for “bone spurs” — so that he could devote his life to the pursuit of women and wealth. He later said that fear of catching a sexually transmitte­d disease was “my personal Vietnam.”

Trump is the embodiment of what Christophe­r Lasch in 1979 called the “new narcissist” who “praises respect for rules and regulation­s in the secret belief that they do not apply to himself”; whose “emancipati­on from ancient taboos brings him no sexual peace”; and whose “cravings have no limits,” because he “demands immediate gratificat­ion and lives in a state of restless, perpetuall­y unsatisfie­d desire.” A product of the “me decade,” Trump is a “me first” — not “America first” — president whose speeches are full of exaggerate­d or falsified selfpraise.

Mueller is the best of America; Trump the worst. All you need to know about the diseased state of today’s Republican Party is that it reviles Mueller and reveres Trump. Hitherto the champions of personal responsibi­lity and rectitude, Republican­s have embraced a culture of self-indulgence that they denounced when it was symbolized by Trump’s fellow draft-dodger Bill Clinton. This shift in the tectonic plates of the culture may long outlast the current administra­tion.

 ?? Charles Rex Arbogast, Associated Press file ?? Donald Trump is profiled against his 92-story Trump Internatio­nal Hotel & Tower in Chicago during a May 24, 2007, news conference on constructi­on progress.
Charles Rex Arbogast, Associated Press file Donald Trump is profiled against his 92-story Trump Internatio­nal Hotel & Tower in Chicago during a May 24, 2007, news conference on constructi­on progress.
 ?? Evan Vucci, Associated Press file ?? Robert Mueller speaks during an Aug. 21, 2013, interview at FBI headquarte­rs in Washington, several weeks before ending his 12-year tenure as director of the FBI.
Evan Vucci, Associated Press file Robert Mueller speaks during an Aug. 21, 2013, interview at FBI headquarte­rs in Washington, several weeks before ending his 12-year tenure as director of the FBI.

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