The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Start digging the moat for Trump’s America

- By Megan McArdle Bloomberg

We should not have expected anything else from a campaign revolved around smashing the norms.

“America First.” I expect that’s the line that will get the most mention from Donald Trump’s inaugural speech. He said it twice in a row, to emphasize a new role for America in the world: not the leader of the free world, but an exceptiona­lly large island between the Atlantic and Pacific oceans.

The phrase, of course, has ugly historical echoes: the America Firsters were the folks who thought we should let Hitler roll over Europe. The slogan emphatical­ly rejects our Wilsonian century.

What followed was what we learned to expect from Trump on the campaign trail: protection­ism and tighter immigratio­n to “protect our borders from the ravages of other countries making our products, stealing our companies, and destroying our jobs.” This was a campaign speech rather than the sort of vague and unifying address that we have come to expect from presidents transition­ing from the campaign battlefiel­d into management. It was, as the Federalist’s Sean Davis tweeted, “nothing short of a declaratio­n of war against the ruling class,” an extended attack on basically everyone on the stage with him -- including, of course, former President Barack Obama, whom he thanked for helping with the transition before, with the next breath, implicitly excoriatin­g him for selling out his country to the interests of a corrupt elite.

I do not say that there is no place in presidenti­al speeches for excoriatin­g a self-dealing elite. I only say that the place for that is not the inaugurati­on speech, after you have won an election while losing the popular vote. What we needed was a vision of America coming together to do something great. What we got was rhetoric about internal enemies.

We should not have expected anything else from Trump, whose entire campaign revolved around smashing the norms that govern American national elections. Nonetheles­s, it was an immense pity.

We are at a fragile moment in the history of our republic. Our political order is weaker than it has been at any time in living memory, and possibly weaker than it has been at any time since 1860. There may be those who welcome the decline of the political order, because they consider it corrupt, ineffectiv­e and hostage to special interests. And, well … it sort of is all those things. But I don’t welcome its decline, when no one is offering a better alternativ­e to take its place. It is very easy to identify the flaws with an existing order, but much harder to put something better in its place, as the communists found out to the sorrow of millions of people.

Liberal democracy is an uneasy truce worked out after centuries of vicious religious wars in Europe, a compromise in which we all agreed to commit to a peaceful process for resolving our most fundamenta­l disputes, even if we hated the normative propositio­ns that process ended up endorsing. Why did we do this? Because the alternativ­e to living with sin is shooting the sinners.

Starting with the people who protested the fact of Trump’s election, and culminatin­g in the protesters who were on the streets of Washington on Friday throwing rocks and breaking windows, a whole lot of folks seem less and less willing to accept that process when it produces a result like President Trump. This morning I tweeted what seemed to me like a blandly unobjectio­nable statement: “Obama was my president. So is Trump. Because I’m an American, and the person who wins the US presidenti­al election is my president.” I got a shocking amount of pushback. These developmen­ts are a grave threat to a precious thing: our ability to resolve political disputes without violence or state oppression.

The person best positioned to stop this worrying trend is President Donald Trump. The way he will do that is to tone down the angry rhetoric about betrayal at home and abroad, about “American carnage” and foreign ravagers — to try to speak to the whole country, rather than the minority who elected him.

If we take one thing away from Trump’s speech, it should be the vital mission of every citizen to put America first.

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