The Palm Beach Post

Election of Trump releases a malevolent spirit on the land

- She writes for the Washington Post.

Kathleen Parker CHARLESTON, S.C. — As usual, the year’s end brings reflection­s and rumination­s on what was and what is to be. This time around, however, it feels as though an era is coming to an end.

The usual regrets — too much ice cream, not enough exercise, too quick with a retort, not enough thank-you notes — all feel quaintly irrelevant juxtaposed against a collection of very real fears about the future. During a year and a half of bitter political infighting — sister against sister, neighbor against neighbor — we’ve lost a better part of ourselves and unleashed armies of vengeful strangers.

Donald Trump’s election has released a malevolent spirit upon the land. He invoked the magic message — essentiall­y them vs. us — and the demons disembarke­d from their dark hiding places. He raided the lost ark, lifted the lid, and the whirlwind of humankind’s worst impulses escaped.

Hyperbolic, yes. But when the next leader of the free world casually comments that we need to build up our nuclear arsenal — and seems to welcome a return of the Cold War — alarm expressed in the strongest terms possible is required. When such alarm did find expression around the nation and the world, the president-elect huddled in his “fake news” bunker and claimed that his remarks were quoted incomplete­ly. He took special aim at NBC News, tweeting that the network “purposely left out this part of my nuclear qoute: ‘until such time as the world comes to its senses regarding nukes.’ Dishonest!”

The rest of what he said adds nothing to assuage the larger concern that he thinks we need more nukes. Or that he believes having more nukes will have no effect whatsoever until the rest of the world comes to its senses. My guess is the rest of the world is thinking the exact same thing: This president-elect is not in his senses.

Trump’s complete original quote, as usual offered via Twitter, was: “The United States must greatly strengthen and expand its nuclear capability until such time as the world comes to its senses regarding nukes.”

Really? By “greatly” expanding our already huge nuclear arsenal, other leaders will come to their senses regarding nukes? Russian President Vladimir Putin expressed earlier on the same day that he wishes to boost his country’s nuclear strength, too. Just great.

And, really, again. What’s with making such war-mongering threats when you’re not in the White House yet? Tweeting on matters of such import is unpresiden­tial. Also, it’s insane!

People who voted for Trump refuse to critique his behavior through any lens but that of having won a contest.

“We won, you lost — get over it” is what now passes for a serious dialogue about matters of importance.

The notion that people who still express concerns are sore losers is nonsense. When the president-elect of the United States so cavalierly threatens to unravel the fragile threads that hold civilizati­on together, there are no winners. He or she who is not worried is not paying attention.

These are also not simple partisan fears. Many Republican­s I know are “slightly terrified,” as one Trump voter recently put it to me. That most, if not all, Democrats are, too, doesn’t have to mean they’re all excessivel­y disappoint­ed, though many surely are. Nor, as the incensed have written, does my non-support of Trump translate to support for Hillary Clinton. We call that a non sequitur.

And when it comes to abusing logic, Trump wins hands down.

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