The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Slogging right along with the dukes out of hazard

- Kathleen Parker Columnist

Joe Biden gave Donald Trump a gift last week when he engaged the president of the United States in a verbal slugfest, saying that if the two men were in high school, he’d take Trump out back and teach him a lesson.

Biden was clearly kidding, speaking off-thecuff about Trump’s alleged mistreatme­nt of women.

But Trump, never one to let an insult pass — and always eager to deflect attention from the chaos engulfing him — responded in kind.

Back and forth they went, hurling insults and behaving in the faux-masculine ways of teenagers staking out their corner of the parking lot, as though the future were secure and all that mattered were the size of one’s hands.

Meanwhile, in the grownup world: It was announced that two more key figures are leaving the White House — H.R. McMaster, national security adviser; and John Dowd, Trump’s top legal adviser in the Mueller investigat­ion. And, the president hired John Bolton — former United Nations ambassador and, perhaps more important to Trump, veteran Fox News commentato­r — to replace McMaster.

Early Friday morning, Congress passed a spending bill and sent it to Trump for his signature, just in time to forestall a government shutdown. Trump had said he would sign it but woke up that morning to tweet that he might veto the bill. By mid-day Friday, he signed it.

Meanwhile, former Playboy bunny Karen McDougal sat down with CNN’s Anderson Cooper to discuss her affair with Trump before he became president. McDougal is seeking liberation from a $150,000 exclusive agreement she had with American Media Inc., which owns the National Enquirer, for her story, which was paid for but never run — a “catch and kill” story, ostensibly so that the tabloid owner, a Trump buddy, could protect the reality star.

In the midst of so many meanwhiles, the Mueller investigat­ion slogs along, searching for clues into the Trump campaign’s possible collusion with Russian operatives who tried to influence U.S. elections. Into this mess entered reports of Facebook’s lack of vigilance in protecting personal informatio­n from the datamining company Cambridge Analytica, which helped the Trump campaign target voters with ads aimed right at their sweet spots.

Still ahead is the planned meeting with North Korea, for which Trump apparently wanted Bolton onboard. The hawkish Bolton, who previously has recommende­d pre-emptive strikes to de-nuclearize unpleasant nations, is hardly what you’d call a cool head. Reputed to share Trump’s my-way-or-you’re-dead-to-me approach to governance, Bolton also has recommende­d military action to achieve change in Iran.

By accounts, Bolton doesn’t play well with others, though he and his mustache plainly have a special relationsh­ip.

To the despair expressed by those who learned something from our regime-change experiment in Iraq, one can only add tears, weeping for the loss of the few moderating voices who briefly surrounded the president. With the exception of Secretary of Defense James Mattis, who seems wisest in all ways, most others have abandoned ship, either through firing, resignatio­n or gettin’ while the gettin’s good.

With so many battles on so many fronts, not to mention a possible tariff war and Thursday’s 700-plus-point market plunge, Trump still managed to find time to engage in a meaningles­s war of words, in the only combat theater this flat-footed deferred veteran has ever known.

Donald Trump — gladiator of earthly delights, hawker of shams and artist of lies — loves chaos, he has said. Well, then, he must be a very happy man. But one of these days, considerin­g all of the above, something is going to blow up. Let’s hope it isn’t us.

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