USA TODAY International Edition

Putin shows he has no strategy beyond cruelty

Failure causes bullies like him to take greater risks

- Rex Huppke Columnist Follow USA TODAY columnist Rex Huppke on Twitter @ RexHuppke and Facebook: facebook. com/ RexIsAJerk/

There’s nothing strategic about bombing a city of nearly half a million people to dust. But that’s what Russian President Vladimir Putin is doing to the coastal Ukrainian city of Mariupol.

There’s nothing strategic about killing civilians. Or targeting an art school sheltering 400 people. Or a theater.

This is not the work of a master military strategist. It’s far simpler. It’s the hideous, unconscion­able actions of a bully angry he’s not getting his way.

Putin wanted Ukraine. So he tried to take it. Now he’s losing thousands of soldiers, the world has united against him, and Ukrainians have shown a patriotic ferocity that will be remembered long after Putin is gone and forgotten.

Failure makes bullies wince

Failure and consequenc­es cause bullies wincing pain. So they escalate. They take greater risks, cause more harm, do anything to relieve that pain, no matter what it means to their victims.

In Mariupol, it means death. The Associated Press called what’s happening to the city “one of the most brutal sieges in modern history.”

Putin is a tormentor on a grand scale, an extreme example of what happens when a bully goes too long without facing consequenc­es. We ignore the simplicity of this catastroph­e – an unhinged bully leveling an entire city because he’s mad – at our own peril.

The bullies in our midst here in America are empowered. They’ve found a helpful shield in the phrase “cancel culture,” which can block attempts to hold them accountabl­e. It gins outrage and rallies fellow travelers. It has become an insidious defense for any bad action.

Trump’s ‘ cancel culture’ obsession

Not long after invading Ukraine, Putin himself described the global response as an attempt to “cancel” Russia. Perhaps he learned that word from his friend Donald Trump, a bully masterfull­y skilled at turning consequenc­es into empowering grievances.

We watched Trump’s bullying escalate throughout his presidency, culminatin­g in relentless, and ongoing, attempts to delegitimi­ze the 2020 presidenti­al election.

You can draw a straight line from the bully’s wounded ego to the deadly Jan. 6 domestic terrorist attack on the U. S. Capitol, aimed at halting the nation’s peaceful transfer of power.

Any attempts to hold the former president accountabl­e for his rhetoric – such as Twitter and Facebook banning him from their platforms – were met with howls of “Cancel culture!” That is utter nonsense, chum for cruelty addicts who’ve forgotten the possibilit­y that actions have consequenc­es.

Cuomo and Kanye use the shield

Former New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, who resigned amid credible allegation­s of sexual misconduct, had the gall to rail against cancel culture last week, calling it “a social death penalty” and saying: “Our cancel culture mentality today is like modern- day stonings. Remember the stonings in the Bible?”

I do remember those. That’s an absurd comparison, and Cuomo is spouting nonsense.

Rapper Kanye West, who now goes by Ye, has been menacing his ex- wife Kim Kardashian and her new boyfriend, Pete Davidson, on social media. That bullying behavior led producers of the upcoming Grammy Awards to cancel his planned performanc­e. As the news broke, supporters of Ye took to Twitter to condemn the decision as a despicable example of cancel culture.

It’s not. It’s a consequenc­e for being a boorish bully. And it should happen more often.

Bullying isn’t protected behavior

What does it say about our society when people treat bullying like a protected behavior?

What does encouragin­g abusive behavior portend for our future?

Ye isn’t bombing any cities. Cuomo is next door to irrelevant. Trump is facing consequenc­es from so many directions that the cancel- culture shield might not be enough.

Nonetheles­s, a too- easy acceptance of awfulness invariably lets real danger rise. You don’t see many powerful world figures such as Putin come along. It doesn’t take many.

For the brave but devastated citizens of Mariupol, it has taken only one. One bully. One tyrant. One monster.

The innocent people fleeing the city, those trapped in basements and shelters or under the rubble of buildings, are suffering the wrath of a small, terrible man whose only strength is eschewing accountabi­lity.

Next time you hear someone whining about cancel culture, remember what happens when actions don’t have consequenc­es.

Remember what Mariupol looked like before a bully didn’t get his way.

 ?? EVGENIY MALOLETKA/ AP ?? People settle in a bomb shelter in Mariupol, Ukraine, this month.
EVGENIY MALOLETKA/ AP People settle in a bomb shelter in Mariupol, Ukraine, this month.
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