Gulf Today

Media must not let us forget the evils of the Trump tenure

- David Zurawik,

Just when it was starting to feel ater 100 days that cable news and social media were properly focused on the potentiall­y culture-changing actions of President Joe Biden, the past presidency of Donald Trump came roaring back on-screen.

There were images and endless analysis of law enforcemen­t agents raiding the New York apartment of Rudy Giuliani, former mayor of New York and onetime personal atorney for Trump. There was Trump on Fox Business saying of the government action, “it’s, like, so unfair.” And there was Michael Cohen, another onetime personal atorney of Trump whose New York apartment was also raided by government officials, saying on MSNBC how much trouble he thought Giuliani was in for.

And then came Michael Fanone, an officer in the Metropolit­an Police Department of the District of Columbia, who suffered a heart atack and concussion as he fought back against members of the Trump-incited mob that atacked the Capitol on Jan. 6. Fanone, who was shocked by a stun gun and beaten with a flagpole on the steps of the Capitol, said how “difficult” it has been to hear some politician­s trying to downplay the violence. In an interview with CNN’S Don Lemon, the police officer cited the language of Trump who claimed the rioters were “hugging and kissing” police, a blatant misreprese­ntation of an event that let five people dead and dozens of law enforcemen­t officers injured.

“It’s been very difficult seeing elected officials and other individual­s kind of whitewash the events of that day or downplay what happened,” Fanone told Lemon. “Some of the terminolog­y that was used, like ‘hugs and kisses’ and ‘very fine people,’ is very different from what I experience­d and what my co-workers experience­d on the 6th.”

Biden himself put Jan. 6 back on the social media burner when he said in his address to a joint session of Congress last week that the Capitol siege was “the worst atack on our democracy since the Civil War.”

From Breitbart News to Daily Wire founder Ben Shapiro, the claim drew instant blowback on the right.

I was initially dismayed by how much screen time and discussion the Trump era was geting over the weekend. I felt the amount of time spent revisiting Trump-induced chaos was especially problemati­c given all the major initiative­s being generated by Biden’s administra­tion. I also welcomed the relative media clam and normalcy Biden was bringing to the presidency. My thinking at first: Let’s forget about one of the most pinball crazy presidenci­es in American history and focus on the goals and accomplish­ments of what might be one of the most transforma­tive since Lyndon Johnson’s or

Franklin Roosevelt’s. Too many urgent decisions need to be made if we are going to come out of this moment of crisis.

But I was wrong. That assessment was based too much on my visceral reaction to Trump and the damage he has done to the nation and not enough on a thoughful considerat­ion of the role of the media in writing early drats of history.

As much as we and many members of the various audiences we serve might want to turn the page on Trump’s presidency and move on with Biden’s agenda, we must never forget what happened the last four years. That’s a major part of our job, writing the first drats of history.

And it is especially important when it comes to Trump and many of those with whom he has surrounded himself given their lack of respect for truth and propensity for lies. Besides Giuliani, I am also thinking here of politician­s like Sen. Ron Johnson, a Republican from Wisconsin, who has steadfastl­y tried to rewrite the narrative of the insurrecti­on.

As much as I would like to never see this gang of revisers, liars and deniers on my screens or have to write about them again, we in the media have to remember and remind our audiences what they said and did. This is more important than ever in post-truth America.

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 ?? Ron Johnson ??
Ron Johnson
 ?? Rudy Giuliani ??
Rudy Giuliani

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