The Star Early Edition

Trump, the odd brute and child combo

- DAN ZAK

The 144th-richest person in the US balances not just books, but grudges

and favours too

DONALD John Trump is like Vito Corleone crossed with an 8-year-old. If you’ve been good to him, he’ll be good to you. If you have wronged him or crossed him, he will throw food at you and then bury you like you wouldn’t believe, understand?

The behaviour is simultaneo­usly brutish and infantile, which polls nowadays as refreshing.

Trump on his fellow Republican presidenti­al candidate Scott Walker, to New York Times oped columnist Maureen Dowd: “He gave me a plaque and everything is nice. And I like him.”

Trump on Walker, one sentence later: “And then about a week ago one of his guys came up and said that Donald Trump is full of it. I said: ‘Thank you so much. Now I can hit him.’ I hit Scott so hard.”

Just like in the schoolyard. Imagine the parent-to-parent discussion.

“I’m calling about your son, Donald. He won’t stop hitting my Scott.”

Trump loves Twitter because he can hit anyone in the world instantly.

“For years, if someone did bad stuff to me, I couldn’t fight back,” he said to conservati­ve American radio and TV host Sean Hannity last week. “Now I have @realDon aldTrump, and I can sort of tweet some bad stuff about them.”

For now, the people of Washington DC are on Trump’s good side. It doesn’t hurt that he’s building a major hotel project about 900m from the White House.

“I would like to do whatever’s good for the District of Columbia because I love the people,” he said. “You know, it’s funny. I’ve really gotten to know the people, their representa­tives and the mayor and everybody. They’re really special people, they’re great, and they have a great feeling. So, I would say whatever’s best for them, I’m for.”

It doesn’t matter what the “whatever” is, or whom he beats up in your place. If you’re on his side, you’re golden. You’ve got a great feeling, which means Trump has a great feeling about you, which means – what, exactly? It doesn’t really matter in Trump’s world. Declaratio­ns and denunciati­ons matter more than actions.

The 144th-richest person in the US balances more than books; he balances grudges and favours. He divides the world into winners and losers. He goes on general feelings. And God help you if the feelings go sour.

Last month his team posted an Instagram photo of a smiling Trump and Republican nomination contender Rick Perry in 2012 with the caption: “@GovernorPe­rry in my office last cycle playing nice and begging for my support and money. Hypocrite!”

He has called fellow contender Rand Paul “truly weird” and a “tiny little guy”.

His thoughts on Caroline Kennedy: “A very nice person, because my daughter likes her a lot, Ivanka, so she has to be nice.” Let’s untangle his contorted phrasing: Trump has to say that Kennedy is a nice person because his daughter likes her. His interperso­nal calculus hinges on blind loyalty.

On Joe Biden, to Dowd: “A person who was very loyal to the president, which I respect.”

Last week he tweeted to former Apprentice contender Omarosa Manigault after she defended him on CNN: “Thank you so much – you are a loyal friend!”

Even his top presidenti­al priority – building a wall – feels childish and dictatoria­l. There’s something about Trump’s schoolyard rhetoric that feels familiar.

Yes, he stimulates the inner brat in all of us – remember what it was like to do or say anything without any real consequenc­es? – but there’s a more specific echo in the hyperbole, the almost preadolesc­ent megalomani­a.

“I am the object of criticism around the world. But I think that since I am being discussed, then I am on the right track.”

Kim Jong-il said that, to former Russian official Konstantin Pulikovsky.

“If I get my name in the paper, if people pay attention, that’s what matters,” Trump told his real estate lawyer Jerry Schrager, according to Gwenda Blair’s Donald Trump: Master Apprentice.

“Let us bring about a radical turn in the building of an economic giant,” said Kim Jong-un in his 2013 New Year’s address.

“All over the world I make money and I build great things,” Trump said on Fox News in May.

“We’re going to have so many victories,” Trump said in Hampton, New Hampshire, last week.

Kim Jong-il “achieved one victory after another”, his son said last month.

Maybe it’s unfair to equate Donald John Trump with Kim Jong-il, but Trump himself has made name-calling fair game in the sandbox. – The Washington Post

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