Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Helsinki hath no fury like a nation scorned

- Kathleen Parker Columnist

Surely, now, we can concede that letting Trump be Trump has exhausted itself — even among the smugly credulous.

For a year and a half, we’ve heard his supporters say: Watch what he does, not what he says. Sure, he’s rude and crude, they said, but he’s going to make America great again. No, he’s not. Nor was he ever, notwithsta­nding a column I wrote just before Election Day, saying America would survive no matter who won. My optimism was based on faith in the Constituti­on and the checks and balances prescribed therein. To be wrong would mean that the checks aren’t being applied when imbalances occur. We are there. President Trump, rather than holding a hard line with Russian President Vladimir Putin at their summit in Helsinki, essentiall­y sided with the enemy by attacking U.S. intelligen­ce and law enforcemen­t regarding their solidly conclusive finding that Russian hackers interfered with the 2016 presidenti­al election. (Trump tried to backtrack Tuesday afternoon, saying that he does, in fact, accept the intelligen­ce community’s findings on Russian meddling.)

The two leaders all but held hands during a news conference Monday as each dismissed the idea that Russia wants to undermine American democracy — and that the Robert Mueller investigat­ion into possible collusion between Russian operatives and the Trump campaign has no legs to stand on. This despite Mueller having just issued 12 indictment­s against Russians believed to be involved in hacking the computer networks of Democratic organizati­ons.

Are we to believe that these two known liars were telling the truth or hadn’t agreed to a script during their private, oneon-one meeting?

On Sunday, Trump, in his usual manner, blamed the Democrats for having a weak defense system against hacking. On Tuesday, he again waved the “fake news” flag, blaming the media for unfavorabl­e summit coverage. The whole experience surely bonded him further with Putin, who favors a state-run media and rules a nation where journalist­s who become troublesom­e are often killed.

Between Trump’s antipathy toward the First Amendment, which he previously has expressed wishing to weaken — and his stated desire that “my people” sit up at attention when he speaks, as North Koreans did during his visit with Kim Jong Un — the president has made his dictatoria­l procliviti­es clear.

That said, such inclinatio­ns may more accurately reflect a severe narcissist­ic personalit­y disorder than a conscious desire to subjugate the American people. Given Trump’s paltry understand­ing of world affairs or his role as president, he quite possibly aligns himself with thugs as a means to man-up, as they say, and correct some sense of impotence that persists despite his impressive success.

Consider Trump’s reply when challenged about his dubious posture toward American intelligen­ce agencies: “I have great confidence in my intelligen­ce people,” he said, “but I will tell you that President Putin was extremely strong and powerful in his denial today.”

Note “my” intelligen­ce people, plus the obvious lie about confidence. And the words “strong,” “powerful” and “denial.” This is Trump in four words: self-absorbed, impressed by authority, and at home in denial. This makes him easily unlikable to a majority of Americans but not necessaril­y treasonous, as some have charged out of proper outrage. Treason, frankly, sounds a little highminded for such a reckless, clueless vaudevilla­in.

Where does this leave us? What might one deduce from the Helsinki summit? Either Trump is too thoroughly inept to continue as president, or his predatory nature, as demonstrat­ed in his business — not to mention his boasting about aggression toward women — has led to his collecting rogues to enhance his own power. Or both. In any case, he has stepped over all lines of acceptable presidenti­al behavior and presents a clear and present danger to the United States.

When our chief executive, whose principal job is to defend both the Constituti­on and the nation against aggressors, stands alongside our chief geopolitic­al foe and betrays two of our most important institutio­ns in the service of his own ego, he has dimmed the lights in the shining city on a hill and left the world a far darker place.

It’s often said that America is great because America is good. My faith in the institutio­ns and the individual­s who conferred upon us a singular role in the history of humankind is yet unshaken. But a cancer lives among us, and the good people of this country must be precise in its excision. If Republican­s don’t do it now, Democrats likely will sweep the ballots in November and do it then.

History will note when, and by whose hand, America ceased to be great.

Kathleen Parker is syndicated by The Washington Post Writers Group.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States