The Boston Globe

Normalizin­g Trump’s unhinged rage is an invitation to violence

- Renée Graham is a Globe columnist. She can be reached at renee.graham@globe.com. Follow her @reneeygrah­am.

It’s a safe bet that far more people heard about singer Taylor Swift watching her maybe-boyfriend Travis Kelce of the Kansas City Chiefs play football than about Donald Trump intimating that General Mark Milley, the outgoing Joint Chiefs of Staff chairman, should be executed.

Last week on his angry little man social media site, Trump lied, saying that Milley “was actually dealing with China to give them a heads up on the thinking of the President of the United States. This is an act so egregious that, in times gone by, the punishment would have been DEATH!”

Milley served as Joint Chiefs chairman during the last two years of Trump’s presidency.

A former president, currently the front-runner for the Republican presidenti­al nomination, suggested that Milley, whose term ends this week, should be put to death for treason. But Trump’s threats of violence, a pillar of his twisted political life, are so commonplac­e they seem to fall beneath the sight line of too many Americans.

Like a dog that barks incessantl­y, Trump’s endless griping has become a kind of “Old man yells at cloud” white noise. And of course, there’s always a concern about giving Trump the spotlight — his oxygen — that he so desperatel­y craves. But when he makes statements so atrocious and vile, he must be called out, challenged, and condemned without reservatio­n.

As usual, Trump is molding facts to fit into his hate machine. What Milley did, which he explained under oath before Congress in 2021, was make two telephone calls to his counterpar­t in China to address what he called “concerning intelligen­ce” that Chinese officials were worried about a potential US attack. Those calls — one of which was made days after the deadly Jan. 6, 2021, insurrecti­on — were authorized by national security agencies and Trump’s own defense officials.

But when has Trump ever let the truth get in the way, especially when there’s an opportunit­y to rile up his followers with overt mentions of violence?

His MAGA minions heard him. In his newsletter, Republican Representa­tive Paul Gosar of Arizona claimed nonsensica­lly that on Jan. 6 the “deviant” Milley “was coordinati­ng with [then-House Speaker] Nancy Pelosi to hurt President Trump, and treasonous­ly working behind Trump’s back.” He added, “In a better society, quislings like the strange sodomy-promoting General Milley would be hung (sic).”

By dictionary definition, a quisling is a “traitor.” By Gosar’s definition, “a better society” is one where execution is the deserved outcome for those who don’t capitulate to Trump.

In a post on X, formerly known as Twitter, Democratic Representa­tive Elissa Slotkin of Michigan excoriated Gosar’s comments. “Gen. Milley has risked his life in combat for this nation, and deserves nothing less than our gratitude for his four decades of service,” she said Monday. “Rep. Gosar’s words are beyond reprehensi­ble, beneath a member of this body, and should be unequivoca­lly condemned.”

Good luck finding Republican­s willing to even mildly chide Gosar or Trump for their inflammato­ry words. It’s unlikely that any of Trump’s fellow GOP presidenti­al contenders — except, perhaps, former New Jersey governor Chris Christie, whose relationsh­ip with Trump has curdled into mutual hostility — will mention Trump’s troubling comments about Milley during the second GOP debate Wednesday.

Even as they try to siphon off bits of Trump’s base, GOP candidates mostly kowtow to him rather than risk making themselves a target of his inexhausti­ble ire. Even with the names of hundreds of politician­s, organizati­ons, journalist­s, and celebritie­s, Richard Nixon’s infamous “enemies list” could fit on a postcard compared to Trump’s. A thinskinne­d man who demands not just loyalty but complete subservien­ce, Trump targets anyone with a mind of their own or adherence to the rule of law.

Milley was effectivel­y the last of what Trump used to call “my generals,” as if they were his private military bound to support, defend, and bear allegiance

A former president, currently the front-runner for the Republican presidenti­al nomination, suggested that Milley, whose term ends this week, should be put to death for treason . ... As usual, Trump is molding facts to fit into his hate machine.

to him instead of to the Constituti­on. But in refusing to do so, in placing democracy above the autocratic whims of one unhinged man, Milley has been marked as disloyal to Trump. It is an unveiled message to Trump’s real army — those who will risk their lives and freedom in the name of their monstrous master.

With 2024 quickly approachin­g, these uneasy days feel not only like a countdown to the next presidenti­al election but also to the next insurrecti­on. At a time when the quadruple-indicted Trump is running on his most disturbing platform of white grievance and retributio­n, any normalizat­ion of his escalating rhetoric is another invitation to the mayhem and brutality of his most acquiescen­t followers.

 ?? SARAHBETH MANEY/NEW YORK TIMES ?? General Mark Milley, outgoing chair of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, testified before a Senate Armed Services Committee hearing on Capitol Hill in 2021.
SARAHBETH MANEY/NEW YORK TIMES General Mark Milley, outgoing chair of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, testified before a Senate Armed Services Committee hearing on Capitol Hill in 2021.

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