I
give up.
When Donald Trump announced he was running for president, I mocked him. “Of the United States?” I asked. (I got a C- in Mockery when I was in college, unfortunately.)
When he jumped into the lead almost
immediately, I laughed. “The higher the climb, the harder the fall,” I said. (I
did better in Pithy Quotations.)
When the early campaigning found him doing well in such
disparate states as Nevada, New Hampshire, and South Carolina, I fell into
denial. “He’ll never, ever be the Republican nominee,” I said. “Republicans are
too sensible.”
"It's Yuuuugggeeee! Trust me." |
So I give up. I’m now convinced that Donald Trump is going to be
the Republican nominee for the presidency. Yes, of the United States.
He crisscrossed the country and stitched together a diverse
group of people — young and old, conservative and moderate, well-educated and “poorly educated,” Southern and
Northern.
They’re united by a single characteristic: They’re no smarter
than a box of rocks.
That, it turned out, was enough. I don’t know whether it will be enough to beat Hillary Clinton or Bernie Sanders (if the Vermont senator’s unexpected Michigan win portends a real turnaround), but to tell you the truth I wouldn’t be surprised. Shocked, yes. Surprised, no.
Well, you know what they say: If you can’t beat ‘em, join ‘em.
In that spirit I would like to put forth the reasons that I, from now on,
support Donald Trump.
He’s inexperienced — and good for him, I say. The two most
experienced presidents we’ve elected in recent times were Lyndon B. Johnson and
Richard Nixon, and what did it get us? The war in Vietnam and Watergate. The
next two most experienced were Gerald Ford and George H. W. Bush, both duds.
And, don’t forget, George W. Bush came into office surrounded by
what was described as a “dream team” of foreign policy advisers — Dick Cheney,
Donald Rumsfeld, and Paul Wolfowitz. Hello Iraq invasion and endless war in the
Middle East.
Experience is vastly overrated.
Trump tells it like it isn’t. And he lies, but that’s good too.
Why should we be the only country that tells the truth? Does China? North
Korea? Iran? Russia? Don’t be silly.
We need a leader who will match our enemies lie for lie, and
Trump has shown a real genius for that. He can tell a lie and make it sound
like an unpleasant truth.
He has no respect for anyone — nor should he. The kind of people
he hangs around with don’t deserve respect. A perfect example of that is Chris
Christie, the governor of New Jersey who endorsed Trump after ending his own
bid.
Christie immediately made himself useful by whacking Marco Rubio
in a drive-by, but did that make Trump grateful?
No, he’s too big for gratitude. He treated Christie like the
lackey he’d become. For me one of the great images of the campaign was Christie
standing behind Trump during a rally, wearing that 1,000-yard stare one
associates with a soldier who’s survived a bombing.
Anyone who can reduce a bully like Christie to a hand-licking
toady with such effortless ease can’t be all bad.
Finally, Trump flip-flops on issues — another strong point. We
live in volatile times that demand constant reassessment of one’s positions on
issues.
The king and queen of this technique are none other than Bill and Hillary Clinton, who are able not
only to change positions on a dime but to occupy both sides of an issue
simultaneously. Trump isn’t quite their equal yet, but he’s close.
Now you see why I’m for The Donald. He’ll make America great
again. It will be a shining outhouse on a hill.
OtherWords
columnist Donald Kaul lives in Ann Arbor, Michigan. OtherWords.org.