First
Flynn….Spicer next?
By
Will Collette
One
of Rhode Island’s endearing – and annoying – qualities is our compulsion to
look for Rhode Island connections to national or international events so we can prove our relevance.
Take
the way much of Rhode Island’s media drooled over Trump's pick of two Rhode
Islanders for high profile White House positions
One is retired (actually, fired) General Mike Flynn to National Security Advisor and the other is Sean Spicer as White House Press Secretary.
It might have been better to downplay those two’s Rhode Island connections since they have turned out to be among the worst of a simply terrible cast of clowns working for the Trump White House.
One is retired (actually, fired) General Mike Flynn to National Security Advisor and the other is Sean Spicer as White House Press Secretary.
It might have been better to downplay those two’s Rhode Island connections since they have turned out to be among the worst of a simply terrible cast of clowns working for the Trump White House.
Portsmouth
resident Mike Flynn has become the first high ranking Trump official to be forced
to resign. He allegedly violated the law by trying to cut backroom deals
with the Russians, and then lied to cover it up.
While
Flynn’s conversations with Vladimir Putin’s representative about lifting US
economic sanctions against Russian may
have violated enough long-standing federal laws to get Flynn indicted, he
learned the classic lesson that it’s often the cover-up that gets you, not the
actual crime.
This
is the second go-round for Flynn in the White House. President Obama fired Flynn from the
position of defense intelligence chief for insubordination. Flynn claimed
he was fired due to his views on Islam, which by most standards are repugnant
and racist.
Which
seemed to make Flynn a perfect match for Trump, except his other character
flaws did him in.
Let’s
not have any more talk about him being a Rhode Islander, shall we?
Then
there’s Barrington native Sean Spicer whose ineptitude as White House Press Secretary has already made him a celebrity
of sorts on Saturday Night Live.
Yeah, they've got the looking ridiculous part down pat |
Rather than model himself on iconic White
House Press Secretaries of the past, like James Brady, Pierre Salinger or Bill
Moyers, Spicer seems to be channeling
Joseph Goebbels, Propaganda Minister for the Third Reich.
To
stand up before the world press and tell lie after demonstrable lie, what other
role model but Goebbels fits?
He
is so terrible at his job that rumors are already floating that Trump
doesn’t like his performance and is considering his ouster.
The
Boston
Globe did a feature piece on Spicer, highlighting his Rhode Island roots
and focusing on the “Seventeen Rules” Spicer shared with students at Portsmouth
Abbey where he was schooled.
Some
of his rules were specific to the students, such as “Get to know the international students and understand their
different perspectives.” That’s an odd one, considering he works for Trump, who
could care less about getting to know or understand people from other
countries.
Spicer’s Rule #2 was aimed at the students, but
really be made into a plaque for this boss’s desk: “Think before you tweet, post or upload.”
Likewise,
Trump has never learned Spicer’s Rule #3: “Take
responsibility when you screw up — you will be rewarded.” Never, ever has Trump ever owned up to making any mistakes.
But
Trump does seem to adhere to two of Spicer’s rules, such as Rule #8, “Perception is reality,” and Rule #15, “It's not what you say, but how you say it.”
Spicer
might have added a 16th rule: “Always keep your resume updated.”
If
any good comes out of Flynn’s and Spicer’s Washington escapades, maybe it’ll be
that we simply be proud to be Rhode Islanders, without counting on such dubious
public figures as these to pump up our reputation.
As to the Michael Flynn matter, Robert Reich raises Six Big Questions
The American public deserves to know the
answers to at least the first five of these questions, and will then make a
judgment on the sixth:
1. Why didn’t Trump act sooner to fire
Flynn? He knew about Flynn’s contact with the Russian ambassador at least
since January, when then-acting attorney general Sally Yates notified the White
House that Flynn had “put himself in a compromising position” with his phone
call to the Russian ambassador.
2. What, if anything, did Trump
authorize Michael Flynn to tell the Russians before the inauguration?
3. What other contacts did Flynn and
other Trump aides have with Russia before the election? U.S.
intelligence reports show that Flynn was in touch with Russian ambassador
Kislyak during the 2016 campaign, and that communications between the two
continued after Nov. 8. The Russian ambassador has even confirmed having
contacts with Flynn before and after the election, though he declined to say
what was discussed.
4. Did Flynn or other Trump aides know
of or cooperate with Russia in interfering in the 2016 election on Trump’s
behalf?
5. If so, did Trump know about
or encourage such cooperation?
These questions won’t go away. The FBI and the
Senate Intelligence Community are investigating. Hopefully, investigative
reporters are also on the case.
Eventually, the truth will come out. As Richard
Nixon learned, coverups in Washington just make things worse.
Which leads inevitably to the last question:
6. If Trump knew or encouraged, will
he be impeached?