Donald Trump recently returned from meeting with the other
powerful countries of the G20 group — one of his first big performances on the
world stage. So how did it go?
Not swell, according to a no-holds-barred account delivered by
Chris Uhlmann, an Australian journalist. Uhlmann made four main points about
how the rest of the world sees the U.S. president.
First, Uhlmann charged, Trump has “no desire or capacity to lead
the world.” He called him “a man who barks out bile in 140 characters” and
“wastes his precious days as president at war with the west’s institutions,
like the judiciary, independent government agencies, and the free press.”
"I could be home watching TV. Or golfing." |
It’s hard to refute that latter point.
How much time has Trump wasted watching cable news, or insisting that he got more votes or had bigger crowds at his inauguration than he really did?
How much time has Trump wasted watching cable news, or insisting that he got more votes or had bigger crowds at his inauguration than he really did?
How much time has our entire country wasted focusing on nasty
tweets, such as the recent one claiming that TV personality Mika Brzezinski has
a low IQ?
Second, Uhlmann concluded, Trump “craves power because it burnishes his celebrity. To be constantly talking and talked about is all that matters.” Worse still, he said, “There’s no value placed on the meaning of words. What’s said one day can be discarded the next.”
Angela Merkel makes Trump blink |
Moreover, Trump himself has shown little shame in making hateful remarks that would embarrass any other leader, from making fun of a disabled journalist to bragging about sexually assaulting women.
Third, Uhlmann warned, one must not “confuse the speeches
written for Trump with the thoughts of the man himself,” because ” it’s the unscripted
Trump that’s real.”
Again, he isn’t wrong. This can be said to some degree of all
presidents. The words of a speechwriter or the tactics of a clever political
strategist may be executed at the White House, but they don’t necessarily
represent the thoughts or feelings of the president.
Got nothing to say to Theresa May, British Prime Minister. |
This is less of a problem when written speeches and unscripted
remarks are similar. But Trump often reads a well-scripted speech and then
turns around right afterward to make entirely contradictory off the cuff remarks.
And last, Uhlmann assessed, as a result of all this, “the G20
became the G19” and “the U.S. was left isolated and friendless.”
You may disagree with parts of this assessment. Perhaps you like
Trump. Maybe you think his policy proposals are good ones.
Keeping his hand in |
Leadership can only occur when others recognize the authority of
and follow the leader. I could declare myself leader of the free world right
now, but nobody would buy into such a claim.
Putin: "He's a good boy." |
At present, under Trump, our country is not doing that.
You can call German Angela Merkel or Chinese Premier Xi Jinping
any names you want.
But until our country elects someone who can work constructively with them, our global influence is going to suffer.
But until our country elects someone who can work constructively with them, our global influence is going to suffer.
And, correspondingly, our ability to achieve any goal that
requires international cooperation will suffer as well.
OtherWords
columnist Jill Richardson is the author of Recipe for America: Why Our
Food System Is Broken and What We Can Do to Fix It. Distributed
by OtherWords.org