Nobody does it
better
America is so lucky to have a guy in charge who is totally incapable of error. And who has a large supply of Sharpies. And an accelerating case of dementia. |
He was always the best athlete. There's nobody bigger or better at the military – and remember, he had to overcome those bone spurs to achieve that.
There's no one who respects women more, or is better to disabled
people. He has an excellent brain and
terrific hands (the better to grab things with).
Need a second opinion? His personal physician assured us that he's
the healthiest president we've ever been fortunate enough to have. And his
erudite son, Eric, tweeted that "he has more energy than any human
being," and that "95 percent of Americans"
agree with his dad's politics.
So it should come as no surprise that, according to Donald Trump,
Donald Trump knows "more about the environment
than most people."
He said this by way of explaining why he blew off the climate
change meeting of the G-7 economic summit last week, lobbing a
my-dog-ate-my-homework excuse that was quickly contradicted by the facts.
It all came at the end of a week where Trump lobbed a couple of
hallucinatory grenades into green circles.
He reportedly floated the idea of purchasing Greenland from Denmark.
The mega-island's commercial potential is growing as the global warming hoax
melts away its ice cover. Greenland, and Denmark, were not amused. (My personal
theory: The president is thinking in a golf/imperialism motif — today
Greenland, tomorrow Tee Land, Fairway Land, and Sandtrap Land.)
According to unnamed White House sources, Trump also spitballed
the idea of disrupting Atlantic hurricanes by detonating nuclear warheads inside
them. This is the type of idea that hasn't been raised since the most
dangerously zealous of the Cold Warriors died off.
These ideas came as the Administration unveiled its plan to cut the regulation of methane, a potent greenhouse gas. (This despite many large oil and gas companies calling for a tightening of such regulations.)
Let's not forget, months ago Trump opined that last year's
Northern California wildfires could have been prevented by "raking"
the forest floor. That's how the Finnish president told him it's done over
there.
When questioned about this, His Excellency Sauli Niinistö politely said his nation's lush forests are not normally raked.
When questioned about this, His Excellency Sauli Niinistö politely said his nation's lush forests are not normally raked.
To be sure, Trump may have the goofiest environmental notions, but
he didn't invent them. Join me for a quick trip down Faulty Memory Lane to meet
some of Trump's inspirational ancestors:
· * As Governor of Maine in
2011, Paul LePage dismissed concerns about the risks from endocrine disrupting
chemicals by explaining, "The worst case is that some
women may have little beards."
· * J.R. Spradley, a U.S.
delegate to a 1990 climate change delegation, tried to assuage the concerns of
his Bangladeshi colleagues concerned that its nation would be underwater
(quoted in the Washington Post, 12/30/1990): "This is
not a disaster, it is merely a change. The area won't have disappeared, it will
just be underwater. Where you now have cows, you'll have fish."
· * Brazil's Trump-ish new
President, Jair Bolsonaro, rejected an offer of aid from France to help fight
this year's catastrophic wildfires by saying France couldn't even stop Notre
Dame Cathedral from burning.
· * Talkshow blowhard Rush
Limbaugh has been a prolific source of off-the-wall declarations, but his
2010 conspiratorial rant that
the Deepwater Horizon oil spill was staged by headline-seeking
environmentalists is a keeper.
· * A decade after the
Oklahoma City bombing and more than a decade before a spate of mass shootings
by far right loners, the FBI settled on its Number One domestic terrorism
threat: Radical environmental and animal
rights activists. To be sure, groups like the Earth Liberation Front
have claimed responsibility for large-scale arson and property destruction, but
they've been dormant for years.
· * Patrick Moore, an early
leader of Greenpeace who turned to become an apologist for chemical, nuclear,
fossil fuel and timber interests in the 1980's, famously described an old
growth clearcut as a "temporary meadow."
So, say what you will about President Trump, but when he praises
"beautiful, clean coal," just think about those who inspired him in
Making America Groan Again.