Susie and I are now back from our visit to DC to have dinner
with my sister, Barbara, and my younger son, Tobias. Barbara and Tobias are good and very wise
people, from whom I gained not only some measure of stability but also a great
deal of wisdom during our all too brief evening together. In this post, I am going to try to articulate
some of what I took away from the visit in the hope that it will offer help to
those of you who read my blog. We are at
the very beginning of a long and genuinely terrible time. We are going to need all the wisdom, patience,
and fellowship we can muster. I do not
want to argue with any of you in this post.
These are early days, and no doubt many of my expectations and
understandings will be overtaken by events in the coming days, weeks, months,
and years. It matters less who correctly
forecasts the future than how we muster our courage, fellow feeling, and mutual
commitment to shared principles.
Let me begin with some insight into the nascent administration
forming, rather inchoately, around the President-elect. Trump, as Tobias observed, is a cruel man who
takes personal pleasure not merely in asserting dominance but also in
inflicting humiliation on those he considers insufficiently praising of his
magnificence. One example among many is
his invitation to Mitt Romney to meet with him to discuss the position of
Secretary of State and his invitation to Ted Cruz to meet about the position of
Attorney General. He has not the
slightest interest in either man for those or any other positions, it goes
without saying, but he understands that such an invitation from the
President-elect cannot be refused, and so he will have the opportunity to
publicly turn them down, thus simultaneously reasserting is dominance and
inflicting some small humiliation. That
he should find this worth the effort and time during so hectic a period says a
good deal about his character.
It is striking how utterly unprepared he is for the position
he is about to assume. Chris Christie,
who is despicable but intelligent and quite capable, had apparently undertaken
the transition planning in an efficient manner.
He was summarily dismissed, pretty clearly at the urging of Jared Kushner,
leaving the administration-in-waiting with no plans whatsoever. No one around Trump even understood that a
series of consent documents have to be signed before the current White House
staff is legally permitted to coordinate with the incoming group, and inasmuch
as Christie had signed those documents and is now gone, new documents must be
drawn up and signed. Nor did Trump and
his coterie even grasp that the entire existing White House staff, right down
to the secretaries, will walk out of the White House on January 20th
next, leaving Trump completely adrift until he hires on a new group – which, by
the way, numbers a core of 450 and a somewhat larger group of an additional
1400 or thereabouts! Our attention understandably
has been focused on such truly awful people as Steve Bannon and Jeff Sessions,
but the mere daily operation of an Administration requires the efforts of a
very large number of people, a fact of which Trump is blindly and stupidly
unaware.
It is striking and deeply revealing of the man that he seems
to have no friends. He has countless
acquaintances, of course, but no friends.
Nor does he seem to have any long-time business partners – not flunkies
and underlings, but partners. Hence his
bizarre reliance on his children and his son-in-law. [Please let no one bring up the fact that
Jack Kennedy appointed his brother Bobby as Attorney General. Bobby was Jack’s campaign manager, after
having served as the Chief Counsel of the Senate rackets Committee.] Equally bizarre and revealing is his apparent
obsession with sleeping in his own bed in Trump Tower, where he has indicated
he plans to spend a good deal of time when President. Tobias pointed out, what I had not thought
about, that each time he travels as President to Trump Tower, which I guess is
at 57th and 5th in Manhattan, the Secret Service will
close down the surrounding area for an hour or two prior to his arrival. Obama visited New York City perhaps eight or
nine times during the seven and a half years of his presidency, causing massive
traffic jams each time. What on earth
will it do to New York if Trump decides to spend one or two nights a week
there? [And what will be the response of
the commercial and private tenants of the Tower when they find their businesses
or their lives constantly disrupted this way?]
Tobias noted that even if Trump shows up only one night a month the
Secret Service will have to impost permanent maximum security on the building
to stop someone from bringing in the makings of a bomb, hiding them in a
utility closet, and planning an assassination.
I do not think Trump begins to understand how public and circumscribed
the life of the President is. By the
way, there is already evidence that foot traffic in and around Trump owned
properties is way down. The presidency,
despite his manifest intention of monetizing it, may prove a losing proposition
for Trump.
And this is what we can collect and project from the first ten days of the period leading up to the Inauguration!
You will see that it was a lovely dinner. But now let me turn to deeper matters. How do I [and you] come to terms with the
prospect, and then the fact, of a Trump presidency, and with the enormous
damage he will do to the lives of countless millions of Americans?
In the days since the election, I have felt, if I may invoke
Moses in Genesis, like a stranger in a strange land, but there
is, alas, no Yahweh to offer us guidance on stone tablets, so we shall have to make
do with our collective knowledge and a quite unwarranted but unshakable belief
in the power of comradeship. I am
reminded, from my study of the history of African-Americans, that many times during
the past four hundred years temporary victories have been followed by bitter
defeats. Black Americans, whether slave
or free, have never given up their quest for justice, and those among us who
are White can do no less.
Woody Allen famously observed that 85% of life is just showing
up, and yesterday evening Tobias echoed that quip, suggesting that it is not
necessary that we engage endlessly in elaborate strategizing about precisely
the most effective anti-Trump action. He
repeated advice that he gave to a gathering of UPenn LGBT students [where
Tobias teaches in the Law School] that simply showing up to gatherings of
organizations committed to shared principles and the defense of the vulnerable
is a good way both to strengthen the opposition and to draw emotional
sustenance.
Above all else, we must separately and together declare loudly
that we shall not go back, we shall
not accept the inferior and endangered status that Trump and his administration
seek to inflict on Gays, on women, on Latino/as, on Muslim Americans, and even –
if Bannon is any evidence, on Jews.
For those of you who would like to listen to Tobias speaking
to the UPenn gathering, you can find it recorded here.
All of this and more I gleaned from one dinner with my wife,
my sister, and my son. Let us each seek
out our loved ones, our friends, and our comrades.
NEVER AGAIN.
Oh, by the way, it was a good meal.
This short film of the Seattle high school walkout and march on Monday gives me hope. It's a small start, but it's a start.
ReplyDeletehttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VLbQ9gduvOA
One hopeful thought: most of the creative and wise people in the country are on our side. That occurred to me as I watched the video of the cast of "Hamilton" aggressively calling out Pence in the audience at curtain call, as the audience booed him. Trump demanded an apology. I thought, "You ain't seen nothing yet!"
ReplyDeleteHi Robert,
ReplyDeleteTwo things: (1) Regarding the recent US presidential election, even our own (in Australia) fairly conservative, if not right-wing, Federal Coalition Government (except for the Corey Bernardi's) was hoping for a Clinton victory (see Julie Bishop's comments); and (2), if you haven't already done so, you might like to read Ian Hunt's recently published book (2015) on Marx and Rawls regarding liberal socialism (Liberal Socialism: An Alternative Social Ideal Grounded in Rawls and Marx).
Best,
Stephen Darling
One more thing - have you've read Anwar Shaikh's Capitalism: Competition, Conflict, Crises (OUP 2016), and if so, what do you think of it?
ReplyDeleteBest,
Stephen Darling
I have not read either of those books, but they sound interesting. thanks for the reference.
ReplyDelete