Donald Trump. (photo: AP)
02 September 16
he
cap does not look good on you, it's a duffer's cap, and when you come
to the microphone, you look like the warm-up guy, the guy who announces
the license number of the car left in the parking lot, doors locked,
lights on, motor running. The brim shadows your face, which gives a
sinister look, as if you'd come to town to announce the closing of the
pulp factory. Your eyes look dead and your scowl does not suggest
American greatness so much as American indigestion. Your hair is the
wrong color: People don't want a president to be that shade of blond.
You know that now.
Why doesn't someone in your entourage dare to say
these things? So sad. The fans in the arenas are wild about you, and
Sean Hannity is as loyal as they come, but Rudy and Christie and Newt
are reassuring in that stilted way of hospital visitors. And The New
York Times treats you like the village idiot. This is painful for a
Queens boy trying to win respect in Manhattan where the Times is the
Supreme Liberal Jewish Anglican Arbiter of Who Has The Smarts and What
Goes Where. When you came to Manhattan 40 years ago, you discovered that
in entertainment, the press, politics, finance, everywhere you went,
you ran into Jews, and they are not like you: Jews didn't go in for big
yachts and a fleet of aircraft — they showed off by way of philanthropy
or by raising brilliant offspring. They sympathized with the civil
rights movement. In Queens, blacks were a threat to property values —
they belonged in the Bronx, not down the street. To the Times, Queens is
Cleveland. Bush league. You are Queens. The casinos were totally
Queens, the gold faucets in your triplex, the bragging, the insults, but
you wanted to be liked by Those People. You wanted Mike Bloomberg to
invite you to dinner at his townhouse. You wanted the Times to run a
three-part story about you, that you meditate and are a passionate
kayaker and collect 14th-century Islamic mosaics. You wish you were that
person but you didn't have the time.
Running for president is your last bid for the respect
of Manhattan. If you were to win election, they couldn't ridicule you
anymore. They could be horrified, but there is nothing ridiculous about
being Leader of the Free World. You have B-52 bombers at your command.
When you go places, a battalion of security guys comb the environs. You
attract really really good speechwriters who give you Churchillian
cadences and toss in quotes from Emerson and Aeschylus and Ecclesiastes.
Labor Day and it is not going well. You had a very bad
month. You tossed out those wisecracks on Twitter and the Earth shook
and your ratings among white suburban women with French cookware
declined. The teleprompter is not your friend. You are in the old
tradition of locker room ranting and big honkers in the steam room,
sitting naked, talking man talk, griping about the goons and ginks and
lousy workmanship and the uppity broads and the great lays and how you
vanquished your enemies at the bank. Profanity is your natural language
and vulgar words so as not to offend the Christers but the fans can
still hear it and that's something they love about you. You are their
guy. You are losing and so are they but they love you for it.
So what do you do this winter? Hang around one of your
mansions? Hit some golf balls? Hire a ghostwriter to do a new
autobiography?
What the fans don't know is that it's not much fun
being a billionaire. You own a lot of big houses and you wander around
in them, followed by a waiter, a bartender, a masseuse, three
housekeepers, and a concierge, and they probably gossip about you behind
your back. Just like nine-tenths of your campaign staff. You're losing
and they know it and they're telling mean stories about you to everybody
and his brother.
Meanwhile, you keep plugging away. It's the hardest
work you've ever done. You walk out in the white cap and you rant for an
hour about stuff that means nothing and the fans scream and wave their
signs and you wish you could level with them for once and say one true
thing: I love you to death and when this is over I will have nothing
that I want.
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