Donald Trump and Steve Bannon. (photo: Saul Loeb/Getty Images)
By Matt Taibbi, Rolling Stone
07 January 18
The blistering new insider account of the White House offers hope that Trump's is just a worse version of a species of presidency we've survived before
ost of the world seems to have concluded that the lunatic chaos described in Fire and Fury, the "bombshell" new book about the Trump White House by Michael Wolff, foretells the end of civilization.
The book certainly doesn't seem like good news. Wolff
tells us our president is probably a neurotic illiterate, incapable of
focus beyond a few seconds, and thought of as a deranged simpleton by
even his most trusted advisors.
The excerpt in New York Magazine
describes an idiot who didn't expect to win and spends his evenings
locked in the White House bedroom wolfing down cheeseburgers – Trump
reportedly has a Woody Allen-esque phobia about being poisoned and
therefore loves the wholesome safety of premade McDonald's – while
watching news about himself and descending into fugue states of rage and
self-pity.
Pretty much any hack novelist writing an imagined
account of what Trump's daily routine is like could have penned that
exact same scene. (I might have put the cheeseburger in one hand and a
hyper-smudged mobile device, for counter-tweeting purposes, in the
other.)
The eerie literary accuracy of such accounts is probably why journalists spent much of Thursday debating the provenance of Wolff's information. Was it all true? Exaggerated? Stuff whispered in confidence?
Others questioned the validity of the account on the
basis that the representation of Trump was so horrifically moronic, it
couldn't possibly be real.
Donald Jr. objected to
Wolff's claim that Trump, when pushed by Roger Ailes to name former
House Speaker John Boehner Chief of Staff, replied, "Who's that?"
"Just another pathetic attempt to smear @realDonaldTrump #fakenews," Trump's large adult son tweeted.
And it's true: Boehner and Trump went golfing together
in 2013. Trump even said then, out loud, "I like John Boehner a lot."
He also reportedly donated $100,000 to a Boehner-linked PAC. So, many
say, it is impossible that Trump wouldn't remember who Boehner was.
Absurd! As anyone who covered Trump in the 2016 race
knows, the man's brain is an ooze of fast-disintegrating neurons.
Moreover, he has a long and storied history of forgetting stuff he only
just said, and people he only just met.
The weirdest case came when Trump appeared to
genuinely forget he'd spent much of the home stretch of the Republican
primary campaign promising not to let the Indiana-based HVAC company
Carrier move jobs to Mexico. He spent four months on the trail babbling
promises about Carrier.
After the election, he balked at the idea he'd ever made such promises.
"I made it for everybody else. I didn't make it really for Carrier," he said.
"I made it for everybody else. I didn't make it really for Carrier," he said.
This could easily have just been Trump cynically
backtracking on a campaign promise, but it's hard to say. He often
appears genuinely befuddled when challenged with earlier statements.
A much-decried incident in which Trump spoke about his
wife Melania's feelings about Hurricane Irma as though she were not, in
fact, standing right next to him, has usually been interpreted as Trump just being an insensitive goon treating his wife like a mannequin.
But the explanation of him genuinely forgetting she
was two feet away also fits, if you watch the man enough. He is
completely capable of just mistaking her for a thin person in a hat.
Trump often stares out at crowds like he has no idea where he is or how he got there, or like he's looking at a room full of scary aliens, à la Rowdy Roddy Piper in They Live.
So I completely buy the idea that Trump could not only
have forgotten who John Boehner is, but forgotten golfing with him, and
doing whatever else they did after – whipping each other with towels in
the club room, etc.
This also could easily be a Far Out Space Nuts situation where Trump heard Ailes say "Boehner," when Trump thought the name was pronounced "Boner."
A detail I hope is true involves a purported insider description of Trump's scalp by Ivanka:
"[It is] an absolutely clean pate — a contained island
after scalp-reduction surgery — surrounded by a furry circle of hair
around the sides and front, from which all ends are drawn up to meet in
the center and then swept back and secured by a stiffening spray. The
color, she would point out to comical effect, was from a product called
Just for Men — the longer it was left on, the darker it got. Impatience
resulted in Trump's orange-blond hair color."
If the NSA is worth its budget, it ought to be able to
produce a satellite photo of that "furry circle of hair," then use it
to frighten spies into giving up their handlers. Humorously, in this
telling, even Trump's hair color testifies to his debilitating lack of
attention span.
The depiction of Trump as a mental incompetent who
couldn't sit through even the beginning of a lesson on the Constitution
("I got as far as the Fourth Amendment... before his finger is pulling
down on his lip and his eyes are rolling back," Wolff quotes Sam Nunberg
as saying) rings painfully true.
So, too, does the description aides in the book use to
describe the worst of Trump's moods, a thing called his "golf face."
According to Wolff, he wore this expression the whole day of his
inauguration, fuming over the absence of A-listers and other outrages:
he was "angry and pissed off, shoulders hunched, arms swinging, brow
furled, lips pursed."
Wolff basically describes Trump as a deficient buffoon
who, when it comes to politics anyway, is totally out of his element,
mistaking fake ardor for the real thing, constantly demanding fealty
from Congress, the business world and staff:
"He was like an instinctive, pampered, and hugely
successful actor. Everybody was either a lackey who did his bidding or a
high-ranking film functionary trying to coax out his performance —
without making him angry or petulant."
Wolff writes Team Trump was really hoping to "almost
win" the presidency as part of a PR-driven business move, only to be
horrified by the reality of securing a hugely demanding government job:
"Once he lost, Trump would be both insanely famous and
a martyr to Crooked Hillary... Melania Trump, who had been assured by
her husband that he wouldn't become president, could return to
inconspicuously lunching. Losing would work out for everybody. Losing
was winning.
"On Election Night, when the unexpected trend — Trump
might actually win — seemed confirmed, Don Jr. told a friend that his
father, or DJT, as he calls him, looked as if he had seen a ghost.
Melania was in tears — and not of joy."
When Trump first announced his run, the consensus in
the press corps was that the last thing he wanted was to actually be
president. This was a man who spent his life golfing, pigging out and
skeeving his way backstage in beauty contests. No one could imagine him
volunteering for a life where he couldn't skip meetings with the Joint
Chiefs, or the head of OPIC.
Now he is president, though, and, this being a new
year, it's worth looking at the possible bright side of Wolff's account.
Trump appears to be so far gone as to have no attention span at all,
and to be totally consumed with press coverage of himself, almost to the
exclusion of all else. This perhaps caps the irreversibly destructive
consequences of his presidency.
That is not to say that horrible things haven't and
won't continue to emanate from the Trump White House. (Just look at the
recent heightened use of drone strikes, for example.)
But it's hard to imagine Trump focusing long enough to
enact a plan as destructive as, say, the invasion of Iraq. Moreover,
his confederates – especially now that Steve Bannon is out – seem mostly
concerned with keeping the boss away from the real power of his office,
almost like parents trying to steer a two-year-old away from the gas
range.
America has been here before, piloted by mentally adrift presidents. Bob Woodward's Veil described
how the CIA had to produce movies about foreign leaders because Ronald
Reagan couldn't take in information (like who the heck Hosni Mubarak
was) any other way:
"Since Reagan did not read many novels but watched
movies, the CIA began to produce profiles of leaders that could be shown
to the President... One was of the new Egyptian President. 'SECRET
NOFORN' flashed on the screen as the narrator began, 'This is Hosni
Mubarak...'"
George W. Bush was a similar figure. He spent much of his first presidential campaign lugging around a biography of Dean Acheson in a widely derided effort to convince the press corps he read books.
Bush in office openly admitted to not reading
newspapers, relaying with surfer-dude insouciance that instead he got
briefings from people who did. He was genuinely proud of knowing nothing.
We survived episodes like that, and a few others. (There is a story, perhaps apocryphal, that James Buchanan bought a ten-gallon jug of whiskey every week.)
Trump by most accounts is worst of all, and the horror effect is enhanced by the seemingly total absence of redeeming qualities in his personality. But a guy who fell backwards into the presidency and has been too brain-hampered upon arrival to do much with the office – there are worse narratives.
Trump by most accounts is worst of all, and the horror effect is enhanced by the seemingly total absence of redeeming qualities in his personality. But a guy who fell backwards into the presidency and has been too brain-hampered upon arrival to do much with the office – there are worse narratives.
Just remember, Trump could be cunning, focused and
bursting with willpower, in addition to being a gross, ignorant pig. We
can only hope that Wolff is right that he isn't both.
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