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Sunday, August 21, 2022

‘I think I know most of it’: Trump’s 1986 quote about nuclear weapon expertise is relevant today

Real estate developer Donald J. Trump rubs a "magic lamp" during the opening ceremony for his huge Taj Mahal casino, in Atlantic city, 05 April 1990. .Billionaire Donald Trump, who was born in 1946, Queens, New York, has gained notability for his celebrity lifestyle and his real estate successes. / AFP PHOTO / BILL SWERSEY        (Photo credit should read BILL SWERSEY/AFP via Getty Images)
Polishing a pretend gold genie lamp may be the only thing Donald Trump was ever qualified to do

As conservatives work around the clock to figure out how to spin the alleged discovery of nuclear secrets illegally hoarded away in Donald Trump’s Mordor lair Mar-A-Lago, many others point to Trump’s history of casually bringing up nukes at every opportunity. For as long as people have been nearby and attentive enough to record it, Trump has made a point to share his many thoughts on weapons and nuclear armament.

You may recall something about nuclear weapons from Bob Woodward’s many books on behind-the-scenes Trump administration disasters—and you would be right, but it goes back much further than that. In fact, it goes back to 1986, to the very first issue of Spy magazine.

When Spy magazine came out, Donald Trump was the Donald Trump we all know now, but with less global power. He was the New York real estate mogul who was all smoke and mirrors, a pig with women, a pig with the media, a pig with contractors, a pig that made pigs say, “Hey man, stop using that expression to describe Donald Trump.” As was detailed in the Daily Beast a few years ago, Trump hated Spy magazine because Spy magazine’s editors and writers loved to pick on him.

Even back in the 1980s, Trump said and did terribly embarrassing things because he’s an embarrassment of a person. It was Spy magazine that coined the “short-fingered vulgarian” moniker that reportedly got deep under Trump’s tissue-paper-thin skin. On Friday, former Spy magazine writer David Kamp tweeted an image from “The Very. First. Issue. Of Spy. 1986.”

The Very. First. Issue. Of Spy. 1986.

Image

 

 

 

The circled part reads: “It would take an hour and a half to learn everything there is to learn about missiles… I think I know most of it anyway.”

That was then, and this is now. According to Bob Woodward’s new book, Peril, Trump’s overall incompetence, combined with his weak emotional control, led Joint Chiefs Chairman Gen. Mark Milley to secretly make “senior military officials in charge of the National Military Command Center” swear an oath to him that they would take no military action or nuclear action from Trump without involving Milley first. This was in the days after the Jan. 6 attempted coup d’etat.

Woodward has previously illustrated Trump’s lack of both sense and intelligence in his 2020 book, Rage. In that book, Woodward details a conversation he had with then-only-once-impeached President Donald Trump about military secrets that someone like Bob Woodward should not be hearing.

Trump reportedly blabbered, "I have built a nuclear—a weapons system that nobody's ever had in this country before. We have stuff that Putin and Xi have never heard about before. There's nobody—what we have is incredible."

Woodward says that this turned out to be true, and the military officials he spoke with were “surprised” Trump would reveal such a thing to Bob goddamn Woodward.

Such a smart guy.  Just ask him about nukes.

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