The Prince of Lies

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We here at The Daily Outrage (we being me and my able assistant, Señor Gato) tried to take a much needed rest for a couple of weeks, in honor of the season of caring, brotherhood, the Prince of Peace and all that, by not watching or reading political news.  Señor Gato and I are not religious; we just wanted a brief respite from the aggravation.

Nice idea, but it didn’t work.  The news seeped in anyway, as it is wont to do, and my blood pressure was raised accordingly.  It took a good deal of therapeutically-applied red wine and dark chocolate to counteract the negativity created by the Prince of Lies, known otherwise on these pages as the TiC (see my 22 December 2016 post, “Cчастливого Рождества!”).    Meanwhile, Señor Gato did what he always does at times like this:  he napped.

Well, that was last year, and now it’s 2017.  A whole year (actually, only 357 days) stretches out before us, filled with the promise of opportunity, understanding, and enlightenment.  It also holds the promise of disaster, chaos, and deception, for such is the nature of the TiC’s looming regime.

Much has been written, in various places, about the lying nature of the TiC’s campaign for, first, the Republican nomination, and then, for the presidency.  Mostly, at first, it was just Lyin’ Don who threw out all the lies, but eventually everyone in his entourage – his minions, you might say – joined in the lie-fest.  It seemed clear at the time, and depressingly clear now, that these were lies that a great many of our fellow citizens wanted to hear:  that America is no longer great; that Democrats, and Hillary Clinton in particular, are to blame for that decline in greatness; that American companies are moving American jobs to Mexico and China due to the incompetence and irresponsibility of Pres. Obama (who was born in Kenya, by the way); that crime is rampant in our cities and getting worse; that illegal immigrants are stealing jobs from honest, working class Americans; that illegal immigrants are contributing to the (nonexistent) crime wave terrorizing the country; that a Great Wall (as the TiC now calls it) can and should be built along the entire length of our border with Mexico; and, that Mexico will be forced, by the TiC, to pay for said Great Wall.  The biggest lie of all is the one wherein the TiC declares that only he can save us from this myriad of fabricated disasters.

These are not the only lies, of course.  There are also the slanders and threats against the press, which are nothing if not bald attempts to intimidate those whose job it is to honestly report to the rest of us about the doings of politicians (and those who claim to be politicians, but who actually are nothing more than pathetic, self-aggrandizing reality-show stars).

Then there’s the question of intelligence.  By this I do not mean the intelligence of the TiC himself (of which, the TiC has an extremely high opinion, contrary to the opinion of many others, myself included).  That’s a good and proper subject for discussion, but I mean national intelligence:  CIA, FBI, et cetera.  Apparently, there are sixteen separate intelligence agencies within the Federal government (why so many, I don’t know), and all of them have agreed that the Russian government, on orders from Vlad the Taciturn, hacked into various websites and email accounts (the Democratic and Republican National Committees, and Hillary Clinton’s campaign, among others), looking for information that could be used to disrupt or discredit the recent national election, and simultaneously help propel the TiC into the presidency.

They found what they were looking for, and funneled it to WikiLeaks, which promptly threw it all out into the cybersphere, where, along with a little help from FBI director James Comey, it helped nudge enough people into Lyin’ Don’s column to ensure him a new home at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, Washington, D.C.  All of this in the aftermath of the TiC himself, during the election campaign, encouraging Russia to hack into Hillary Clinton’s email account.  And of course, being BFFs, Vlad complied.

This is all bad enough, but the TiC, being a man of poor boundaries, thin skin, and extremely high self-esteem, has decided that the thousands of people in those sixteen agencies are incompetent idiots (Remember the Iraq WMD debacle of 2003!).  Not only that, but the TiC knows, just knows, in his infinite wisdom, that such a thing is impossible, because, you know, hacking is difficult, and proving it is more so, and anyway, his bud Vlad wouldn’t do such a nasty thing after all the nice things Vlad has said about the TiC, and vice versa.  No, no – of course not.  And anyone who thinks otherwise is a fool.  Not only that, but that Julian Assange, WikiLeaks founder, is actually a great guy – despite what the TiC said only six years ago.

The actual fools among us are the ones who were taken in by the TiC’s act, because that’s what it was, and what it continues to be.  I suspect they will eventually realize they’ve been had, and that the swamp the TiC railed against does not in fact exist, and that even if it did, the former generals and current billionaires comprising the TiC’s cabinet are not the crew to drain it.

They will realize that starting a trade war with China, spending billions of dollars to build an unnecessary wall that Mexico will never pay for, and ignoring the manipulation of our election (and who knows what else) by a not-friendly foreign power, will not deliver – or return – stewardship of America into the hands of angry white men who need simple explanations for complex issues.

They have helped elect the most incompetent, pampered, infantile president in our history, and we are stuck with him until 20 January 2021.  In the ensuing four years, though, none of us should refrain from calling a lie exactly what it is, nor should we refrain from mocking the absurd and even dangerous pronouncements that will issue forth from the mouth of this man who, with every word and every deed, proves that he is the real fool.

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Cчастливого Рождества!

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Cчастливого Рождества,  Владимир Путин!

Merry Christmas, Vladimir Putin!  Happy Year of the Rooster, Xi Jinping!  Congratulations on the Utter Destruction of Aleppo, Basher Al-Assad!

Do you gentlemen (I use the word advisedly) like surprises?  If so, you must all be thrilled about the gift that has been made to you by some of my fellow citizens.  Who knew an ignorant narcissist could become president of the United States?  (Thanks, in part, to you, Vladimir Vladimirovich.)

See?  In America, anyone can become president!

Ok, a case can be made that George W. Bush proved that in 2000, but honestly, by comparison with the soon-to-be Twit-in-Chief (TiC), W. doesn’t look quite as awful as he once did.  Neither does Richard Nixon, which is a bit disturbing, but more about Tricky Dick in a later post.

Sure, W. and his crew started and then botched a completely unnecessary war in Iraq, based on the false allegation that Saddam Hussein had weapons of mass destruction in his hands.  (Admit it:  Don’t you sometimes wish Saddam were still in charge in Baghdad?  Do you ever wonder how the world might be different now, if W. had just left him alone?  One thing I’m pretty sure about is that Iraqi nuclear missiles would not have been raining down on New York City.  And as for truck-driving terrorists, well, we’ll never know the answer to that one, will we?)

At least W. and most of his advisors and cabinet members knew something about governance, even if, like Dick Cheney, they used that knowledge in inappropriate, and illegal, ways.  The TiC, on the other hand, is given to dictating – to say nothing of self-aggrandizement, at which he is particularly skilled.  What he is not given to doing is collaborating and politicking, his “Art of the Deal” notwithstanding.  It is true that, in the beginning of his administration, President Obama was disdainful of engaging in the sort of political horse trading that has historically been the main way things have gotten done in Washington, DC.  Nevertheless, the number of rules and conventions and standards of which the TiC is disdainful is vast, and it grows by the day.

The same is true of a majority of the TiC’s appointments and nominations thus far.  They are people who are either stunningly unqualified for the job or they’re committed to destroying the department or agency they will lead – or both.  It’s a challenge to have a favorite horror story with this lot, but I’ll delve into it anyway.

Is it the neurosurgeon who didn’t want an important government post?  If that’s the case, what was that recent run for the Republican presidential nomination all about?  Now, if approved by the Senate, this fellow will run the Department of Housing and Urban Development.  The TiC tells us that the reason he chose this particular man is because he grew up in an “inner city” neighborhood.  Oh, and he’s black, but the TiC seems to be ignoring that part.  Or maybe he’s not ignoring it, and he hopes that nominating Ben Carson will somehow endear him to the millions of African Americans who voted by the busload for Hillary Clinton.  I think it highly improbable that such a thing could come about, but then, I didn’t think the TiC could get elected in the first place.

And then there’s Rex Tillerson, currently CEO of ExxonMobil, the sixth largest company in the world, and the largest petroleum-centric corporation on the planet.  Every day, ExxonMobil pumps some 3.9 billion barrels of oil out of the ground, from which, in 2015, they made almost $270,000,000,000.  Mr. Tillerson has worked for ExxonMobile and its predecessors for forty-one years, which is to say, since he was twenty-three years old.  He knows nothing else.

Well, that’s not quite true.  He knows Vladimir Putin.  They’re great friends.  Rex and Vlad go way back; some twenty-five years, in fact.  Vlad admires Rex so much that in 2013, Vlad awarded the Order of Friendship (OoF) to Rex.  This is the highest honor Russia can bestow on a foreigner, and Rex earned his OoF by virtue of ExxonMobil discovering a huge new oil field for the Russians, in the Arctic.  Prior to that, for about five years, Rex was director of a joint US-Russian oil company that was registered in the Bahamas (a.k.a., tax haven).

Sanctions imposed on Russia after its invasion of Ukraine and annexation of Crimea put a stop to the big (300 billion dollars big) Arctic oil project, but Vlad, being such good pals with Rex, did not ask him to return the OoF, because that’s the kind of guy Vlad is.  And anyway, he probably figured that Rex would do something nice for him in the future, just to make up for the lost oil billions.

Assuming the United States Senate plays along, Rex will soon be in a position to do that nice thing, whatever it may turn out to be, since he will be the new Secretary of State.  Funny how things work out, isn’t it?  The moreso, when you learn that Rex, as CEO of ExxonMobil, appears to have made some decisions – purely business decisions, of course – that benefited ExxonMobil and its stock holders (and Rex), but did not benefit the United States.  In other words, he placed corporate profit above patriotism.  Or, to put it another way, his first allegiance is to his company, not his country.  Will he now, after 41 years of faithful service to Big Oil, change his priorities and think first about the good of America?  I hope so, but I’ll have to see it to believe it.

Seeing-is-believing is also the case with the TiC, since he has promised a variety of different, and sometimes opposing, things to a whole lot of people in the last year.  But I don’t have to wait to see if the TiC is going to change his priorities, because it’s already obvious that he is not going to do that.

Speaking of oil, his selection of Rick Perry to be Secretary of Energy reinforces what I have already written about the TiC’s priorities and his much (self) vaunted wisdom.  Mr. Perry, besides being a former governor of Texas (the Republic of Oil), also sits on the board of the corporation that is attempting to build the Dakota Access Pipeline.  The same pipeline that was opposed by Native Americans, over whose land the pipe would be laid.  The Corps of Engineers has put a hold on the pipeline being routed beneath the Missouri River, which is the primary water source for the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe.  I wonder what the new Secretary of Energy will think about all this?

Coincidentally, during his own recent run at the presidency, Mr. Perry, in one of the primary debates, could not recall the name of one of the federal departments he wanted to eliminate.  Oh yeah … the Energy Department.  As I said, funny how things work out.

I do not think there has been any other in-coming presidential administration that has encompassed the range of incompetence, and hostility, if not outright malevolence, towards the government, that we see in the TiC’s choices.  Incompetence is bad enough, but malevolence is dangerous, both to ourselves and to other nations.

At least with incompetence it’s out in the open, so you have a chance to withstand attempts to turn back the clock 40 or 50 years, such as this crowd proposes to do.

Malevolence, on the other hand, hides in the shadows.  It is threatening, and it is subversive.

A lot of folks who supported and presumably voted for the TiC have been accusing people like me of anti-Trump hysteria for suggesting that the path the TiC is going down could lead to authoritarianism in this country; that it could lead to a diminution of free speech, oppression of the independent and questioning press (to say nothing of certain minority groups), and a weakening of our place and strength in the world community.

This is not hysteria.  This is a profound concern about the malevolence I see and feel in the TiC and his followers (TiCists?).   Their attitudes and potential policies – Muslim bans, loosening of libel laws, destruction of environmental protections, and repressing women’s power over themselves, among many other things – can lead to a creeping regime change that is undemocratic; a change that is antithetical to everything we have believed America stands for, everything it has represented to the rest of the world.

The TiC would love to shut down the New York Times, and get Saturday Night Live off the air, because he feels they are being mean and unfair to him.  I have to believe that the good people who voted for the TiC did not think they would be sending a thirteen year old boy to the White House, but that, essentially, is what they have done.  A thin-skinned, spoiled, and marginally educated thirteen year old boy, who wants everyone to love him and be nice to him, even when he taunts and mocks other children, and bullies them, and threatens them with violence.

Well, silence is the best weapon we could hand to this annoying and dangerous child, and I have no intention of remaining silent.  I hope you won’t either.

M.