Saturday, August 20, 2016

Let The Horse Race Commence!

Trump didn't apologize for ANYTHING and so, of course, pundits are acting as if he apologized for EVERYTHING.

2 comments:

  1. More Trumpery, from today's _New York Times_:

    http://www.nytimes.com/2016/08/22/opinion/trumps-hollow-regrets.html
    -------------
    Trump’s Hollow ‘Regrets’
    Charles M. Blow
    AUG. 22, 2016

    Donald Trump is the candidate who is so rigid in his perverted
    self-righteousness that he doesn’t “like to have to ask for
    forgiveness.” He says he has never even sought forgiveness
    from God, the divine author and inspiration of his favorite book,
    from which he struggled to name a favorite verse. . .

    Precisely what does Trump regret? . . .

    I don’t believe, even for a nanosecond, that he regrets the
    personal impact of what he has said on anyone besides himself. . .

    I believe that Trump regrets that, as Lindsey Graham put
    it last week, “People are getting pretty nervous about our
    candidate because he’s in a death spiral here and nobody
    knows where the bottom is at.” Trump’s “regret” is just
    a cynical ploy to set a bottom and bounce back.

    But it will take more than the 75-plus remaining days of this
    campaign to disassemble what it took 70 years of his life
    to build.

    He is who he is.

    This fragile narcissist, who is a sort of bottomless pit of
    emotional need and affirmation, is easily injured by even the
    slightest confrontation.

    He is a man who has said of himself, “I have no friends, as
    far as I’m concerned,” as he joked that it would be easy to
    get big money out of politics. But that claim is worrisome,
    a thing that only a bully would say.

    Yes, he can work a crowd, work a screen and work a Twitter
    account. He can channel anger, hatred and bigotry and give it
    a voice and face and standing. He can make bombast feel like
    bravado. He can lower discourse and raise the rabble.

    He has the gifts of a grifter. . .

    Trump thinks of himself as a great man — that is the premise of
    his entire sales pitch, that America has faltered and can only
    be made great again by the Midas touch of his tiny hands — but if
    current trends continue and he suffers a staggering loss on
    Election Day, his ego will be forever injured as he is assigned
    to history not as a great man but as a great disaster, a
    cautionary tale of what comes of a party that picks a
    con man as its frontman. . .

    There is something rotten at the core of this man that no length
    of script or turn of phrase can ameliorate.
    ====

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  2. And more:

    http://www.nytimes.com/2016/08/22/opinion/the-water-next-time.html
    -------------
    The Water Next Time
    Paul Krugman
    AUG. 22, 2016

    A disaster area is no place for political theater. The governor
    of flood-ravaged Louisiana asked President Obama to postpone
    a personal visit while relief efforts were still underway. . .
    He made the same request to Donald Trump, declaring, reasonably,
    that while aid would be welcome, a visit for the sake of a
    photo op would not.

    Sure enough, the G.O.P. candidate flew in, shook some hands,
    signed some autographs, and was filmed taking boxes of Play-Doh
    out of a truck. If he wrote a check, neither his campaign nor
    anyone else has mentioned it. . .

    But boorish, self-centered behavior is the least of it.
    By far the bigger issue is that even as Mr. Trump made a
    ham-handed (and cheapskate) effort to exploit Louisiana’s
    latest disaster for political gain, he continued to stake
    out a policy position that will make such disasters increasingly
    frequent. . .

    Remember when climate deniers used to point to a temporary
    cooling after an unusually warm year in 1998 as “proof” that
    global warming had stopped? It was always a foolish,
    dishonest argument, but in any case we’ve now blown right
    through all past records.

    And one consequence of a warmer planet is more evaporation,
    more moisture in the air, and hence more disastrous floods.
    As always, you can’t say that climate change caused any
    particular disaster. What you can say is that warming makes
    extreme weather events more likely, so that, for example,
    what used to be 500-year floods are now happening on an
    almost routine basis. . .

    It probably won’t surprise you to hear that when it comes to
    climate change, as with so many issues, Mr. Trump has gone deep
    down the rabbit hole, asserting not just that global warming
    is a hoax, but that it’s a hoax concocted by the Chinese to
    make America less competitive.

    The thing is, he’s not alone in going down that rabbit hole. . .

    [W]hen it comes to denial of climate change and the deployment
    of bizarre conspiracy theories to explain away the evidence,
    Mr. Trump is squarely in the Republican mainstream. He may
    be talking nonsense, but anyone his party was likely to
    nominate would have been talking pretty much the same nonsense.

    It’s interesting to ask why climate denial has become not just
    acceptable but essentially required within the G.O.P. Yes,
    the fossil-fuel sector is a big donor to the party. But the
    vehemence of the hostility to climate science seems disproportionate
    even so. . . What’s happening, I suspect, is that climate denial
    has become a sort of badge of right-wing identity. . .

    In any case, this election is likely to be decisive for the climate,
    one way or another. . .
    ====

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