12 Jun 2018

“A Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad President Builds an Empire”

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Niall Ferguson points out that the supposedly oh-so-smart people just don’t get it. Trump is winning.

To most highly educated people I know, President Trump is a Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad president.

For two years, the people with at least two university degrees (PALTUDs) have been gnashing their teeth about Trump’s every utterance and move. To the foreign policy experts, he is a bull in a china shop, trampling the “rules-based international order” underfoot. To the economics establishment, he is a human wrecking ball, smashing more than a half-century of consensus that free trade really works better than protectionism.

A striking feature of all this dire commentary is how wrong it has been so far. …

Despite all the trade war talk, the US economy is at full employment, the dollar is rallying, the stock market is up 30 percent since Trump’s election, and the only countries in any trouble are the usual suspects with their usual problems (e.g., Turkey).

It is not that Trump is an underrated genius, nor for that matter an idiot savant. It is just that his intuitive, instinctive, impulsive way of operating, familiar to those who have done business with him, is exposing some basic flaws in the conceptual framework of the PALTUDs. …

Think of the world as a three-empire system. It is dominated by the United States, China, and Europe, in that order. Each empire is evolving in a different direction. The American empire, having experienced overextension in Afghanistan and Iraq, has not retreated into isolation. Its latest step down the road to empire is domestic. …

All the accompanying symptoms of the transition from republic to empire are already visible. The plebs despise the elites. An old and noble senatorial order personified by John McCain is dying. A cultural civil war rages on social media, the modern-day forum, with all civility cast aside and character assassination a daily occurrence. The president-emperor dominates public discourse by issuing 280-character edicts, picking fights with football players, and arbitrarily pardoning convicted criminals.

Meanwhile, the Chinese empire becomes ever more centralized, ever more invasive of its citizens’ privacy, and ever more overt in its overseas expansion. The Western world regards Xi Jinping as an almighty potentate. Few observers appreciate the acute sense of weakness that has motivated his tightening grip on party and state and his surveillance of his own people. Few see the risks of imperial ventures such as the Belt and Road Initiative, which is drawing Chinese investment into economically unpromising and strategically dangerous locations.

The weakest of the three empires is the European Union. True, its central institutions in Brussels have the power to impose rules, fines, and taxes on the biggest American and Chinese corporations. But Europe lacks tech giants of its own. Its navies, armies, and air forces have melted away, so that it can scarcely defend its frontiers from penniless migrants, never mind hostile invaders. And the political consensus on which it has been based for the past 60 years —between social democrats and moderate conservatives in every member state — is crumbling under a nationalist-populist assault.

The logic of Trumpism is simply to bully the other empires, exploiting the fact that they are both weaker than the United States, in order to extract concessions and claim victories. The Chinese sincerely fear a trade war and will end up buying a very large amount of American produce in order to avoid one. The Europeans dare not stand up to Trump over his Iran sanctions and secretly agree with him about China, and so are reduced to impotent seething (Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany) or sycophancy (President Emmanuel Macron of France, until last week’s G-7 summit). If they unite against him, he brings up Russia and divides them again.

To the PALTUDs, who remain so certain of their intellectual superiority to the president, all this is incomprehensible. They will continue to find fault with Trump’s every success, nitpicking their way through the small print, failing to realize that in the imperial transition such details cease to matter.

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5 Feedbacks on "“A Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad President Builds an Empire”"

GoneWithTheWind

I think that Trump is an underrated genius. I believe that he is the most significant president since George Washington. He is not a politician, he is not interested in getting reelected over anything else. He is not what we might expect in a president. He is so much more. He is three dimensional in a two dimensional political world. He is machiavellian in a political world of posers. He sees right through China, Europe and Canada. Trump is so successful and so much better at this than other politicians that I fear for his life. The would-be leaders are not happy being shown up for their mediocre self centered leadership.



Seattle Sam

Watching Trump leave the liberal establishment blithering is what it must have been like during the revolutionary war when the British complained that the Colonials were hiding behind trees, not lining up in neat rows to fight.



bob sykes

PALTUD’s are poorly educated. Almost all of them have fake degrees in fake disciplines from fake universities. They have attended marxist reeducation camps, and they have been brain-washed into stupidity. Paul Krugman is a good example, although he mixes in dishonesty with his stupidity.

The mere fact that these losers despise Trump isa strong argument in favor of him and his policies.

As someone has recently said, Trump is the best President since Jackson.



Anonymous White Male

“An old and noble senatorial order personified by John McCain is dying.”

Noble? I don’t think that word means what you think it does. I honestly couldn’t tell you who the last noble senator was, maybe in the 60’s. But, I’m pretty sure there’s nothing noble about McCain.



Jim

Evret Dirksen comes to mind.



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