Author Topic: It’s Not Worth Sacrificing Anyone’s Integrity to Defend Trump’s Tweets  (Read 286 times)

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Offline EasyAce

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By David French
http://www.nationalreview.com/corner/445957/its-not-worth-sacrificing-anyones-integrity-defend-trumps-tweets

Quote
Over on the homepage, Rich lays out chapter and verse the multiple political problems Trump’s tweets create —
problems that are different and worse for a president than a candidate. It’s all so ridiculous because it’s all so unnecessary.
An effective presidency doesn’t require shoot-from-the-hip tweeting. In fact, Trump’s tweeting habits are so far mainly
undermining his effectiveness.

The tweets, however, are exposing something else in many of Trump’s friends and supporters — an extremely high
tolerance for dishonesty and an oft-enthusiastic willingness to defend sheer nonsense. Yes, I know full well that many
of his supporters take him “seriously, not literally,” but that’s a grave mistake. My words are of far lesser consequence
than the president’s, yet I live my life knowing that willful, reckless, or even negligent falsehood can end my career
overnight. It can end friendships instantaneously. Why is the truth somehow less important when the falsehoods come
from the most powerful and arguably most famous man in the world?

I’ve watched Christian friends laugh hysterically at Trump’s tweets, positively delighted that they cause fits of rage on
the other side. I’ve watched them excuse falsehoods from reflexively-defensive White House aides, claiming “it’s just
their job” to defend the president. Since when is it any person’s job to help their boss spew falsehoods into the public
domain? And if that does somehow come to be your job, aren’t you bound by honor to resign? It is not difficult, in a free
society, to tell a man (no matter how powerful they are or how much you love access to that power), “Sir, I will not lie for
you.”

The 1990s are instructive. I distinctly recall Democrat friends who not only defended Clinton on the narrow grounds that
his White House affair (and subsequent lies and attempts to cover up that affair) weren’t grounds for resignation or
impeachment. Fine. Make that argument. But all too many people went farther, denigrating the sanctity of marriage vows
and longing for the alleged moral sophistication of the European model — a model where the wife and mistress can stand
side-by-side at a president’s funeral. Fast forward to 2017, and some people laugh at a commitment to truth as “weak” in
much the same that some Democrats laughed at a commitment to fidelity as “unsophisticated.”

We don’t know what happens behind closed doors, and it may well be the case that advisers are diligently and faithfully
trying to convince the president to put down his phone. I hope that’s what’s happening, and perhaps one day their efforts
will bear fruit. But for now consider the storylines that are being lost or swamped in the midst of presidential tweetstorms:
1) significant progress in the fight against ISIS; 2) an ongoing stock-market rally that directly defies leftist predictions in
the immediate aftermath of Trump’s victory; and 3) one of the most-respected Supreme Court nominees in a generation.
Indeed, think how much Trump’s tweets about wiretapping ended up stepping on the news about Gorsuch’s first day of
confirmation hearings. Think about how much Trump’s mistaken (or deliberately false) tweets about NATO are needlessly
complicating our alliances. Is this behavior in America’s best interests? I don’t even believe it’s in Trump’s best interests.

GOP gratitude for beating Hillary Clinton cannot and must not extend into acceptance (or even endorsement) of presidential
dishonesty and impulsiveness. Trump isn’t just doing damage to himself. As he lures a movement into excusing his falsehoods,
he does damage to the very culture and morality of his base. The truth still matters, even when fighting Democrats you
despise.


"The question of who is right is a small one, indeed, beside the question of what is right."---Albert Jay Nock.

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