kunstler | Immigration is a practical
problem, with visible effects on-the-ground, easy to understand. I’m
enjoying the Trump-provoked debate mostly because it is a pushback
against the disgusting dishonesty of political correctness that has
bogged down the educated classes in a swamp of sentimentality. For
instance, Times Sunday Magazine
staffer Emily Bazelon wrote a polemic last week inveighing against the
use of the word “illegal” applied to people who cross the border without
permission on the grounds that it “justifies their mistreatment.” One
infers she means that sending them back where they came from equals
mistreatment.
It’s refreshing that Trump is
able to cut through this kind of tendentious crap. If that were his only
role, it would be a good one, because political correctness is an
intellectual disease that is making it impossible for even educated
people to think — especially people who affect to be political leaders.
Trump’s fellow Republicans are entertainingly trapped in their own
cowardliness and it’s fun to watch them squirm.
But for me, everything else
about Trump is frankly sickening, from his sneering manner of speech, to
the worldview he reveals day by day, to the incoherence of his
rhetoric, to the wolverine that lives on top of his head. The thought of
Trump actually getting elected makes me wonder where Arthur Bremer is
when we really need him.
Did any of you actually catch
Trump’s performance last week at the so-called “town meeting” event in
New Hampshire (really just a trumped-up pep rally)? I don’t think I
miscounted that Trump told the audience he was “very smart” 23 times in
the course of his remarks. If he really was smart, he would know that
such tedious assertions only suggest he is deeply insecure about his own
intelligence. After all, this is a man whose lifework has been putting
up giant buildings that resemble bowling trophies, some of them in the
service of one of the worst activities of our time, legalized gambling,
which is based on the socially pernicious idea that it’s possible to get
something for nothing.
I daresay that legalized
gambling has had a possibly worse effect on American life the past three
decades than illegal immigration. Gambling is a marginal activity for
marginal people that belongs on the margins — the back rooms and back
alleys. It was consigned there for decades because it was understood
that it’s not healthy for the public to believe that it’s possible to
get something for nothing, that it undermines perhaps the most
fundamental principle of human life.
Trump’s verbal incoherence is
really something to behold. He’s incapable of expressing a complete
thought without venturing down a dendritic maze of digressions, often
leading to an assertion of how much he is loved (another sign of
insecurity). For example, when he attacked Jeb’s (no last name
necessary) statement that we have to show Iraqi leaders that “we have
skin in the game,” Trump invoked the “wounded warriors,” saying “I love
them. They’re everywhere. They love me.” In the immortal words of Tina
Turner, “what’s love got to do with it?”
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