Finally, Trump’s Derangement Is Breaking Through in the Media

Finally, Trump’s Derangement Is Breaking Through in the Media

It took a reference to Arnold Palmer’s p***** to get more mainstream reporters to tell it like it is. That’s progress.

Former President Donald Trump holding a microphone in front of a crowd.

Former president Donald Trump at a town hall at the convention center in Lancaster

 

Joe Biden’s departing the race and passing the torch to Kamala Harris accomplished two good things for Democrats: It energized crucial blocks of voters, especially Black women and young women, and also forced the media to drop its despicable obsession with Biden’s alleged mental and physical infirmities and concentrate on the only deranged person in the race, Donald Trump. It’s taken almost three months to accomplish that, but this last week, Trump gave them no choice.

It’s possible that the least important thing got the most attention, as is often the case: Trump talking about the size of the late golf great Arnold Palmer’s… let’s say “equipment.” “He took showers with the other pros. They came out of there and said, ‘Oh my God, that’s unbelievable,’” he said. Palmer, the pride of Latrobe, Pennsylvania, where Trump held his rally, was “all man,” he said.

What got less attention, at the same rally, were his profane insults to Harris. “You have to tell Kamala Harris.… We can’t stand you. You’re a shit vice president.” He added:“Kamala, you’re fired, get the hell out of here, you’re fired.” The crowd roared.

Groups slam Trump's comparison of Jan. 6 rioters to Japanese Americans incarcerated in WWII

 

But this capped a week of bizarre behavior: At a supposed town hall on Monday, after an audience member had a medical incident, Trump told his music masters (whose choices are always bizarre) to play songs—instead of his taking any questions. For 39 minutes, Trump danced and swayed to a medley that included “Ave Maria,” James Brown’s “It’s A Man’s World,” Leonard Cohen’s “Hallelujah,” and “Memory” from the musical CatsSaturday Night Live said that if you liked those songs, you could buy them in a compilation called Now That’s What I Call Dementia, Volume 1. For the kids, that spoofs a series of cheesy CDs from the late 1990s called Now That’s What I Call Music, featuring various years and genres.

 

Dementia isn’t funny, of course. That’s SNL’s joke, not mine. But the weekend brought the most serious coverage of Trump’s obvious mental decline we’ve seen in the major media all year. On Friday Politico reported that advisors described Trump as “exhausted,” explaining why he was declining or backing out of interviews (the campaign denied that). It was also widely reported that in exhorting a crowd to get out and vote, he insulted them: “Jill, get your fat husband off the couch,” he said. “Get that fat pig off the couch. Tell him to go and vote for Trump, he’s going to save our country. Get that guy the hell off our—get him up, Jill, slap him around. Get him up. Get him up, Jill. We want him off the couch to get out and vote.” (Observers are divided over whether, by using the name “Jill,” he was referring to the Bidens. I don’t think so. Joe Biden is neither a “fat pig” nor likely to vote for Trump.)

Donald Trump news & latest pictures from Newsweek.com

Mainstream news organizations suddenly became more blunt about Trump’s decline—and derangement. “Trump’s age finally catches up with him,” The Washington Post wrote Saturday. “Trump kicks off Pennsylvania rally by talking about Arnold Palmer’s genitalia,” AP headlined its coverage of the Latrobe debacle. “Donald Trump’s vulgar rally ramble fuels questions about his state of mind,” the Financial Times wrote.

 

As always, The New York Times immediately “sane-washed” the story. On its breaking-news politics page, a short report said Trump told “golf stories” about Palmer without mentioning his lewd remark. But shockingly, after wide social-media outcry, reporter Michael Gold told a critic to direct his questions to senioreditor@nytimes.com, because “I filed something that included the thing you mention as omitted, but I’m not given the power to publish what I say.”

Harris hits back after Trump insults her again at campaign rally

Maybe the pressure worked. Later in the day, the Times ran a longer piece by Gold, headlined “At a Pennsylvania Rally, Trump Descends to New Levels of Vulgarity,” which included the Palmer story verbatim, and warned that Trump’s crude talk could alienate “swing voters.”

To be fair, The New York Times reported on Trump’s earlier evidence of cognitive decline on October 7, in a piece headlined “Trump’s Speeches, Increasingly Angry and Rambling, Reignite the Question of Age.” But the paper continues to use euphemisms about Trump’s sick behavior instead of calling it what it is, while also playing down his extreme policies. “Harris Has Championed Family Policies. Now Trump Likes Them Too,” read a Saturday headline.

But overall, the major media seems more ready to tell the truth about Trump. All of the Sunday shows covered his Palmer remarks and the other evidence of not just vulgarity but potential mental decline. Reporters were quick to pounce on the fact that Trump’s alleged stint at a McDonald’s occurred at a location that was closed to regular customers and featured supporters pretending to drive through and pick up orders from Trump; in fact, they got prepackaged food. Harris has also seized on the week of insanity by using clips of Trump’s bizarre remarks (not the Palmer story; her rallies include kids) at her public appearances. Trump is giving Harris a real chance to spotlight his unfitness for office, and she is taking it.

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The greatest danger here is not just Trump’s unbelievable shot at another term; polls show the pair essentially tied. It’s that if elected, Trump could quickly wind up ceding the presidency—whether because he knows his infirmity is disabling, or he’s forced to—to vice presidential nominee JD Vance. That might be more disastrous than a Trump second term. Vance is the friendly face of fascism, elevated by tech megamillionaires and democracy foes Peter Thiel and Elon Musk. Trump doesn’t understand the Heritage Foundation’s Project 2025; Vance would know how to make it reality. Just the way Republicans argued that a vote for the 81-year-old Biden was a vote for Harris—which seemed to be fine with voters, as Harris is running stronger than Biden was among almost all demographics—Democrats should stress that a vote for Trump is a vote for Vance. Vance repels many voters, especially young women.

At any rate, it was a terrible week for Trump. Harris is nimbly highlighting his many stumbles, but so are reporters. Both developments bode well for democracy.

 

Elon Musk Gives Democrats a Chance to Run Against Oligarchy

Donald Trump’s richest supporter has been busy finding new ways to corrupt democracy.

 

Elon Musk and Donald Trump look at one another.

 

American campaign finance laws are so ridiculously lax—thanks to a string of Supreme Court decisions such as Citizens United (2010), which loosened restrictions on dark money—that it is hard to imagine a scenario where a rich person would get into legal trouble for swaying an election. Even so, Elon Musk, reportedly the world’s richest man, with a net worth of more than $240 billion, is pushing his luck with actions that, at the very least, merit criminal investigation.

For the duration of the election, Musk has set up camp in the swing state of Pennsylvania, where he’s offering a $100 reward to anyone who signs a petition supporting the First and Second Amendments (in effect, standard right-wing agitprop)—with the possibility of a further $1 million prize for any registered voter who signs the petition.

Finally, Trump’s Derangement Is Breaking Through in the Media

As CNN reports:

The first million-dollar winner was named Saturday, with Musk handing a giant check to a Trump supporter at his event in Harrisburg, saying, “So anyway, you’re welcome.” He announced the second winner Sunday afternoon during an event in Pittsburgh, handing out another check on a stage adorned with big signs reading, “VOTE EARLY.”

In an interview Sunday on NBC’s “Meet the Press,” Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro said Musk’s giveaway was “deeply concerning” and is “something that law enforcement could take a look at.” Shapiro, a Democrat, was previously the state attorney general.

Musk has promised to keep handing out a million dollars a day till Election Day. He has turned the election into a gaudy lottery game, one where there is a lucrative incentive for low-propensity Republican voters to register. Josh Shapiro is not the only one to worry about possible lawbreaking. Even The Wall Street Journal, a newspaper friendly to Donald Trump, acknowledged that the $100 prize was “pushing the envelope of election law.”

Elon Musk and the danger to democracy

The addition of a million-dollar prize for registered voters goes beyond pushing the envelope and is plausibly viewed as an excursion into the territory of lawlessness. Writing in the Election Law Blog, law professor Rick Hansen of UCLA asserts, “Though maybe some of the other things Musk was doing were of murky legality, this one is clearly illegal,” since 52 USC 10307(c) offers the stiff penalty of a $10,000 fine or imprisonment for up to five years for anyone who “pays or offers to pay or accepts payment either for registration to vote or for voting.”

Nor is this the only example of Musk skating on thin legal ice when it comes to campaign spending. Musk has given more than $100 million to a dark-money group called Building America’s Future. In Open Secrets, Anna Massoglia reports that Building America’s Future has created “an initiative called Progress 2028 that purports to be Kamala Harris’ liberal counter to the conservative Heritage Foundation’s Project 2025 [but] is actually run by a dark money network supporting former President Donald Trump.”

Trump says when he mixes up names it is on purpose | Reuters

The website for Progress 2028 makes it sound like Harris supports an array of left-wing policies on issues like immigration, trans rights, and environmentalism that she in fact opposes. For example, the document states, “Undocumented immigrants are the backbone of our country, and by removing barriers, we unlock incredible potential. Kamala Harris believes that every person, no matter their immigration status, deserves access to basic healthcare.” Alas, from a leftist perspective, we have to admit that Harris does not believe healthcare is a basic right for anyone—let alone undocumented immigrants.

Messages from the purported Project 2028 have also been sent as texts, with links to the website. This might take Project 2028 beyond the realm of dirty tricks into the realm of criminality.

As Joshua Micah Marshall notes at Talking Points Memo:

If these [websites] said “paid for by Harris for President” you’d have a straight up campaign finance violation. But that’s not what they’re doing. So I don’t think the Musk group is doing anything illegal here.

The one part of this I’m not sure about, however, is the texts. Texts, like the US mail and phone calls, come under specific regulatory and even legal frameworks. In some cases, it’s not enough to be technically accurate in the way I’m describing above. If you’re trying to impersonate someone that can be enough to get you in trouble. That’s very different from a website in which you can say basically anything.

Why Some of the Loudest Cheers for Trump Are Coming From Silicon Valley - The New York Times

Musk’s group is, in the most charitable interpretation, in legally murky territory—one that certainly merits a Justice Department investigation, as does Musk’s million-dollar prize for registered voters. Sadly, this is unlikely, since Merrick Garland’s Department of Justice has hardly distinguished itself as eager to pursue Trump-related criminality.

However, Garland’s notorious fecklessness might actually be a benefit in this case, since Musk’s contempt for democracy is best answered with a political response rather than legal redress. The legal system is slow and cumbersome, and the election is less than two weeks way. Instead of demanding a legal penalty for Musk’s actions, Democrats would do better to run against Musk as an oligarch threatening democracy. Musk is the perfect face of the new American robber barons.

Musk is so eager to elect Trump he’s willing to do anything it takes, by hook or by crook. Even his legal actions stink of desperation and shadiness. One example is the microtargeting of ethnic groups. As the website 404 Media reports:

An Elon Musk-funded group called Future Coalition PAC is targeting Muslim voters in Michigan and Jewish voters in Pennsylvania with diametrically opposed political advertisements about Kamala Harris. In areas of Michigan with relatively large Muslim populations, the Super PAC is painting Harris as a close friend of Israel and is suggesting that she is beholden to the beliefs of her Jewish husband Doug Emhoff; in parts of Pennsylvania with relatively large Jewish populations, the advertisements call Harris antisemitic and say she “support[s] denying Israel the weapons needed to defeat the Hamas terrorists who massacred thousands.”

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Musk’s eagerness to elect Trump is clearly rooted in a squalid quid pro quo. Trump has promised to put Musk in charge of government efficiency. Since Musk’s companies receive billions in government contracts every year—and often clash with government regulators—Musk would in effect be given the power to trim the very agencies that regulate him. As The New York Times noted, “That would essentially give the world’s richest man and a major government contractor the power to regulate the regulators who hold sway over his companies, amounting to a potentially enormous conflict of interest.”

Speaking at a rally in Philadelphia, Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez observed: “Elon Musk thinks that dangling money in front of a working person is a cute thing to do” and “Elon Musk thinks your vote can be bought.”

Ocasio-Cortez has exactly the right approach to this issue. Democrats have long warned about Trump’s threat to democracy. But surely the billionaires around Trump who are salivating at the prospect of taking over the government if Trump wins pose a far greater threat. As his brain descends into a long twilight struggle with coherence, Trump himself will hardly be in a position to run his own administration. Rather, he’ll turn the car keys over to billionaires and their minions such as JD Vance and the apparatchiks of the Heritage Foundation. Musk ought to be the poster boy for this oligarchic threat and offers Democrats a major target for the closing two weeks of the campaign

 

 

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