Source: TomDispatch.com
2021 has indeed begun and god knows what it has in store for us.Ā But unless, somehow, weāre surprised beyond imagining, The Donald is indeed going to leave the White House soon and, much as I hate to admit it, in some strange fashion weāre going to miss him.Ā Of course, it will be beyond a great relief to see his⦠well, letās just say him in the rearview mirror.Ā While occupying the White House, he was, in a rather literal sense, hell on earth. Nonetheless, he was also a figure of remarkable fascination for anyone thinking about this country or that strangest of all species, humanity, and what weāre capable of doing to ourselves.
So, hereās my look back at our final Trumpian months (at least for a while). As I review the weeks just past, however, you may be surprised to learn that Iām not planning to start with the presidentās former national security adviser (of 23 days ā āyouāre fired!ā) cum-convictee-cum-pardonee urging The Donald to declare martial law; nor will I review the presidentās endless tweets and fulminations about the āfraudulentā 2020 election or his increasing lame (duck!) assaults on all those he saw as deserting his visibly sinking Titanic, including Mitch McConnell (āthe first one off the shipā); nor do I have the urge to focus on the conspiracy-mongress who captured the presidentās heart (or whateverās in that chest of his) with her claims about how āVenezuelanā votes did him in; nor even his doom-and-gloom āholidayā trip to Mar-a-Lago, including on Christmas Day his 309th presidential visit to a golf course; nor will I waste time on how the still-president of these increasingly dis-United States, while pardoning war criminals and pals (as well as random well-connected criminals), managed to ignore the rest of a country slipping into pandemic hell ā cases rising, deaths spiraling, hospitals filling to the brim in a fashion unequaled on the planet ā about which he visibly couldnāt have cared less; nor will I focus on how, as Christmas arrived, he landed squarely on Alexandria Ocasio-Cortezās position of giving $2,000 checks to the American people and so for a few days became an honorary āsocialistā; nor will I even spend time on his unique phone call for 11,780 votes in Georgia.
Instead, in this most downbeat of seasons, Iād like to begin with something more future-oriented, a little bit of December news you might have missed amid all the gloom and doom. So, just in case you didnāt notice as 2020 ended in chaos and cacophony, as the president who couldnāt take his eyes off a lost election sunk us ever deeper in his own version of the Washington swamp, there were two significantly more forward-looking figures in his circle. Iām thinking of his daughter Ivanka and her husband Jared Kushner who plunked down $30 million on the most exclusive bit of real estate they could find in Florida, a small island with only 41 residences known among locals as the ābillionaireās bunker.ā
They purchased a plot of land there on which they can assumedly build the most modest of multimillion-dollar mansions⦠but let the Hill describe it:
āThe secluded spot sits on 1.8 acres and comes with 200 feet of waterfront and ābreathtaking sunset views.ā A real estate listing dubs it an āamazing parcel of land,ā saying, āThis sprawling lot provides a rare opportunity to build your waterfront dream estate.ā The listing boasts that the Miami island is āone of the most exclusive and private neighborhoods in the world with its private country club and golf course, police force, and 24/7 armed boat patrol.’ā
And better yet, though just off the coast of Miami, itās only 60 miles from what they may hope will be the alternate White House for the next four years, Mar-a-Lago.
The Future, Trump-Style
As far as Iām concerned, amid the year-ending chaos of the Trump presidency, nothing could have caught the essential spirit of the last four years better than that largely overlooked news story.Ā Letās start at its end, so to speak. Instead of brooding nonstop about a lost election like you-know-who, Ivanka and Jared, both key presidential advisers, are instead going to pour millions of dollars into what might be thought of as a personal investment in the future on that island off the southern coast of Florida.
When it comes to the planet, this catches in a nutshell the essence of whatās passed for long-term thinking in the Trump White House since January 2017.Ā After all, the most notable thing about the southern coast of Florida, if youāre in an investing (and lifestyle) mood, is this: as the worldās sea levels rise (ever more precipitously, in fact) thanks to climate change, one of the most endangered places in the United States is that very coast.Ā Flooding in the region has already been on the rise and significant parts of it could be underwater by 2050 with its inhabitants washed out of their homes well before that ā and no personal police force or patrol boats will be able to protect Ivanka and Jared from that kind of global assault.Ā Even Donald Trump, should he run and win again in 2024, wonāt be able to pardon them for that decision.
Put another way, the future of those two key Trump family members is a living example of what, in this world of ours, is usually called climate denialism; the āchildren,ā that is, have offered their own $30-million-plus encapsulation of the four-year environmental record of a 74-year-old president who couldnāt imagine anyoneās future except his own.
Though climate denialism is indeed the term normally used for this phenomenon, as a descriptor in the Trump years it fell desperately short of the mark. Itās a far too-limited way of describing what the U.S. government has actually been doing. Withdrawing from the Paris climate accords, promoting oil exploration and drilling galore, and deep-sixing energy-related environmental regulations, Trump and his crew have not just been denying the obvious reality of climate change (as the West Coast burned in a historic fashion and the hurricane season ramped up dramatically in 2020), but criminally aiding and abetting the phenomenon in every way imaginable.Ā They have, in fact, done their best to torch humanityās future.Ā As Iāve written in these years, they rather literally transformed themselves into pyromaniacs even as they imagined unleashing, as the president proudly put it, āAmerican energy dominance.ā The promotional phrase they used for their fossil-fuelized policies was āthe golden era of American energy is now underwayā ā that golden glow assumedly being the flames licking at this overheating planet of ours.
So, a climate-change endangered island? Why even bother to imagine such a future? In fact, the president made this point all too vividly when it came to Tangier Island, a 1.3-square-mile dot in the middle of Chesapeake Bay that global warming and erosion are imperiling and that is, indeed, expected to be gone by 2050. In 2017, the president called the mayor of its town (after CNN put out a story about the increasing problems of that Trump-loving isle). He assured him, as the mayor reported, that āwe shouldnāt worry about rising sea levels. He said that āyour island has been there for hundreds of years, and I believe your island will be there for hundreds more.āā
IED-ing the American System
And of course, letās not forget that, for the presidentās daughter and son-in-law, dropping $30 million is just another day at the office. In that, they distinctly follow in the tradition of the bankruptee who has similarly dished out dough to his heartās content, while repeatedly leaving others holding the bag for his multiple business failures. (Undoubtedly, this is something the American people will experience when he finally jumps ship on January 20th, undoubtedly leaving the rest of us holding that very same bag.) Ā Pardon me, but that $30 million dollars being plunked down on a snazzy plot of land ā someday to be water ā should remind us that weāre talking about a crew who are already awash in both money (of every questionable sort) and, at least in the case of the president, staggering hundreds of millions of dollars in debts. It should remind us as well that weāre dealing with families evidently filled with grifters and a now-pardoned criminal, too.
Make no mistake, from the moment Donald Trump walked into the White House, he was already this countryās con-man-in-chief.Ā Back when he was first running for president, this was no mystery to his ever-loyal ābase,ā those tens of millions of voters who opted for him then and continue to stick by him no matter what.Ā As I wrote in that distant 2016 election season,
āAmericans love a con man.Ā Historically, weāve often admired, if not identified with, someone intent on playing and successfully beating the system, whether at a confidence game or through criminal activity. [At] the first presidential debate⦠Trump essentially admitted that, in some years, he paid no taxes (āthat makes me smartā) and that he had played the tax system for everything it was worth⦠I guarantee you that Trump senses heās deep in the Mississippi of American politics with such statements and that a surprising number of voters will admire him for it (whether they admit it or not).Ā After all, he beat the system, even if they didnāt.ā
And admire him they did and, as it happens, still do. He was elected on those very grounds and, despite his loss in 2020 (with a staggering 74 million voters still opting for him), a couple of weeks from now, heāll walk away from the White House with a final con that will leave him floating in a sea of money for months (years?) to come.Ā Hereās how New York Times reporters Shane Goldmacher and Maggie Haberman describe the situation:
āDonald J. Trump will exit the White House as a private citizen next month perched atop a pile of campaign cash unheard-of for an outgoing president, and with few legal limits on how he can spend it⦠Mr. Trump has cushioned the blow by coaxing huge sums of money from his loyal supporters ā often under dubious pretenses ā raising roughly $250 million since Election Day along with the national party. More than $60 million of that sum has gone to a new political action committee, according to people familiar with the matter, which Mr. Trump will control after he leaves office.ā
He was, in other words, in character from his first to last moment in office and, in his own way (just as his followers expected), he did beat the system, even if he faces years of potential prosecution to come.
Oh, and one more thing when it comes to The Donald. With a future Biden administration in mind, you might think of him not just as the con-man president but the Taliban president as well. After all, heās not only torn up but land-mined, or in Taliban terms IED-ed, both the federal government, including that ādeep stateā heās always denounced, and the American system of governing itself. (āThis Fake Election can no longer standā¦ā) And those improvised explosive devices, or IEDs, he and his crew have buried in that system, whether in terms of health care, the environment, or you name it are likely to go off at unexpected moments for months, if not years, to come.
So, when you say so long, farewell, aufwiedersehn, adieu to you-know-who, his children, and his pals, the odds are you wonāt ever be saying goodbye. Not really. Thanks to that $60 million-plus fund, that base of his, and all those landmines (many of which we donāt even know are there yet), heāll be with us in one form (of disaster) or another for years to come ā he, his children, and that island that, unfortunately, just wonāt sink fast enough.
Like it or not, after these last four years, whatever the Biden era may hold for us, Donald Trump proved a media heaven and a living hell. Itās going to be quite a task in a world that needs so much else just to demine the American system after he leaves the White House (especially with Mitch McConnell and crew still in place). Count on one thing: we wonāt forget The Donald any time soon. And give him credit where itās due. Thereās no denying that, in just four years, heās helped usher us into a new American world that already couldnāt be more overheated or underwhelming.
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