Like Father Like Son
(3-minute video clip at the site link)
(3-minute video clip at the site link)
Blogger Note: 100%
excellent analysis from Dana Milbank at the Washington Post – absolutely
a must read as it was published. I wanted to share what he wrote with those who have not read
it yet. You may or may not agree, but enjoy it nevertheless. My points of interest are in red, no other editing.
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WaPo Editor’s Note: The opinions in this article are the author’s, as
published by our content partner, and do not necessarily represent the views of
MSN or Microsoft.
Milbank starts here with this:
'“I love it.”
That’s
how Donald Trump Jr. responded, we now know, to an email last year offering
dirt on Hillary Clinton from the Russian government.
What
I love is the defense of this attempt by senior Trump campaign officials to
receive Russian help in the election. As my colleagues John Wagner and Rosalind
Helderman report, presidential advisers are explaining away
the meeting with the Russian lawyer as a “rookie mistake” by an
“unsophisticated” campaign.
“Rookie
mistake”: the all-purpose defense of the Trump White House.
When President Trump failed to support NATO’s collective-defense
promise, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) called it “a rookie
mistake.”
After revelations of Trump’s meddling in the FBI’s Russia probe,
House Speaker Paul Ryan (R-WI) explained that Trump is “new at this.”
The
rookie-error explanation has been employed to describe Trump’s firing of FBI
Director James Comey, his handling of health care and his legislative approach.
There
have been enough rookie errors to send this whole team back to Double-A ball.
The longer this goes on — we’re now six months into Trump’s term — the less it looks like growing pains than incompetence
and mismanagement aggravated by nepotism and dishonesty.
Returning
from three weeks abroad, I’ve been catching up on developments at home. These
weeks, though highly abnormal by usual standards, were fairly typical of the
Trump presidency. Mistakes and outrages are so common that we become numb to
them.
But
stack three weeks of the embarrassments together and the cumulative effect
makes it plain that this is amateur hour for the greatest
nation on Earth:
The
president, representing the United States at the Group of 20 summit in Germany,
tweets that “everyone” at the world conference is talking about why Clinton
campaign chairman John Podesta wouldn’t give DNC servers to law enforcement.
Trump erroneously claims the CIA sought the server. Podesta, who had no
authority over the DNC, urges “our whack job” president to “get a grip.”
Trump
gives a speech in Warsaw contradicting an earlier speech he gave in Riyadh,
Saudi Arabia. While in Poland, he publicly disparages U.S. intelligence
agencies.
The
president meets with Chinese President Xi Jin-ping and the White House press
release identifies his country as “the Republic of China” — that is, China’s
foe Taiwan.
Trump
meets with Vladimir Putin and tweets that he “discussed forming an impenetrable
Cyber Security unit” with Putin. Twelve hours later, Trump tweets that such a
“Cyber Security unit” can’t happen.
Secretary
of State Rex Tillerson tells reporters that Trump discussed sanctions with
Putin. Trump tweets the next day: “Sanctions were not discussed.” (The previous
month, Tillerson called for the end to a blockade of Qatar; hours later, Trump
touted the Qatar blockade.)
Trump’s
voter-fraud commission requests voter files and is roundly rejected by
Democratic and Republican state officials alike; the Mississippi secretary of
state, a Republican, tells the commission to “go jump in the Gulf of Mexico.”
In
spite of Trump’s vow that a North Korean missile capable of reaching the United
States “won’t happen,” North Korea tests an ICBM. Trump calls this “very, very
bad behavior.” After the missile test, U.N. ambassador, Nikki Haley, complains
on Twitter on Independence Day: “Spending my 4th in meetings all day.
#ThanksNorthKorea.”
Trump
gives a speech at the Kennedy Center, in July, vowing, “We’re going to start
saying ‘Merry Christmas’ again.”
The
president tweets that a cable-news host, Mika Brzezinski, was “bleeding badly
from a face-lift” when he met her. Sen. Ben Sasse (R-NE) responds: “Please just
stop.”
Trump
follows this by tweeting a mock professional wrestling video of him pummeling
“Fraud News CNN.”
The
Post’s David Fahrenthold reports that fake Time magazine covers featuring Trump
were on display in at least five of Trump’s clubs.
The
president, who had implied he had tapes of his talks with Comey, tweets that
there are no such tapes. Lawmakers, calling the president’s word insufficient,
threaten to subpoena the tapes.
Former
CIA director David Petraeus, asked in a panel discussion whether Trump is fit
to serve, replies: “It’s immaterial.”
Trump
claims the Senate health-care bill “is working along very well.” Republican
leaders soon abandon plans to have a vote on the bill.
The
White House issues a statement threatening to bomb the Syrian regime. Both the
intelligence community and the Pentagon appear to be caught off guard.
Eight
months after the election, Trump tweets: “Hillary Clinton colluded with the Democratic
Party in order to beat Crazy Bernie Sanders.”
Now,
after months of Trump denials of Russia contacts, comes proof of a Russia
meeting with Donald Jr., Jared Kushner and campaign chairman Paul Manafort
during the campaign. Among Junior’s conflicting explanations: It was okay
because the Russian didn’t produce good dirt on Clinton.
And
these are just some of the misfires.
They
aren’t rookie mistakes. This is a team that never should have taken the field.”
— End of the article
Thanks for stopping by. More to come I am sure. A lot of shoes left to
drop.
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