TAKE HEART POODLES – YOU’RE BETTER AND SMARTER THAN TRUMP!

Perspective from the 19th Hole is the title I chose for my personal blog, which is meant to give me an outlet for one of my favorite crafts – writing – plus to use an image from my favorite sport, golf.  Out of college, my first job was as a reporter for the Daily Astorian in Astoria, Oregon, and I went on from there to practice writing in all my professional positions, including as press secretary in Washington, D.C. for a Democrat Congressman from Oregon (Les AuCoin), as an Oregon state government manager in Salem and Portland, as press secretary for Oregon’s last Republican governor (Vic Atiyeh), and as a private sector lobbyist.  This blog also allows me to link another favorite pastime – politics and the art of developing public policy – to what I write.  I could have called this blog “Middle Ground,” for that is what I long for in both politics and golf.  The middle ground is often where the best public policy decisions lie.  And it is where you want to be on a golf course.

Various media outlets today are reporting this:

“Trump is coming off as Putin’s poodle,” as the so-called U.S. president Donald Trump snuggles up to Russia’s Vladimir Putin.

I protest.

Comparing Trump to poodles does the latter a crime.

Poodles – my wife and have had two in our lives – are better and smater than Trump ever was or could be.

For one thing, poodles are smart.  Trump isn’t.

If poodles had vocal cords, they could speak and what they would say would be far better than anything Trump has said or would say.

So, Trump, snuggle up to Putin if you feel you must.  But, for the media – don’t use poodles in the metaphor.  They and I protest…loudly.

A COUPLE OF MY PROTESTS AGAINST TRUMP – IN WRITING

Perspective from the 19th Hole is the title I chose for my personal blog, which is meant to give me an outlet for one of my favorite crafts – writing – plus to use an image from my favorite sport, golf.  Out of college, my first job was as a reporter for the Daily Astorian in Astoria, Oregon, and I went on from there to practice writing in all my professional positions, including as press secretary in Washington, D.C. for a Democrat Congressman from Oregon (Les AuCoin), as an Oregon state government manager in Salem and Portland, as press secretary for Oregon’s last Republican governor (Vic Atiyeh), and as a private sector lobbyist.  This blog also allows me to link another favorite pastime – politics and the art of developing public policy – to what I write.  I could have called this blog “Middle Ground,” for that is what I long for in both politics and golf.  The middle ground is often where the best public policy decisions lie.  And it is where you want to be on a golf course.

Okay, as we all deal with how Donald Trump and his lackeys will violate federal law without a smidge of regret, some of us have to find ways to respond.

While “ways to respond” will, I hope, mean more than two of my minor protests with regard to writing, it still feels better for me to hone these protests.

Here they are:

  • When I refer to Trump, I will refrain from calling him Mr. as is done routinely by such top newspapers as the New York Times.  I don’t exalt that moniker; it just feels good not to do so.
  • Also, when I refer to Trump, I will not use the word “administration” to cite what he is doing as president, as I would with any other president.  Using that word conveys that I might have a notion that  Trump is “administering” anything.  He is not.  He is just flying by the seat of his pants, no matter if anyone opposes his illegal actions – not Congress, not the courts, not public opinion.

There!

I feel better already, even though there is no way my protests will matter.

Still, all of us Americans must find real ways to oppose Trump as he continues dismantling the America we know.

These small protests could lead to bigger ones for me.

WHAT’S A CONSTITUTIONAL CRISIS?  AND IS AMERICA IN ONE?

Perspective from the 19th Hole is the title I chose for my personal blog, which is meant to give me an outlet for one of my favorite crafts – writing – plus to use an image from my favorite sport, golf.  Out of college, my first job was as a reporter for the Daily Astorian in Astoria, Oregon, and I went on from there to practice writing in all my professional positions, including as press secretary in Washington, D.C. for a Democrat Congressman from Oregon (Les AuCoin), as an Oregon state government manager in Salem and Portland, as press secretary for Oregon’s last Republican governor (Vic Atiyeh), and as a private sector lobbyist.  This blog also allows me to link another favorite pastime – politics and the art of developing public policy – to what I write.  I could have called this blog “Middle Ground,” for that is what I long for in both politics and golf.  The middle ground is often where the best public policy decisions lie.  And it is where you want to be on a golf course.

Well, the answer to the question posed in this blog headline:  Perhaps.

And, if a crisis exists, it is exactly what Donald Trump wants.

You see, he views himself as king or dictator, so nothing else matters.  Not what others think.  Not Congress.  Not the courts.  Not public opinion.  And, not the U.S. Constitution.

Here is the way the New York Times put it:

“Trump is operating under the theory that the Executive Branch is unitary, in the sense that Article II of the Constitution places executive power in a single person, the president, who gets to control every high-level official who executes federal law (and plenty of lower-level ones, too).”

And, here’s a summary of the U.S. Constitution because, to know if it is in jeopardy, we all need to know what it is.

“Written in 1787, ratified in 1788, and in operation since 1789, the United States Constitution is the world’s longest surviving written charter of government.

“Its first three words – “We The People” – affirm that the government of the United States exists to serve its citizens.

“The supremacy of the people through their elected representatives is recognized in Article I, which creates a Congress consisting of a Senate and a House of Representatives.  The positioning of Congress at the beginning of the Constitution affirms its status as the “First Branch” of the federal government.

“The Constitution assigned to Congress responsibility for organizing the executive and judicial branches, raising revenue, declaring war, and making all laws necessary for executing these powers.

“The president is permitted to veto specific legislative acts, but Congress has the authority to override presidential vetoes by two-thirds majorities of both houses.  The Constitution also provides that the Senate advise and consent on key executive and judicial appointments and on the approval for ratification of treaties.

“For over two centuries the Constitution has remained in force because its framers successfully separated and balanced governmental powers to safeguard the interests of majority rule and minority rights, of liberty and equality, and of the federal and state governments.

“More a concise statement of national principles than a detailed plan of governmental operation, the Constitution has evolved to meet the changing needs of a modern society profoundly different from the eighteenth-century world in which its creators lived.  To date, the Constitution has been amended 27 times, most recently in 1992.  The first ten amendments constitute the Bill of Rights.”

All this came up in my mind mostly because of an article in The Atlantic Magazine by David A. Graham.

He started his column this way:

:Grasping the scale of President Donald Trump’s assault on American governance is no small matter.  The administration is challenging laws, claiming the right to reinterpret the Constitution, questioning judges’ powers, and arrogating new powers to itself.  Seeking to convey the gravity of the situation, many commentators have labeled what’s happening a ‘constitutional crisis.’

“That’s a mistake — not because what’s happening is not serious, but because it is so serious.  This week, the Trump administration came the closest it has thus far to outright refusing to follow a judge’s order, after days of comments from Vice President J. D. Vance, Bureaucrat in Chief Elon Musk, and others questioning whether a president must follow court rulings.  That’s a threat to the very basic question of whether a president is subject to the law or not — especially when so many things that Trump has done appear plainly illegal.”

But, Graham believes what he calls “the abstraction of constitutional crisis obscures the immediate danger, making what’s happening seem like an issue more for legal experts and policy wonks than for the everyday Americans who stand to lose not only essential government services but also fundamental rights.

“A president refusing to abide by the law or the Constitution and ignoring court orders to stop his illegitimate actions would be a constitutional crisis like a bank robbery is a cash flow crisis,” says Joseph Ura, a political scientist at Clemson University.”

A recent New York Times article reported that many legal scholars believe the country is in a constitutional crisis, but it began by acknowledging, “There is no universally accepted definition of a constitutional crisis.”

The law, for all its careful parsing of language, has a weakness for this sort of I-know-it-when-I-see-it formulation, but if even the professors can’t define it, how can the general public?

More from The Atlantic writer, Graham:

“At one time, appeals to the sanctity of the Constitution might have swayed more people, but one reason Trump has been able to dominate U.S. politics for so long is that voters are not feeling protective of their institutions.

“About six in 10 people in a 2022 New York Times poll said the constitutional order needs major reforms.  In 2023, PEW found that just 4 per cent of Americans think the political system is working very well.  And in 2024, voters selected a guy who’d tried to overturn the previous election.  Regardless of what law professors think, the populace has already decided that the Constitution is in crisis.

“And insofar as people do think of this as a ‘crisis,’ that might only further empower Trump — who’s responsible for it in the first place.  That’s because, in times of crisis, Americans usually look to the president to act quickly and decisively.

“That can be good in a bona fide external crisis, like an attack by a foreign country or a pandemic, but that’s not what’s happening now.”

What’s happening now is Trump disregarding the rule of law – the rule of the U.S. Constitution – when it suits him.  He doesn’t care about the usual boundaries, but, as he preens for TV and on-line sources, I hope his contempt will catch up with him.

The future of American democracy depends on it.

WHERE IS THE MIDDLE GROUND?

Perspective from the 19th Hole is the title I chose for my personal blog, which is meant to give me an outlet for one of my favorite crafts – writing – plus to use an image from my favorite sport, golf.  Out of college, my first job was as a reporter for the Daily Astorian in Astoria, Oregon, and I went on from there to practice writing in all my professional positions, including as press secretary in Washington, D.C. for a Democrat Congressman from Oregon (Les AuCoin), as an Oregon state government manager in Salem and Portland, as press secretary for Oregon’s last Republican governor (Vic Atiyeh), and as a private sector lobbyist.  This blog also allows me to link another favorite pastime – politics and the art of developing public policy – to what I write.  I could have called this blog “Middle Ground,” for that is what I long for in both politics and golf.  The middle ground is often where the best public policy decisions lie.  And it is where you want to be on a golf course.

Regarding this blog headline, middle ground is lost under Trump, but is it gone forever?

Too early to tell, but I fear that, if Trump has his way, the idea that middle ground exists – call it compromise, if you will – could no longer be possible.

You see, Trump and his sycophants want to be dictators, if not kings.  They don’t believe in compromise.  They only want to assert their will.  Congress be damned.  The courts be damned.  Plus, they think public opinion is what they say it is, not what it is.

If middle ground is lost, they say “so be it.”  To them, it’s “my way or the highway.”

One other aspect of this is worth noting. 

If the “other side” rails against Trump’s over-the-top actions, all that does is infuse him with more intent to continue going down “his” path.  He never responds well to criticism, for he thinks it is all part of a major effort “to get him.”

It’s exactly what paranoid narcissists do.  It’s always all about them and no one else matters.

For my part, I always have thought that middle ground is often where the best solutions lie for pressing public policy challenges.

Neither the hard right nor the hard left.  In the middle.

That’s what I thought when I worked as state lobbyist for 25 years in Oregon.  I often saw an intent to produce solutions that work for the benefit of both Republicans and Democrats, as well as for the public at large.

As examples in Oregon, top-of-mind for me are three health care issues because much of my time was spent representing Providence Health and Services, as well as other health clients.  So, this morning, I cite the three issues:

  • A Special Tax on Hospitals:  A few years ago, someone – not sure whom – came up with what was a decent idea.  Tax hospitals, use the money as it landed in State of Oregon coffers as match for federal money under Medicaid, and, thus, gain more money from Washington, D.C. than otherwise would have arrived here.

Again, a decent idea.  But, as lobbyists, we were concerned that the “new money” actually might not go to low-income health care in Oregon because, on occasion, “health care money” had been diverted elsewhere.

So, we advocated for creation of a “work group” composed of legislators and lobbyists, as well as the Governor’s Office, that would hammer out consensus details.  It worked.

The consensus was put into a memorandum that all parties signed and the result?  New money intended for health care went to health care.

  • A Special Tax On Health Insurance Premiums:  The same notion as above worked its way into the idea that health insurance companies domiciled in Oregon should pay a tax, with the proceeds intended to be for the federal match.

Again, with a work group consensus, the new system worked for the benefit of low-income Oregonians in need of medical care.

Now, in the spirit of candor, I add that a critic of these two tax approaches would say the scheme was just a bid to gain MORE federal spending.  Perhaps true, but, to me, the end justified the means:  More money came to Oregon for a consensus purpose — better health care.  A middle ground solution.

  • Assisted Suicide Compromise:  My final example of middle ground occurred in relation a very controversial “human” issue when it was passed by Oregon voters:  A procedure for persons, within certain limits, to end their lives in response to huge physical limitations they faced.  In other words, end their lives early.  The assisted suicide law is now more than 20 years old in Oregon.

I had a special role on behalf of Providence once the assisted suicide law was on the books.

Given Providence’s dotted-line connection to the Catholic Church, I advocated for a “conscience clause,” which would allow Providence employees to opt out of being involved in suicide processes if doing so was against their “conscience.”  The clause also would say that assisted suicide did not need to be practiced at Providence facilities if the leaders of those facilities had a “conscience” against doing so.

To achieve this, I relied on the best legislator to lead middle ground solutions, Senator Neil Bryant, R-Bend, who is still a friend to this day.  At my request, he agreed to form a work group to consider alternatives and, due to his leadership, the process succeeded.

Providence properties (eight hospitals throughout Oregon) and Providence nurses and other staff were given the right to opt out in exchange for Providence referring those who genuinely wanted assisted suicide to reputable providers outside the hospital system.

It was a tough solution because, to some Providence leaders, “referral” amounted to “being an agent by which something inappropriate – assisted suicide – was done.”  Agentry went against Catholic principles..

Still, Providence was a health care system, not a church.  So, referral worked.  When all was said and done, a reasonable solution that amounted to “policy in the middle.”  And, to this day, the compromise works for Providence and for citizens who want assisted suicide.

The bottom-line point is that middle ground does exist if those involved want to find it and are willing to work hard to do so.

Back to Trump.  He won’t even look.

“REPEATING LIES DOESN’T MAKE THEM TRUE” – PART 2

Perspective from the 19th Hole is the title I chose for my personal blog, which is meant to give me an outlet for one of my favorite crafts – writing – plus to use an image from my favorite sport, golf.  Out of college, my first job was as a reporter for the Daily Astorian in Astoria, Oregon, and I went on from there to practice writing in all my professional positions, including as press secretary in Washington, D.C. for a Democrat Congressman from Oregon (Les AuCoin), as an Oregon state government manager in Salem and Portland, as press secretary for Oregon’s last Republican governor (Vic Atiyeh), and as a private sector lobbyist.  This blog also allows me to link another favorite pastime – politics and the art of developing public policy – to what I write.  I could have called this blog “Middle Ground,” for that is what I long for in both politics and golf.  The middle ground is often where the best public policy decisions lie.  And it is where you want to be on a golf course.

NOTE:  I labeled this blog part 2 because it follows one yesterday where I quoted several columnists dealing with all the lies Donald Trump has told as a matter of course, believing that repetition equals truth.  This time I reprint the entire column by one of those writers, Peter Baker, who works for the New York Times.  He is one of the best political writers going these days.

Baker joined The Times in 2008 after 20 years at The Washington Post and has covered the White House over the course of the past six presidencies, starting in 1996 with Bill Clinton and continuing through George W. Bush, Barack Obama, Donald J. Trump, Joseph R. Biden Jr., and now Trump again.

So, his analysis matters.  Kudos to him for being willing to share it.

*********

By Peter Baker

The United States sent $50 million in condoms to Hamas.  Diversity programs caused a plane crash.  China controls the Panama Canal.  Ukraine started the war with Russia.

Except, no.

None of that is true.

Not that it stops Trump.  In the first month since he returned to power, he has demonstrated once again a brazen willingness to advance distortions, conspiracy theories and outright lies to justify major policy decisions.

Trump has long been unfettered by truth when it comes to boasting about his record and tearing down his enemies.  But what were dubbed “alternative facts” in his first term have quickly become a whole alternative reality in his second to lay the groundwork for radical change as he moves aggressively to reshape America and the world.

If the U.S. Agency for International Development is stupid enough to send prophylactics to a Palestinian terrorist group in Gaza, he claims, then it deserves to be dismantled.  If recruiting people other than white men to work in the airline sector compromises safety, such programs should be eliminated.  If China controls the strategic passage through the continent, the United States should take it back.  If Ukraine is the aggressor, it should make concessions to Moscow.

“One of the biggest presidential powers that Trump has deployed is the ability to shape his own narrative,” said Julian E. Zelizer, a Princeton history professor and editor of a book of essays about Trump’s first term.  “We have seen repeatedly how Trump creates his own reality to legitimate his actions and simultaneously discredit warnings about his decisions.”

Taking his real-estate hucksterism and reality-show storytelling into politics, Trump has for years succeeded in selling his version of events.  The world according to Trump is one where he is a master of every challenge and any failure is someone else’s fault.

He claimed to have built the greatest economy in history during his first term so many times that even some of his critics came to accept that it was better than it really was.  He dismissed intelligence reports that Russia intervened in the 2016 elections on his behalf so often that many supporters accepted his denial.

Most significantly, Trump has waged a four-year campaign to persuade Americans that he did not lose the 2020 election when in fact he did, making one false assertion of widespread fraud after another that would all be debunked yet still leave most Republicans convinced it was stolen, according to polls.

At the same time, he has recast the January 6, 2021, assault on the Capitol by supporters trying to stop the transfer of power from a “heinous attack,” as he originally termed it, to a “day of love,” as he now calls it.  This revised interpretation helped him rationalize pardoning nearly 1,600 people who were charged, including many who had beaten police officers.

“Trump is a highly skilled narrator and propagandist,” said Ruth Ben-Ghiat, author of “Strongmen: Mussolini to the Present” and a historian at New York University who specializes in fascism and authoritarianism.  “Actually, he is one of the most skilled propagandists in history.”

Ben-Ghiat said what made Trump’s “easily refutable lie” about the 2020 election so remarkable was that he was “working not in a one-party state or authoritarian context with a controlled media, but in a totally open society with a free press.”

But she and other scholars said some of Trump’s themes resemble those seen in authoritarian states.  “The kind of propaganda and disinformation that we see now is not particularly new and not dependent on the internet,” said Benjamin Carter Hett, a historian of World War II at Hunter College.  “Exactly the same kind of thing happened in the very diverse and lively German press of the 1920s and 1930s.”

Trump’s aides have long recognized his penchant for prevarication and either adjusted or eventually broke with him.  John F. Kelly, his longest-serving White House chief of staff in his first term, has said that Trump would tell his press aides to publicly repeat something that he had just made up.  When Kelly would object, saying, “but that’s not true,” Trump would say, “but it sounds good.”

Stephanie Grisham, who served as a White House press secretary in the first term, once recalled that Trump would tell aides that “as long as you keep repeating something, it doesn’t matter what you say.”  And that trickled down to the staff.  “Casual dishonesty filtered through the White House as though it were in the air-conditioning system,” she wrote in her memoir.

Anthony Scaramucci, a former Trump ally who served briefly as his White House communications director, said on Friday that Trump believes dishonesty works.  Trump, he said, is at “50 years of distorting things and telling lies and he is at 50 years of getting away with it, so why wouldn’t he make the lies bigger and more impactful in this last stretch?”

The exaggerations and falsehoods serve a strategic purpose.  While Trump won a clean victory in November, including in the popular vote, which he lost in 2016, he did not win a majority and his 1.5-percentage-point margin was one of the lowest since the 19th century.  But he regularly says that he won a “landslide victory,” which serves not just to stroke his ego but to assert an expansive popular mandate for his agenda.

Trump, who repeatedly disparaged media fact-checking during last year’s campaign, does not back off after misleading statements and lies are exposed.  Instead, he tends to double down, repeating them even after it’s been reported that they are not true.

After reporters determined that the $50 million for condoms story was untrue, Trump not only repeated it, he increased the supposed total to $100 million.  Nor did he back down after falsely claiming that U.S.A.I.D. had provided grants to media organizations as “a ‘payoff’ for creating good stories about the Democrats,” even after learning the money was simply for subscriptions.

Likewise, Trump made his claim about diversity programs and air safety the day after the midair collision of a passenger jet and Army helicopter in Washington without an ounce of proof, nor did he ever follow up with any.  And while a Hong Kong company operates two of five ports adjacent to the Panama Canal, he continues to say the passage is controlled by China when in fact Panama operates it.

And to support his effort to rescind the constitutional right to birthright citizenship, Trump keeps saying that the United States is “the only country in the world that does this,” even though it has been repeatedly reported that in fact more than 30 countries do.

“Opponents end up arguing about his narratives regardless of how grounded they are in fact,” said Dr. Zelizer.  “This has put President Trump in a perpetual position of advantage since he decides the terms of debate rather than anyone seeking to stop him.”

In Trump’s facts-are-fungible world, conspiracy theories at times are given as much weight as tangible evidence and those who traffic in them are granted access that no other president would give.  Just this past week, he talked about going to Fort Knox to see if the nation’s gold really is there, indulging a fringe suspicion that it is somehow missing.

Invited to accompany Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth to Europe was Jack Posobiec, a far-right influencer who promoted the lie that Democrats were running a pedophile ring out of a Washington pizza parlor, a lie that inspired an armed man to burst in and open fire to save the supposed victims.  Posobiec ended up not going but later accompanied Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent to Ukraine.

Trump’s blame-the-victim revisionism over Ukraine in recent days has been among the most striking efforts to translate his alternative reality into policy.  Over the course of several recent days, he said that Ukraine “started” the war with Russia in 2022 and called the country’s president, Volodymyr Zelensky, a “dictator without elections,” while absolving President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia, an actual dictator who had invaded his neighbor.  He went even further on Friday, saying, “It’s not Russia’s fault.”

By undercutting public sympathy for Ukraine, Trump may make it easier for him to strike a peace agreement with Putin giving Russia much of what it wants even over any objections by Zelensky or European leaders.  Since Zelensky is a dictator responsible for the war, this reasoning goes, he deserves less consideration.

One of Trump’s claims about Ukraine offers a case study in his mythmaking.  He said that the United States has provided $350 billion in aid to Ukraine, three times as much as Europe, but that much of the money is “missing” and that Zelensky “admits that half of the money we sent him is missing.”

In fact, the United States has allocated about a third of what Trump claimed, even less than Europe, and none of it is known to be missing.

The dollar figures cited for U.S. aid to Ukraine can vary depending on how government officials present them, what time period they cover and whether they include humanitarian and economic assistance.

How did Trump arrive at his claim?  The White House did not respond to a request for elaboration.  But it appears that Trump was referring to a recent interview with Zelensky that the president or his staff either misunderstood or distorted.

In the interview, Zelensky was asked by The Associated Press about exaggerated numbers and he corrected them.  “When it’s said that Ukraine received $200 billion to support the army during the war, that’s not true,” Zelensky said according to a translation by Ukrainska Pravda, a Ukrainian news outlet.  “I don’t know where all that money went.”

Zelensky was not saying that there was $200 billion and that he did not know where all of it went.  He was saying there never was $200 billion in the first place.  Even Trump’s special envoy to Ukraine, Keith Kellogg, has indicated no concern over missing money, saying that “we have a pretty good accounting of where it’s going.”  Indeed, the vast bulk of U.S. aid approved for Ukraine has been in the form of weapons, not cash.

But that does not comport with the official line at the White House.  Once Trump makes an assertion, those who work for him — and want to keep working for him — are compelled to tailor their own versions of reality to match his.  Even if it requires them to abandon previous understandings of the facts.

So, there was Michael Waltz, the former Republican congressman from Florida now serving as Trump’s national security adviser, pressed last week to reconcile his past comments about who was responsible for the war in Ukraine with his boss’s current position.

A reporter read aloud from an opinion column that Waltz had written in 2023 stating that “Putin is to blame, certainly, like Al Qaeda was to blame for 9/11.”  Waltz was asked if he still believed that or whether he now shared Trump’s assessment that Ukraine had started the war.

“Well,” Waltz said carefully, “it shouldn’t surprise you that I share the president’s assessment on all kinds of issues.  What I wrote as a member of Congress was as a former member of Congress.”

And so, Waltz’s actual reality gave way to Trump’s alternative version.

*********

And, I add this conclusion by drawing a quote from what Baker wrote…here it is:

“The kind of propaganda and disinformation that we see now is not particularly new and not dependent on the internet…Exactly the same kind of thing happened in the very diverse and lively German press of the 1920s and 1930s.”

So, there it is.  A comparison between Hitler and Trump, though the former is not mentioned by name, though it was in the 20s and 30s that Hitler rose to power and tried to kill off a race of people – the Jews.  It appears that Trump is mimicking the German killer; he wants to be like him and that should concern all Americans.

“REPEATING LIES DOES NOT MAKE THEM TRUE”

Perspective from the 19th Hole is the title I chose for my personal blog, which is

image from my favorite sport, golf.  Out of college, my first job was as a reporter for the Daily Astorian in Astoria, Oregon, and I went on from there to practice writing in all my professional positions, including as press secretary in Washington, D.C. for a Democrat Congressman from Oregon (Les AuCoin), as an Oregon state government manager in Salem and Portland, as press secretary for Oregon’s last Republican governor (Vic Atiyeh), and as a private sector lobbyist.  This blog also allows me to link another favorite pastime – politics and the art of developing public policy – to what I write.  I could have called this blog “Middle Ground,” for that is what I long for in both politics and golf.  The middle ground is often where the best public policy decisions lie.  And it is where you want to be on a golf course.

NOTE:  This is the first of two blogs dealing with this “repeating lies” concept.  This first installment covers various media reports as I open the Department Good Quotes Worth Remembering.  The last quote is drawn from a column by Peter Baker in the New York Times.  So, in blog #2, I reprint Baker’s entire column because it is so good.

The headline on this blog came from Atlantic Magazine writer Tom Nichols.

Regarding Donald Trump, it rings true.

Trump believes that, just because he says something, it is true.

And, if accused of lying, that charge doesn’t stop him.  He just repeats the lie and appears to believe that repetition produces truth.

Nichols’ good line prompts me to open one of the five departments I run – this one is the Department of Good Quotes Worth Remembering.  No need here to mention the other four departments I manage; each stands on its own.

From the New York Times:  The scariest thing about what President Trump is doing with his tariffs-for-all strategy, I believe, is that he has no clue what he is doing — or how the world economy operates, for that matter.  He’s just making it all up as he goes along — and we are all along for the ride.

From The Atlantic Magazine:  Secretary of State Marco Rubio is in Saudi Arabia pretending to be in charge of negotiations between the U.S. and Russia over the fate of Ukraine.  Rubio is the perfect fall guy for this assignment.  Confirmed as secretary of state by a 99–0 vote, he’s won praise from all sides for his commitment to American institutions and values.

The word “pretending” above is drawn to make comparisons to William Rogers who, under President Nixon, was Secretary of State.  But, Nixon didn’t involve Rogers in Vietnam peace talks, so Rogers was nothing more than a figurehead.  Rubio may be suffering the same fate.

More from The Atlantic:  This week, Donald Trump falsely accused Ukraine of starting a war against a much larger neighbor, inviting invasion and mass death.  At this point, Trump — who has a history of trusting Russian President Vladimir Putin more than he trusts the Americans who are sworn to defend the United States — may even believe it.

Casting Ukraine as the aggressor (and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky as a “dictator,” which Trump has done) makes political sense for Trump, who is innately deferential to Putin, and likely views the conflict as a distraction from his own personal and political agendas.  The U.S. president has now chosen to throw America to Putin’s side and is more than willing to see this war end on Russian terms.

Repeating lies, however, does not make them true.

Russia, and specifically Putin, launched this war in 2014 and widened it in 2022.  The information and media ecosystem around Trump and the Republican Party has tried for years to submerge the Russian war against Ukraine in a sump of moral relativism, because many in the GOP admire Putin as some sort of Christian strongman.  But Putin is making war on a country that is mostly composed of his fellow Orthodox Christians, solely based on his own grandiose fantasies.

From hill.com:  Elon Musk was never elected to any office, yet he is running roughshod over many parts of the federal government. 

Musk and the make-believe Department of Government Efficiency’s efforts to tap into databases across the government is facing broad pushback from a variety of groups sounding the alarm over the privacy and security risks.

From the New York Times:  One of the best political writers going these days, Peter Baker, puts it this way:

The United States sent $50 million in condoms to Hamas.  Diversity programs caused a plane crash.  China controls the Panama Canal.  Ukraine started the war with Russia.

Except, no.  None of that is true.  Not that it stops Trump.  In the first month since he returned to power, he has demonstrated once again a brazen willingness to advance distortions, conspiracy theories, and outright lies to justify major policy decisions.

Trump has long been unfettered by truth when it comes to boasting about his record and tearing down his enemies.  But what were dubbed “alternative facts” in his first term have quickly become a whole alternative reality in his second to lay the groundwork for radical change as he moves to aggressively reshape America and the world.

And, from me, enough for today, even though there are many more good quotes.  Next time.

THE WEIRD NEW PUTTING TECHNIQUE THAT’S DRIVING THE GOLF WORLD COMPLETELY NUTS – AND ME, TOO

Perspective from the 19th Hole is the title I chose for my personal blog, which is meant to give me an outlet for one of my favorite crafts – writing – plus to use an image from my favorite sport, golf.  Out of college, my first job was as a reporter for the Daily Astorian in Astoria, Oregon, and I went on from there to practice writing in all my professional positions, including as press secretary in Washington, D.C. for a Democrat Congressman from Oregon (Les AuCoin), as an Oregon state government manager in Salem and Portland, as press secretary for Oregon’s last Republican governor (Vic Atiyeh), and as a private sector lobbyist.  This blog also allows me to link another favorite pastime – politics and the art of developing public policy – to what I write.  I could have called this blog “Middle Ground,” for that is what I long for in both politics and golf.  The middle ground is often where the best public policy decisions lie.  And it is where you want to be on a golf course.

An unorthodox putting technique called aim-point is taking over the sport.  Not everyone is happy about it.

Including those, like me, who worry about slow play in professional golf because aim-point aggravates the slowness.

Writing in the Wall Street Journal, Andrew Beaton, tried to explain aim-point.

“When the best golfers in the world line up a putt these days,” Beaton wrote, “many of them look completely deranged. 

“Their process for reading greens everywhere from Augusta National to St. Andrews involves standing over the line of the putt, closing one eye and sticking a couple fingers in the air as if they’re trying to hail a cab to the clubhouse.  

“Never in the centuries since a bunch of Scots started malleting balls toward a cup had anyone studied greens quite like this before.”

However, Beaton writes that aim-point has become as popular as it is polarizing.  

“One PGA Tour veteran, 2009 U.S. Open champion Lucas Glover, recently inflamed the controversy when he called for aim-point to be banned and cited it as a factor in golf’s pace-of-play debate.  Others have criticized it for simply looking silly — or worse, violating the game’s unwritten rules when players stomp around too close to the hole.”

Even so, a growing number of top pros swear by it.  They argue it makes the maddening art of reading a green more scientific and that the backlash against it is just uninformed.  

One is Collin Morikawa.

“Aim-point has 1,000 per cent helped me,” he says.  “I don’t think people understand how aim-point works to really say this is right or wrong.”

Beaton goes on to explain the technique this way: 

“First, you straddle the putt’s line at the point of the biggest break.  Then you use your footing to discern the amount of tilt, at which point you assign a number — usually one, two or three — to the slope’s severity.  

“Next, standing behind the ball with one eye closed and a pointer finger aimed at the center of the hole, you raise the number of fingers that corresponds to that slope.  And that’s your line.  So, if you estimate the slope at 2 per cent from right to left, you aim at the point outside your middle finger.  Voilà

‘There is nothing textbook about it to players who have been taught to bend over and read a green with their eyes.  Aim-point is feeling instead of seeing.”

And that’s the exact idea an unemployed golf nut with no professional experience in the game had when he first came up with aim-point. 

More from Beaton:

“’Your body is very, very good at balancing itself,’ says aim-point’s pioneer, 57-year-old Mark Sweeney.  ‘And your eyes are very easy to trick with optical illusions.’

“The idea dates back to 2003, when Sweeney was at home watching the final round of Ben Curtis’s improbable victory at the British Open.  On that afternoon, he kept seeing something repeat itself:  Players were misreading the same putt in the same direction on the 18th green.

“I don’t understand why this is so difficult,’ he thought.  

“With all the technology flooding into the game, he believed there had to be a better way to read greens. 

“Sweeney had never played the game competitively, but he did have a background in finance and software development.  So, he wrote 100,000 lines of code for a program that would laser scan greens and calculate the optimal path and speed for every putt.  This was long enough ago that the first platform he made for it was for a PalmPilot.  

“But because golfers can’t lug laboratory equipment with them to model every green, it wasn’t practical on the course.  Its first widespread use was actually on television broadcasts, and Sweeney was part of a Golf Channel team that won a Sports Emmy for the tech in 2008. 

“As Sweeney heard feedback from the industry and parlayed his expertise into a new career as a putting guru, golfers wanted something they could actually use.  First, he came up with a system of charts that told players where to aim.  That was still cumbersome and complicated.  It was only when he was teaching some 7-year-olds that he came up with the version of aim-point that’s widely used today. 

“Sweeney was giving a lesson to a bunch of kids in 2013 and wanted a basic way of teaching them to feel the high side of the hole, so he had them straddle their line like an invisible seesaw.  What he quickly discovered was that the slope corresponds to the number of fingers you hold up because it even accounts for distance.  On a longer putt, those fingers block more of the green and tell you to aim farther from the cup, the same way golfers need to calculate for more break.

“It isn’t an exact science.  It can take time for players to learn how to read slope with their own balance, though Sweeney says most people get within a half percentage point quickly.  Putts can also break more than once, and there are adjustments players need to learn to make, such as how far they hold out their arm with their fingers raised, based on the speed of the green.  Yet he found it was more accurate than simply eyeballing it and guessing. 

“’It happens to match the physics of a golf ball rolling on a green,’ Sweeney says.  ‘For whatever crazy reason.’” 

Some pro golfers were crazy enough to try it.  Brian Gay, a five-time winner on the PGA Tour, was the first in early 2014, and he says it came naturally to him as someone who always used his feet to feel a green’s slope.  But that doesn’t mean everyone accepted it.  

“Other golfers,” Beaton wrote, “looked at him as though he was using an umbrella for a putter.  ‘Most guys were like, ‘What is he doing?’

“Yet, others such as Adam Scott soon followed.  Since then, it’s taken off so much that instructors all across the globe teach the technique.  Viktor Hovland, Dustin Johnson and Justin Rose have all used it.  Nowadays, it isn’t unusual to see an entire group of players and their caddies in the middle of greens, aiming and pointing.” 

The opposite of the benefits of aim-point revolve around the fact that it takes far longer than old-school green reading and slows down the game for fans.

Even beyond pace of play, others chafe at how some players pace around too close to the hole to feel the break. 

So, make your own decision, as I have.  I don’t use it – not smart enough – and I don’t like its use on pro golf tours.

The bottom-line for me:  Using aim-point already slows down what has come to be a slow game anyway.  So, ban it and return to reading greens like they deserve to be ready, which means bending down to see the line and then putting.

IS TRUMP’S HONEYMOON OVER?  OR DOES HE HAVE ONE OR CARE?

Perspective from the 19th Hole is the title I chose for my personal blog, which is meant to give me an outlet for one of my favorite crafts – writing – plus to use an image from my favorite sport, golf.  Out of college, my first job was as a reporter for the Daily Astorian in Astoria, Oregon, and I went on from there to practice writing in all my professional positions, including as press secretary in Washington, D.C. for a Democrat Congressman from Oregon (Les AuCoin), as an Oregon state government manager in Salem and Portland, as press secretary for Oregon’s last Republican governor (Vic Atiyeh), and as a private sector lobbyist.  This blog also allows me to link another favorite pastime – politics and the art of developing public policy – to what I write.  I could have called this blog “Middle Ground,” for that is what I long for in both politics and golf.  The middle ground is often where the best public policy decisions lie.  And it is where you want to be on a golf course.

A close friend and I were talking the other day and asked each other if the United States’ historic system of “checks and balances” was still in effect in Trump 2.

We suspected the answer was “no.”  Congress kneels before Donald Trump.  Courts wonder what to do as Trump tells them “to go to ____.”  And, the Supreme Court waits for who knows what.

But, what about public opinion?

It appears Trump doesn’t know or care about it because, of course, he is always the smartest person in the room, unless Elon Musk is there, too, and they share the glory.

Then, today, I read a column in the Washington Post by a solid political reporter, Aaron Blake, who wondered, based on public opinion polls, whether the “Trump honeymoon was over.”

For my part, I didn’t know Trump had one, but Blake’s report in worth reading and pondering.

Here is how he started his column:

“New polling shows Trump’s approval ratings declining and major warning signs are appearing.

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“…Trump came into office claiming a sweeping and historic mandate, but that was always oversold.

“Trump’s win was relatively modest, historically speaking.  And while his approval rating upon taking office reached a new all-time high for him — around 50 per cent — his ‘honeymoon’ phase still paled in comparison with every modern president not named Trump.

“And now, after one month in office, whatever honeymoon (or mandate) Trump enjoyed appears to be slipping away.”

Here is a summary of how Blake made his point:

  • Multiple polls this week show Trump’s approval rating dropping into more normal territory for him, in the mid-40s.  A new Washington Post-Ipsos poll crystallizes a number of warning signs for Trump’s agenda of drastic and legally dubious change.

Indeed, Americans seem to be quite concerned by how far Trump is going, and most of his signature policies and initiatives appear to be quite unpopular — especially those spearheaded by billionaire Elon Musk.

  • Trump’s approval ratings this week in polls — including the Post-Ipsos poll and others from Reuters, Quinnipiac University, CNN and Gallup — have ranged from 44 per cent to 47 percent.  In all of them, more disapprove than approve of him.
  • A big question has been whether Trump’s drastic attempts to overhaul the federal government might hurt him.  And it appears that’s happening.
  • Many Americans don’t like his government cuts and tariffs.  But this, of course, depend on what issues pollsters test.  Some loom large as strikes against Trump.

One is Trump tariffs.  The CNN poll shows Americans oppose his tariffs on aluminum and steel by 15 points (49-34), while the Post-Ipsos poll shows nearly 2-to-1 opposition to his 25 per cent tariffs on goods from Mexico and Canada.  About 7 in 10 Americans think tariffs generally increase the price of products in the United States.

  • Many Americans also don’t like firing large numbers of government workers, which is opposed by 19 points (58-39) in the Post-Ipsos poll.
  • Americans strongly oppose deporting undocumented immigrants who aren’t criminals (57-39), who arrived as children (70-26) and who have U.S. citizen children (66-30).  That accounts for a huge number of would-be deportees, and it suggests that a true mass-deportation operation could be politically problematic.
  • The finding about the firings of government workers gets at one of the biggest emerging strikes against Trump:  Musk.  The writing has been on the wall that Americans are skeptical of the influence suddenly wielded by the world’s richest man, who has spearheaded those firings through the U.S. DOGE Service, which he leads, and the situation appears to have gotten worse.
  • Perhaps no Trump action is as unpopular as one of his first ones:  Pardoning virtually all January 6 defendants.  Previous polling has focused only broadly on the pardons, without drilling down on the most controversial among them:  The pardons of violent offenders — those convicted of assaulting police.

Blake acknowledges a big caveat with unpopular policies and efforts — how much people actually view them as affecting their lives.

More from Blake:

“But the new polling does highlight perhaps the most significant emerging problem for Trump:  The economy.  While this has long been his strength, that no longer appears to be the case.

“The Post-Ipsos poll shows Americans disapprove of his handling of the economy 53 to 45.  Those are his worst economic numbers since 2017.  The Reuters poll shows his economic approval at 39 per cent, which is lower than it ever was in his first term.

“It’s possible to read too much into these numbers.  They could be in large part a reflection of continued economic unrest and persistent inflation, rather than anything specific to Trump.

“But the data also suggest that Americans see Trump as misplacing his priorities.”

So, with these polling realities, does Trump care?

I suspect the answer is “no.”  He only cares about himself, so he assumes that he has a God-given right to do what he is doing – and perhaps he views himself as a God in the first place.  Or, at least as a “king” as he described himself yesterday.

This check on Trump – public opinion – may not amount to much, especially as he has nearly four years left in his term.  And, of course, he now says, despite a Constitutional bar, he wants and deserves a third term.

Perish the thought!

THE DEPARTMENT OF WORDS MATTER IS OPEN AGAIN

Perspective from the 19th Hole is the title I chose for my personal blog, which is meant to give me an outlet for one of my favorite crafts – writing – plus to use an image from my favorite sport, golf.  Out of college, my first job was as a reporter for the Daily Astorian in Astoria, Oregon, and I went on from there to practice writing in all my professional positions, including as press secretary in Washington, D.C. for a Democrat Congressman from Oregon (Les AuCoin), as an Oregon state government manager in Salem and Portland, as press secretary for Oregon’s last Republican governor (Vic Atiyeh), and as a private sector lobbyist.  This blog also allows me to link another favorite pastime – politics and the art of developing public policy – to what I write.  I could have called this blog “Middle Ground,” for that is what I long for in both politics and golf.  The middle ground is often where the best public policy decisions lie.  And it is where you want to be on a golf course.

For several weeks, I have toyed with opening this department, one of five I run with a free hand to manage as I see fit.  But there was always something else to do.

Now, I have time to open this department and, to add a point, I won’t list here the other departments I run because they are able to stand on their own.

This time, I report on words used by Donald Trump that have different meanings than what the dictionary says is the case.

I write about this with due credit to Glenn Kessler, the Washington Post writer who produces the acclaimed “Fact Checker” column.

Here is how he started his most recent column, the one about Trump words:

“Trump is sweeping through the U.S. government, terminating dozens of programs, laying off tens of thousands of workers, even dismantling entire agencies.  At the same time, the White House has adopted a unique lexicon to describe its agenda — in some cases, using words that in ordinary contexts mean the opposite.”

He then provided a guide to the verbiage, drawn from remarks made by Trump and White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt.

Transparency:  Traditionally, transparency in the federal government has meant access to data, federal contracts and government reports, even if they shed light on problems.

But Trump has fired nearly a score of inspectors general (IG), who root out fraud and malfeasance in federal agencies.  Eight have filed suit, saying they were fired illegally.  One IG, for the U.S. Agency for International Development, was booted as soon as he issued a critical report on the aid stoppage ordered by the president.

When reports emerged that a State Department website revealed that Tesla, a company owned by billionaire Elon Musk, Trump’s biggest financial backer, received a $400 million contract, the contract document was scrubbed to remove any reference to Tesla.

Meanwhile, the Musk-led U.S. DOGE Service — which is targeting agencies for contract terminations and personnel cuts — operates in secret and the people on his team have not been revealed, though reporters have figured out the identity of some key players.

But the White House says the administration is transparent because Trump often answers questions from reporters, even if, as usual, honesty is not involved.

Free speech:  The First Amendment enshrines a right to free speech — the right to articulate opinions and ideas without interference, retaliation or punishment from the government.  There’s always been some tension in this notion — does this give someone the right to yell “fire” in a crowded theater when there is no fire?

Conservatives objected to social media platforms such as Twitter (before Musk bought it and turned it into X) and Facebook downgrading or removing posts that contained inaccurate or false information, especially during the covid pandemic.  Trump himself was removed from many platforms after he instigated a riot at the U.S. Capitol to prevent the certification of Biden’s victory in 2020.  But he’s been re-instated and many social media companies have scaled back efforts to police false information circulating on their platforms.

:I stopped government censorship once and for all and we brought back free speech to America,” Trump told House GOP members after taking office.

But the White House in recent days has barred Associated Press reporters from news events because the agency still refers to the Gulf of Mexico, the internationally recognized name for the body of water that has been in use since the mid-17th century.

Fraud and abuse:  Fraud generally means deception, often criminal, in pursuit of financial and personal gain.  But Trump has upended that definition — broadening it to include programs and policies he disagrees with — while at the same time making it harder to detect fraud.

“We’re finding tremendous fraud and tremendous abuse,” Trump said as Musk stood by his side in Oval Office.  But a Fact Checker accounting of the announcements from DOGE, or Department of Government Efficiency, of terminated programs found that most concern diversity, transgender, and climate change programs.

Deficit:  In Washington, deficit usually means the federal budget deficit.  But for Trump, the deficit that matters:  The trade deficit.  He imposed 25 per cent tariffs on steel and aluminum, threatened tariffs against Canada and Mexico, and proposed to upend the current trading system by imposing reciprocal tariffs.

“We have a tremendous deficit with Mexico,” Trump said last week.  “We have a tremendous deficit with Canada.  We have a tremendous deficit with Europe, the E.U., with China, I don’t even want to tell you what Biden allowed to happen with China.”

Actually, under Biden, the trade deficit with China fell to its lowest level in 10 years, according to the Census Bureau.

So, there you have it.  A new lexicon from Trump who apparently doesn’t refer to the dictionary to understand the meaning of words.

He just talks.

When he speaks, it is as if whatever happens to cross his mind ends up coming out of his mouth.

Both sides of his mouth, with no care for accuracy or context.

NICHOLAS KRISTOF:  “TRUMPISM” IS ALARMING

Perspective from the 19th Hole is the title I chose for my personal blog, which is meant to give me an outlet for one of my favorite crafts – writing – plus to use an image from my favorite sport, golf.  Out of college, my first job was as a reporter for the Daily Astorian in Astoria, Oregon, and I went on from there to practice writing in all my professional positions, including as press secretary in Washington, D.C. for a Democrat Congressman from Oregon (Les AuCoin), as an Oregon state government manager in Salem and Portland, as press secretary for Oregon’s last Republican governor (Vic Atiyeh), and as a private sector lobbyist.  This blog also allows me to link another favorite pastime – politics and the art of developing public policy – to what I write.  I could have called this blog “Middle Ground,” for that is what I long for in both politics and golf.  The middle ground is often where the best public policy decisions lie.  And it is where you want to be on a golf course.

Nicholas Kristof. 

Remember him?

He is a New York Times reporter who has deep roots in Oregon.  He wanted to run for governor in Oregon last time around, but, despite the fact that he owned a home and property in Yamhill County, courts ruled he did not meet residency standards.

Too bad.

Win or lose, he would have run a solid campaign.

After the legal decision, he returned to the NY Times and still writes cogent commentary, one of which is referenced below.

His latest contribution appeared under this headline:  Not quite a unified theory of Trumpism, but still an alarming pattern

Here is how the column started:

“Trump’s second term dizzies many Americans, but I find it oddly familiar — an echo of the time I lived in China as a reporter.

“Americans sometimes misperceive Trump’s actions as a fire hose of bizarre and disparate moves, a kaleidoscope of craziness.  Yet, there is a method to it, and I’ve seen parallels in authoritarian countries I’ve covered around the world over the past four decades.

“It’s not that I offer a unified theory of Trumpism, but there is a coherence there that requires a coherent response.  Strongmen seek power — political power but also other currencies, including wealth and a glittering place in history — through a pattern of behavior that is increasingly being replicated in Washington.”

Kristof contends that what he calls “parallels to Adolph Hitler and 1930s Germany are overdrawn and diminish the horror of the Third Reich.”

He may be right, but I have thought for a few years that Trump reminds me of Hitler, though, of course, I only know Hitler through history books. 

Still, Trump appears to admire Hitler, if only with the Mein Kampf book near his bed.  After all, Trump believes he is nearly a God, or perhaps in his judgment, fully a God.  He thinks he deserves to be worshipped.

And, he doesn’t care who he dislocates, kills or maims as he covets more and more power.  Just think of immigrants if you want an example.

More from Kristof:

“Democracy is not an on-off switch but a dial.  We won’t become North Korea, but we could look more like Viktor Orban’s Hungary.  This is a question not of ideology but of power grabs:  Leftists eroded democracy in Venezuela and Nicaragua, and rightists did so in Hungary, India and (for a time) the Philippines and Poland.  The U.S. is the next test case.

“When authoritarians covet power, they pursue several common strategies.”

  • First, they go after checks and balances within the government.

“Trump ignores laws he finds inconvenient.  He cannot legally fire inspectors general without 30 days’ notice, but he did so anyway.  He moved to eliminate independent congressionally established agencies, which he has no authority to do.  Probably unlawfully, he is sidelining Congress’s constitutional role by impounding funds.  Even when faced with court orders, he appears not to be fully obeying in some cases.”

  • Second, authoritarians try to crush independent referees and civil society institutions, including news organizations, universities, statistical agencies and central banks.

“After I covered the Tiananmen Square massacre as an eyewitness in 1989, The People’s Daily declared that I ‘spread new lies,’ and the prime minister’s office ordered an audit of my taxes and tried to bar my infant son from getting a residence permit.

“For similar reasons, Trump is doing his best to intimidate news organizations and discredit them as ‘enemies of the people.’  

  • Third, authoritarians sometimes recruit shadowy private enforcersto employ violence to intimidate or punish critics.

China has used triad gangsters to suppress dissent, and India and Iran appear to have hired thugs to silence critics in Canada and the United States.

“Trump has not gone that far, and I hope he never will.  But his mass clemency of January 6 rioters, including those who clubbed police officers, was a signal of impunity for violent political offenders acting in his name.  His removal of security from former officials facing death threats, such as Anthony Fauci and Mark Milley, indicates a lack of concern for the fate of critics.

“There are other characteristics of authoritarians that are evident in Washington today.  The sycophantic praise directed at Trump by his aides is familiar to anyone who has seen personality cults from Turkmenistan to Bangladesh.  Assertions that God has anointed a ruler or ‘spared my life for a reason,’ as Trump put it, have been a dime a dozen.”

So, Kristof concludes:  “Let’s pay attention to the larger mosaic, not just the individual tiles of outrage.  The upheaval in Washington is 1,000 things, yes, but what’s emerging is a pattern of undercutting restraints on executive power in ways that weaken the democracy that we inherited and that we must fight to preserve.”

Good words from Kristof worth pondering. 

And, I say, even if not a 100 per cent, parallel, keep the Trump-as-Hitler parallel top of mind.  For, if it continues to ring true, real citizens should have no choice but to raise their voices in protest.