By Kevin D. Williamson
Wednesday, April 23, 2025
Donald Trump says
he stands behind Pete Hegseth, our entirely unqualified
secretary of defense, a former Fox News weekend morning-show clown and future
Brylcreem model who is in the habit of treating sensitive military information
as though it were knitting-circle gossip. Hegseth has chatted about upcoming
military actions with everyone and his brother—literally,
his brother, as well as his wife—through an app that is in and of itself
not sufficiently secure but which is even more insecure when it is being
handled by tech-illiterate doofuses (and the Trump administration is full of
these) who, in a related instance, accidentally copied the editor of The
Atlantic on the conversation.
The president says he has complete confidence in Hegseth.
So, he’s probably cooked.
No, it’s not a great time for former Fox News
personalities serving in top-level positions—which is a damned weird
thing to write! Janette Nesheiwat, a former Fox News contributor nominated as
surgeon general for some reason, “falsified, misled, selectively omitted, or
lied about her medical education, board certifications, and military
experience,”
according to Anthony Clark, an independent journalist and former staffer on
the House Oversight Committee. Short version: Nesheiwat has said and written
things that implied she was a student at University of Arkansas for Medical
Sciences, where she was never enrolled, and/or American University, which does
not have a medical school but is a too-cute way of saying “American University
… of the Caribbean,” the for-profit medical school—unrelated to the university
in Washington, D.C.—from which her degree actually comes.
There is more reporting to be done, but Clark seems to
have the goods.
You can probably guess where this will all lead.
The usual people are making the expected noises: “None of
this is based in reality,” Hegseth said about the chat
scandal, though the facts of the case—the reality—are not in dispute. “Fake
news,” press secretary Karoline Leavitt said
about an NPR
report alleging that Trump is thinking about dumping Hegseth. One suspects
she’ll be the last to know. But if you work for the Trump administration, Trump
has thought about firing you at least once before his second Diet Coke of the
day.
Of course, there’s more.
Our secretary of homeland security, dog-murdering goofball cosplay
enthusiast Kristi Noem, who is not a former television personality but who
seems to be positioning herself for a future in show business, is having a
little trouble with security here in the homeland, having managed
to get herself robbed of a purse containing $3,000 in cash, among other
sundries, at a restaurant in Washington. The gold
Rolex Daytona she wore to pose in front of Salvadoran gangsters appears to
be safe.
Florida man Dan Bongino, who insists
that “taxation is theft” in spite of the fact that he spent almost the
entirety of his career firmly attached to the taxpayers’ teat as a government
employee of one kind or another, finally made it to the FBI when he was
appointed deputy director. Ever eager to demonstrate what a tough guy he is,
Bongino stepped onto the mat with an FBI trainer, got his ass kicked, and then
took to social media to denounce the New York Times for reporting that
he’d been injured in the ass-kicking. The
New York Times had not yet reported the fact, but Bongino
successfully made the non-story into a non-non-story. Like many of his
colleagues in the administration, Bongino got onto Trump’s radar as a Fox News
guy, and, like many of his colleagues, he is not really qualified for the job
to which he was appointed and is
not very good at it.
Bongino has made some innovations: He has a multiagent
bodyguard team to watch over him, something no previous deputy director has
felt necessary. He also spends a great deal of time behaving like an idiot
child on social media.
There are a couple of good people left in government.
Jerome Powell, the chairman of the Federal Reserve, was never a game-show host
and seems to know what he is doing. Trump is endeavoring mightily to fire him,
and worldwide financial markets are micturating voluminously and
from a great height on U.S. stocks and the dollar. What are the markets
saying? Approximately: “Well, hell. This dumbass apparently means it.”
Meanwhile, there is the vice president, J.D. Vance, who
may have actually bored the pope to death.
Sweet release!
Pope Francis’ occasional heresies (Was the pope
Catholic?) may necessitate the briefest taste of purgatory, but I suspect a lot
of Americans will look back on the holy father’s timing as being pretty solid.
The rest of us will have to live under the wisdom of the
median American voter for a little while longer.
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