By Kevin D. Williamson
Friday, May 30, 2025
“The federal bureaucracy situation is much worse than I
realized,” Elon Musk, the billionaire dilettante tasked by that other
billionaire dilettante with reforming the federal bureaucracy, said earlier
this week. “I thought there were problems, but it sure is an uphill battle
trying to improve things in D.C., to say the least.” The Tesla boss is
out of DOGE and out of the administration and has announced a general retreat from
political engagement, having discovered—as one will—that all this “easy” and
“obvious” and “common sense” stuff turned out to be … hard.
Welcome to the party, you plank.
We’ve been here before, of course. Donald Trump and his
team have been three weeks away from announcing a groundbreaking new health
care plan for … what, just about a decade now? Donald Trump’s confidence in
addressing a complex subject has a linear relationship to his ignorance
regarding that subject, and so we have got gems like this presidential
declaration of ineptitude: “Nobody knew that health care could be so
complicated.” It isn’t the case that nobody knew—lots of people knew.
Some of those people had good ideas, some had terrible ideas, but they knew it
was complicated. The guy who didn’t know? The one who spent most of his life as
a Manhattan gadfly, a game-show host with side hustles in pro wrestling and
porn. That guy didn’t know.
The problem—one of the problems—is that that guy doesn’t
know what he doesn’t know.
An “outsider,” his admirers like to call him. And Trump
is an outsider in Washington in the same way that a guy who skipped every class
but shows up for the final exam is an outsider in Physics 101. Maybe he’s the
captain of the football team or a trust-fund dork from Queens. The problem
isn’t that he’s from a different social milieu from the nerds who did the
reading—the problem is that he doesn’t know anything and is too arrogant and
slothful to do his homework.
And it shows.
Trump insisted
that “trade wars are good and easy to win,” but he has been backed down and
forced to reverse himself at every turn. Much money is being made on the “TACO”
trade, what the finance guys call their current profitable strategy of betting
that Trump will always change course when things get hard—TACO being an acronym
for Trump Always Chickens Out.
Trump vowed that he’d put an end to the brutal Russian
assault on Ukraine (not that he’d speak about it that honestly) before even
taking the oath of office the second time around, and, when Vladimir Putin more
or less laughed in his face, he was reduced to passive-aggressive social media posts:
“What Vladimir Putin doesn’t realize is that if it weren’t for me, lots of
really bad things would have already happened to Russia, and I mean REALLY BAD.
He’s playing with fire!” Not something … REALLY BAD! Oh, dear, anything but that. Say
what you will about a murdering degenerate such as the Russian caudillo,
there isn’t any PACO trade being giggled about up and down Wall Street.
I meet a lot of conspiracy kooks in my life, from
inside-the-Beltway types raging against the “deep state” to your old-fashioned
Jews-run-the-Fed types, and they all sound alike to me after a point. Here’s a
little whisper from a guy who has spent a good deal of time with Washington’s
sausage makers and who was (relevant to the conspiracy nuts) present for the
infamous events at Waco,
Texas, in 1993: There are no conspiracies. There are no secrets. Everything
is more or less what it seems. Trump critics sometimes are vulnerable, too,
with whispers of Russian kompromat or mob debts or secretly diagnosed
mental illness. But the obvious explanation for Trump’s eccentricity (or most
anything else) is almost always the
correct explanation. Which is why I have been writing for all these years that
the key to understanding the Trump administration is that its central figure,
Donald Trump, is stupid, lazy, and angry. Almost any of his seemingly
inexplicable actions can be explained by picking some ranked combination from
this list:
1. Stupid
2. Lazy
3. Angry
4. Stupid
and Lazy
5. Stupid
and Angry
6. Lazy
and Angry
7. Stupid,
Lazy, and Angry
8. Lazy
and Stupid
9. Angry
and Lazy
10. Angry
and Stupid
11. Stupid,
Lazy
12. Stupid,
Angry
13. Lazy,
Angry
14. Stupid,
Lazy, Angry
15. Lazy,
Stupid, Angry
16. Angry,
Stupid, Lazy
That’s it. There are people around Trump, such as Marco
Rubio and J.D. Vance, who are not stupid or lazy (though both are distinctly
angry men) but are functionally indistinguishable from the stupid and the lazy
because they are throne-sniffing sycophants who dread a return to the private
sector more than almost anything else in this life. When smart and active
people who lack integrity decide to reorganize their lives and their souls to
accommodate the whimsies and toddler tantrums of a man who is (see 1-16 above),
they end up conducting their careers as though they themselves were similarly
afflicted. That’s a mistake. Trump isn’t mentally disabled, but if your shower
temperature were the same number as his IQ, you’d be shopping for a new water
heater.
It is a lot easier to replace a water heater than to
replace a president, to revive a wrecked political party, or to buy your soul
back after selling it at whatever bargain-basement price poor old J.D. Vance
got.
It’s all right there to see: Trump, the supposed master
negotiator, is as a matter of practical fact able to effectively negotiate
exclusively in situations in which no substantial negotiation is required:
with people he can fire, for example, or with utterly dependent parties. He
calls this “negotiating from a position of strength” instead of “bossing around
your cowering flunkies.” Even when a party that is largely dependent on
the U.S. government and the goodwill of the Trump administration has a modicum
of independence and agency, Trump finds it nearly impossible to get his way:
e.g., the Benjamin
Netanyahu government in Israel, our European
trading partners, Apple,
etc. A guy who cannot successfully boss around Jerome Powell isn’t going to
twist Vladimir Putin’s arm with any great success.
Again, there’s no mystery here: These people don’t know
what they are doing. Elon Musk’s personal state of ketamine-enhanced pristine
ignorance may be his and his alone, but the sober ignoramuses around him are no
less ignorant for their sobriety. (Or relative sobriety over at the Pentagon.)
Donald Trump is a jumped-up dolt. Director of National Intelligence Tulsi
Gabbard and Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and FBI
Director Kash Patel are conspiracy kooks, fools, and ignoramuses. Steve
Witkoff, Trump’s special envoy to the Middle East, is an incompetent. Defense
Secretary Pete Hegseth is a booze-addled, second-tier morning-show host. Kelly
Loeffler, head of the Small Business Administration, is a billionaire
dilettante whose previous big job was serving as CEO of a company owned by her
husband. Who does that leave? Bootlicking toadies setting themselves up to get
on (or back on) the Fox News gravy train post-Trump and ride it until it runs
out of money. Jeanine Pirro. Stephen Miller.
And poor, puzzled Elon Musk, who has tucked his tail
between his legs and run off to Texas complaining that the “federal bureaucracy
situation is much worse than I realized.” His No. 2 at DOGE is
leaving, too. It was bigger than they realized, Musk says. Maybe he should
have consulted somebody who knows something.
Because Musk and Trump and those around them apparently
don’t know the first thing about what’s actually going on in Washington.
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