By Victor Davis Hanson
Tuesday, April 24, 2018
On the domestic and foreign fronts, the Trump
administration has prompted economic growth and restored U.S. deterrence. Polls
show increased consumer confidence, and in some, Trump himself has gained
ground. Yet good news is bad news to the Resistance and its strange continued
efforts to stop an elected president in a way it failed to do in the 2016
election.
Indeed, the aim of the so-called Resistance to Donald J.
Trump is ending Trump’s presidency by any means necessary before the 2020
election. Or, barring that, it seeks to so delegitimize him that he becomes
presidentially impotent. It has been only 16 months since Trump took office
and, in the spirit of revolutionary fervor, almost everything has been tried to
derail him. Now we are entering uncharted territory — at a time when otherwise
the country is improving and the legal exposure of Trump’s opponents increases
daily.
First came the failed lawsuits after the election
alleging voting-machine tampering. Then there was the doomed celebrity effort
to convince some state electors not to follow their constitutional duty and to
deny Trump the presidency — a gambit that, had it worked, would have wrecked
the Constitution. Then came the pathetic congressional boycott of the
inauguration and the shrill nationwide protests against the president.
Next was the sad effort to introduce articles of
impeachment. After that came weird attempts to cite Trump for violations of the
emoluments clause of the Constitution. That puerile con was followed by plans
to declare him deranged and mentally unfit so that he could be removed under
the 25th Amendment. From time to time, Obama holdovers in the DOJ, National
Security Council, and FBI sought to leak information, or they refused to carry
out presidential orders.
As the Resistance goes from one ploy to the next, it
ignores its string of failed prior efforts, forgetting everything and learning
nothing. State nullification is no longer neo-Confederate but an
any-means-necessary progressive tool. Suing the government weekly is proof of
revolutionary fides, not a waste of California’s taxpayer dollars.
Anti- and Never-Trump op-ed writers have long ago run out
of superlatives. Trump is the worst, most, biggest — fill in the blank — in the
history of the presidency, in the history of the world, worse even than Mao,
Mussolini, Stalin, or Hitler. So if Trump is a Hitler who gassed 6 million or a
Stalin who starved 20 million, then logically Trump deserves what exactly?
The book industry is doing its part. Mythographer Michael
Wolff’s hearsay Fire and Fury suggested
that Trump was a dangerous child despised as much by his friends as by his
enemies. As FBI director, James Comey leaked confidential memos, lied to
Congress, misled a FISA court, admitted that he based his handling of the
Clinton-email investigation on the assumption she’d win the presidency,
misinformed the president about the status of his investigation. And the
now-former director book-tours the country slamming Trump hourly on the
assumption that he would certainly not be former,
if only his prior obsequious efforts to appease Trump had saved his job. Comey
is building perjury cases against himself daily with each new disclosure that
belie past sworn testimonies, but that is apparently less scary to him than
simply ignoring Trump.
Robert Mueller and his “dream team” were long ago
supposed to have discovered proof of Trump’s collusion with Russia. A year
later, they have found nothing much to do with this mandate. Then the
alternative scent was obstruction of justice. Then the chase took another
detour to follow some sort of fraud or racketeering. Now the FBI is reduced to
raiding Trump’s lawyer in an effort to root out the real story on Stormy
Daniels. One wonders what might have happened had Michael Cohen panicked and
destroyed 30,000 emails before Mueller seized his computers. No matter,
Mueller’s legal army presses on, even as it leaves its own wounded on the
battlefield, as resignations, reassignments, and retirements for improper
conduct decimate the Obama-era FBI and DOJ hierarchies.
Trump has left the intelligence community unhinged. John
Brennan (“When the full extent of your venality, moral turpitude, and political
corruption becomes known, you will take your rightful place as a disgraced
demagogue in the dustbin of history. . . . America will triumph over you”) and
James Clapper (who called Trump a veritable traitor working for Putin) have
both admitted to lying under oath to Congress in the past, and with their
present invective, they have discredited the very notion of a Washington
intelligence elite. At some point, Mueller’s zealotry will remind federal
attorneys that equality under the law demands indictments of those with far
greater legal exposure, regardless of the exalted status of Comey, Andrew
McCabe, and — in the matter of lying under oath, leaking classified materials,
and destroying evidence — John Brennan, James Clapper and Hillary Clinton.
In addition, a media, found to be more than 90 percent
negative in its coverage of the Trump administration, sought to delegitimize
the president. Journalists declare that disinterested reporting is impossible
in the age of Trump — and therefore believe that Stormy Daniels or James
Comey’s Dudley Do-Right’s memos are a pathway to accomplish what they are
beginning to concede Robert Mueller cannot.
Everything from the NFL to late-night comedy shows have
become Trump-hating venues. Almost every sort of smear from scatology to
homophobia has been voiced by celebrities to turn Trump into a president
deserving such abuse — and worse. Late-night television host Steven Colbert was
reduced to incoherent and repellant venom: “You talk like a sign-language
gorilla that got hit in the head. In fact, the only thing your mouth is good
for is being Vladimir Putin’s c*** holster.” Actor Robert De Niro has become
deranged and dreams of pounding on Trump’s face. But then so does former vice
president Joe Biden, who on two occasions boasted that Trump is the sort of guy
that a younger he-man Biden used to take outside the gym to give a whippin’ to.
Each cycle of hysteria demands another, as the race to
the bottom has descended into which celebrity or politician can discover the
most provocative — or crude — Trump expletive. “S***” and “f***” are now the
ordinary vocabulary of angry Democratic politicos and officeholders. Are we
reaching a point in the so-far-failed Resistance where little is left except
abject violence in the manner of the Roman or French Revolution? The problem
for Trump’s pop-culture foes is not whether to imagine or advocate killing the
president. That’s a given. They just need to agree on the means of doing so:
decapitation (Kathy Griffin), incineration (David Crosby), stabbing (the
Shakespeare in the Park troupe), shooting (Snoop Dogg), explosives (Madonna),
old-fashion, Lincoln-style assassination (Johnny Depp), death by elevator
(Kamala Harris), hanging (a CSU professor), or simple generic assassination (a
Missouri state legislator).
Now the Democratic party — whose presidential candidate,
Hillary Clinton, hired Christopher Steele to find dirt on Trump with the aid of
Russian sources to warp the 2016 election — is suing President Trump, alleging
collusion with the Russians. If Clinton were called as a witness, what would
she say under cross-examination — that she did not hire Steele, that he never
purchased Russian dirt, or that there was no collusion effort to enlist foreign
nationals such as British subject Christopher Steele and Russian propagandists
to warp an American election?
Insidiously and incrementally, we are in the process of
normalizing violence against the elected president of the United States. If all
this fails to delegitimize Trump, fails to destroy his health, or fails to lead
to a 2018 midterm Democratic sweep and subsequent impeachment, expect even
greater threats of violence. The Resistance and rabid anti-Trumpers have lost
confidence in the constitutional framework of elections, and they’ve flouted
the tradition by which the opposition allows the in-power party to present its
case to the court of public opinion.
Instead, like the French revolutionaries’ Committee on
Public Safety, the unhinged anti-Trumpists assume that they have lost public
opinion, given their venom and crudity, and are growing desperate as every
legal and paralegal means of removing Trump is nearing exhaustion. Robert
Mueller is the last chance, a sort of Watergate or Abu Ghraib that could gin up
enough furor to drive down Trump’s poll favorability to the twenties and
thereby reduce his person to a demonic force deserving of whatever it gets.
After the prior era of hysteria, between 2005 and 2008,
when books and docudramas staged the imagined assassination of George W. Bush,
and celebrities like Michael Moore and activists such as Cindy Sheehan reduced
Bush to the status of a war criminal, the Left in 2009 demanded a return to
normal political discourse and comportment, with the election of Barack Obama.
A newly contrite and apologetic America was abruptly worth believing in again.
In 2009, the CIA and FBI suddenly were reinvented as hallowed agents of change.
Bush careerists, including Clapper and Brennan, were now
damning the very counterterrorism practices that they once helped put in place,
while offering Obama-like politically correct sermons on the benign nature of
Islamism. Surveillance and jailing were appropriate punishments for suspected
Obama apostates (ask James Rosen or Nkoula Basseley Nakoula). The IRS was
weaponized for use against Obama’s ideological opponents. Suggestions that the
president was unfit or worse became near treasonous. Unity was the new
patriotism. The assumption was that Obama had ushered in a half-century of
progressive norms, not that he so alienated the country that he birthed Donald
Trump.
The danger to the country this time around is that the
Left has so destroyed the old protocols of the opposition party that it will be
hard to resurrect them when progressives return to power.
We are entering revolutionary times. The law is no longer
equally applied. The media are the ministry of truth. The Democratic party is a
revolutionary force. And it is all getting scary.
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