Though many of us in this country never believed even one word of what Trump Said on the campaign trail he bamboozled up to 34 to 37% of the public into voting for him. But, to me, he still sounds like the guy walking up the street or standing on the corner with obvious PTSD of some kind who has "lost it" somewhere along the way to today. Though you might feel sorry for someone like this you know better than to listen to them or next week it might be you on the corner saying completely insane things and talking to yourself. This is just the reality we all face every day in our lives.
begin quote from:
Cillizza: Trump is making conspiracy theories great again
Donald Trump has made conspiracy theories great again
(CNN)Donald
Trump's political career was birthed of a conspiracy theory: The
much-debunked idea that Barack Obama was not born in the United States.
Trump,
beginning around 2011, seized on the issue -- which had been
percolating in the fever swamps on the far right since Obama won -- and
used it to cast himself as the lone voice among conservatives willing to
stand up to Obama (and political correctness).
That
the whole thing was, wait for it, a totally false conspiracy theory was
beside the point for Trump. It proved useful to him, so he used it.
Given
that origin story, we shouldn't be terribly surprised that Trump's
willingness to engage in conspiracy theories as a candidate has
continued since he entered the White House.
Take Trump's tweets on Saturday alone. They amounted to a conspiracy theorist's dream.
- "Word is that @Greta Van Susteren was let go by her out of control bosses at @NBC & @Comcast because she refused to go along w/ 'Trump hate!'"
- "Numerous states are refusing to give information to the very distinguished VOTER FRAUD PANEL. What are they trying to hide?"
- "I am extremely pleased to see that @CNN has finally been exposed as #FakeNews and garbage journalism. It's about time!"
Let's take these one by one.
The
first tweet deals with MSNBC parting ways with host Greta van Susteren.
Van Susteren, in a series of tweets, offered no evidence that she left
because of any pressure from the bosses that she be more anti-Trump.
The second deals with 27 states rejecting or raising doubts about requests for data from voter rolls made by the Presidential Advisory Commission on Election Integrity.
The objections to providing that information have been bipartisan, with
secretaries of state and governors expressing worries about states'
rights as well as the possibility that the information could be used to
make a case they don't believe exists for widespread voter fraud.
And the final tweet deals, I think, with a story dealing with Russia that CNN retracted 8 days before Trump sent his tweets. (Three people with ties to that story, including its author and editor, resigned in the wake of the retraction.)
In
each of these examples, what Trump does is similar: He takes something
that's happened and insists (or insinuates) that there's something more
to the story. Something people aren't telling you. Something the
"elites" are covering up.
He, of
course, provides no evidence to back up those claims. That's because
there isn't any evidence. What Trump is doing in each of these three
tweets is throwing just enough red meat to the conspiracy-minded to keep
them coming back for more (and more)(and more).
What
Trump is relying on is the self-fulfilling prophecy that drives all
good conspiracy theorists. He knows more than "they" will let him say!
Anyone who doubts Trump is part of the conspiracy! And so on and so
forth.
Now, Trump didn't create
conspiracy theories. He is just taking advantage of their rise, a rise
fueled by the NSA's massive program of personal data collection exposed
by Edward Snowden, Trump backer Alex Jones and a thousand and one Reddit
sub-Reddits that bring together like-minded conspiracy theorists to
prove that they can't all be wrong.
What
Trump has done is mainstream conspiracy theories for his own political
purposes. Much more so than any other past presidential candidate or
president, Trump is willing to indulge conspiracy theories that fit his
political purposes.
He didn't exactly say that Ted Cruz's father was involved with the JFK assassination but there was that photo of Rafael Cruz and Lee Harvey Oswald...
Then there was the time President Obama ordered a wiretap of his phones at Trump Tower. Sure, everyone in the government denies it but....
There's
LOTS more examples. (Millions of people voted illegally in the 2016
election! Muslims were celebrating on the rooftops in New Jersey on
9/11! Etc. Etc. Etc.)
The point
here is that Trump knows exactly what he's doing. It's not important
whether he believes all the conspiracy theories he helps churn up and
push into the mainstream. What's important is that by doing so he
benefits politically.
The result? Conspiracy theories -- and the people who spout them -- have never been more prevalent.
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