http://www.vox.com/policy-and-politics/2016/11/27/13758538/donald-trump-vote-illegally-tweet

Donald Trump is now questioning the legitimacy of the election he won
“I won the popular vote if you deduct the millions of people who voted
illegally,” Trump tweeted.

Updated by Ezra Klein@ezraklein  Nov 27, 2016, 4:15pm EST

Donald Trump took some time off from staffing his White House and
enjoying Thanksgiving to go on a series of Twitter rampages this
weekend. The proximate cause of his rage is the movement for audits of
the vote in a few key states — an effort he derided as, well, “Sad!”
But his anger took a darker turn on Sunday afternoon, when he blasted
out this missive:

 Follow
 Donald J. Trump ✔ @realDonaldTrump
In addition to winning the Electoral College in a landslide, I won the
popular vote if you deduct the millions of people who voted illegally
2:00 AM - 28 Nov 2016
  42,354 42,354 Retweets   122,222 122,222 likes

There’s much to say on this, but here are a few of the obvious points:

1. Trump has lost the thread of his own argument. The point of Trump’s
tweets was to dismiss those questioning the legitimacy of the vote.
“The Green Party scam to fill up their coffers by asking for
impossible recounts is now being joined by the badly defeated &
demoralized Dems,” he tweeted, adding, “Nothing will change.” But
here, Trump undermined himself. If Democrats worry the votes were
miscounted, and the president-elect believes that millions of people
voted fraudulently, then it’s clear we need a recount to restore faith
in the outcome of the election.

2. This perhaps goes without saying, but it’s unnerving that the
president-elect can’t restrain himself from making a bad situation
worse on Twitter, or even hold himself to the logic of the argument he
intended to make and the outcome he wanted to achieve.

3. This tweet is an example of Trump’s most dangerous quality: his
tendency to mobilize against a threatening, sometimes imaginary Other
whenever he himself is under siege. There is no evidence of
significant voter fraud from this election. But Trump is telling his
supporters that voting fraud did in fact happen, and that they should
therefore worry that their political power will be overwhelmed by
illegal voters.

4. The nightmare scenario in 2016 was that Trump would refuse to
accept the outcome of the election when he was a mere candidate.
Imagine if he were to refuse to accept the outcome of the next
election once he is the president, and after he has appointed
loyalists to control America’s security apparatus.

5. Imagine this tendency of Trump’s emerging after a domestic
terrorist attack. George W. Bush worked hard in the aftermath of 9/11
to tamp down Islamophobia in America — to ensure it was al-Qaeda (and,
eventually, Saddam Hussein) who was blamed, not American Muslims. Who
would Trump blame in the aftermath of a terrorist attack? How quick
would he be to turn Americans against each other, to find an enemy who
could absorb the public anger that might normally attach itself to
him?

6. I’ve noticed a lot of people on Twitter seem to think Trump’s tweet
is scary because it’s false, but the actually scary interpretation is
that he believes it’s true, which he probably does. It seems likely
that Trump got his “information” from conspiracy theorist site
InfoWars.com, or someone else retweeting or rewriting InfoWars — a lot
of weird things Trump says later prove to emerged in the pro-Trump,
conspiracy theory-corners of the internet. The problem with Trump
isn’t the lies he tells as much as it’s the information he chooses to
believe.

7. Consider the difference between a world where Trump is lying to us,
and a world where Trump has fooled himself. Trump lost the popular
vote, and he lost it by a wide margin — more than 2 million votes and
counting. A wise man would take that information seriously and think
about how to staff his White House, set priorities, and moderate his
message to win over a majority of the public. Instead, Trump appears
to have convinced himself the vote count was riddled with fraud and
that he won a majority of the legitimate vote — and thus he can govern
like a man who won the popular vote, and holds the mandate that
carries.

8. Back in March, I wrote a piece about how Trump was too gullible —
too fond of bad information and sycophants — to be president. I think
that piece holds up.

9. It has been weeks since Donald Trump won the presidential election,
and here is what we can say: he is still just himself. He is governing
like he promised. He is appointing the loyalists, lackeys, and
extremists he surrounded himself with during the campaign. He is
tweeting the same strange, crazed missives, pursuing the same odd and
counterproductive vendettas. His conflicts of interest have proven, if
anything, worse than expected, and he has shown no shame, restraint,
or interest in addressing them. America — through the electoral
college — voted to make Donald J. Trump president, and we are getting
what we asked for, good and hard.


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Peace Is Doable

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