[In writing the speech that Trump delivered on Thursday, Bannon—or
Stephen Miller, or whoever composed it—gave free rein to Trump’s
maniacal, zero-sum view of the world. The Paris accord wasn’t
portrayed as the well-meaning, nonbinding, and, in many ways, modest
deal that Barack Obama agreed to join in 2015. Trump spoke of it as if
it were an urgent threat to the economic livelihood of god-fearing
Americans. “Therefore, in order to fulfill my solemn duty to protect
America and its citizens, the United States will withdraw,” Trump
said.
He could have left it there, but he didn’t. This was to be a lengthy
repudiation of environmentalists, and a paean to the coal miners and
other hardhats whom the globalists had trampled on. It was a blowback
to those who thought, when Trump declined to pull the United States of
out of nafta, that the globalists inside his Administration—the Gary
Cohns and Rex Tillersons—had neutered the nationalistic America
Firsters. And, above all, the speech was a “screw you” to the world
beyond America’s borders—to the Macrons and Merkels who had pleaded
with the President in vain not to take this step.
...
This was Trumpism in its full glory—the world as a conspiracy against
its sole superpower, a country that accounts for a quarter of global
G.D.P. and about forty per cent of global personal wealth. “At what
point does America get demeaned?” Trump demanded, his voice rising.
“At what point do they start laughing at us as a country?”
The answer is that the laughing stopped a good while back. What once
seemed like a punch line—Donald Trump in the White House—is now an
everyday reality that the rest of the world is trying to deal with.
After this latest display of nihilism, it only seems more alarming.]

JOHN CASSIDY

DONALD TRUMP’S “SCREW YOU” TO THE WORLD

By John Cassidy   June 1, 2017

In pulling the U.S. out of the Paris climate-change accord, Trump was
ignoring the advice of his senior economic advisers, many of his
fellow-businessmen, and, reportedly, his own daughter and son-in-law.
PHOTOGRAPH BY ANDREW HARRER / BLOOMBERG VIA GETTY

On Thursday, a fine spring day in Washington, D.C., Donald Trump took
to the podium in the White House’s Rose Garden and announced that he
was pulling the United States out of the Paris climate-change
agreement. In doing so, he was ignoring the advice of his senior
economic advisers, many of his fellow-businessmen, and, reportedly,
his own daughter and son-in-law. Ivanka Trump was nowhere to be seen
at the announcement event, but Steve Bannon, the President’s chief
strategist, was strutting around. That was the tip-off for the sort of
address that Trump was about to deliver.

On major occasions, Trump doesn’t do uplifting speeches: we know that
by now. From the campaign stump to his remarks at the Republican
Convention in Cleveland and his Inaugural Address, his big speeches
have all been distinguished by their alarmism, fearmongering, and
negativity. To be sure, he always promises to restore America to past
glories, but that pledge is merely used as the coda to a jeremiad. His
underlying theory of the case is always the same: the United States
has been ripped off, exploited, and swindled.

***In writing the speech that Trump delivered on Thursday, Bannon—or
Stephen Miller, or whoever composed it—gave free rein to Trump’s
maniacal, zero-sum view of the world. The Paris accord wasn’t
portrayed as the well-meaning, nonbinding, and, in many ways, modest
deal that Barack Obama agreed to join in 2015. Trump spoke of it as if
it were an urgent threat to the economic livelihood of god-fearing
Americans. “Therefore, in order to fulfill my solemn duty to protect
America and its citizens, the United States will withdraw,” Trump
said.*** [Emphasis added.]

***He could have left it there, but he didn’t. This was to be a
lengthy repudiation of environmentalists, and a paean to the coal
miners and other hardhats whom the globalists had trampled on. It was
a blowback to those who thought, when Trump declined to pull the
United States of out of nafta, that the globalists inside his
Administration—the Gary Cohns and Rex Tillersons—had neutered the
nationalistic America Firsters. And, above all, the speech was a
“screw you” to the world beyond America’s borders—to the Macrons and
Merkels who had pleaded with the President in vain not to take this
step.*** [Emphasis added.]

“The Paris climate accord,” Trump declared, “is simply the latest
example of Washington entering into an agreement that disadvantages
the United States, to the exclusive benefit of other countries,
leaving American workers, who I love, and taxpayers to absorb the cost
in terms of lost jobs, lower wages, shuttered factories, and vastly
diminished economic production.”

He added, “The rest of the world applauded when we signed the Paris
Agreement. They went wild. . . . For the simple reason that it put our
country, the United States of America, which we all love, at a very,
very big economic disadvantage. . . . The agreement is a massive
redistribution of United States wealth to other countries.”
To back up this contentious argument, Trump cited a study that he said
showed that entering the Paris Agreement would leave the U.S., by
2040, three trillion dollars poorer, and with 6.5 million fewer jobs.
Of course, he didn’t mention the letter that he had received from
twenty-five prominent C.E.O.s, which said, “As some of the largest
companies operating in the United States, we strongly urge you to keep
the United State in the Paris Agreement. . . . By expanding markets
for innovative clean technologies, the agreement generates jobs and
economic growth.”

The “massive redistribution” that Trump talked about is actually a
common expression of intent by rich countries like the United States,
which have been largely responsible for raising the carbon content in
the atmosphere, to help subsidize clean-energy development in
countries like India and Vietnam, which are now going through the sort
of energy-intensive development that Western countries went through
many decades ago. It’s a voluntary commitment, and it’s much smaller
than most environmentalists believe is necessary to avoid a big spike
in carbon emissions.

Trump didn’t mention these things, either. Instead, the Paris accord
was described as the work of scheming foreigners, particularly the
Europeans, and their domestic agents, the traitorous globalists. The
agreement “handicaps the United States economy in order to win praise
from the very foreign capitals and global activists that have long
sought to gain wealth at our country’s expense,” Trump said. “The same
nations asking us to stay in the agreement are the countries that have
collectively cost America trillions of dollars through tough trade
practices and, in many cases, lax contributions to our critical
military alliance. You see what’s happening. It’s pretty obvious to
those that want to keep an open mind.”

***This was Trumpism in its full glory—the world as a conspiracy
against its sole superpower, a country that accounts for a quarter of
global G.D.P. and about forty per cent of global personal wealth. “At
what point does America get demeaned?” Trump demanded, his voice
rising. “At what point do they start laughing at us as a country?”***
[Emphasis added.]

***The answer is that the laughing stopped a good while back. What
once seemed like a punch line—Donald Trump in the White House—is now
an everyday reality that the rest of the world is trying to deal with.
After this latest display of nihilism, it only seems more alarming.***
[Emphasis added.]


John Cassidy has been a staff writer at The New Yorker since 1995. He
also writes a column about politics, economics, and more for
newyorker.com. More


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