[It’s not exactly a news flash at this point that Donald Trump isn’t very
fluent on questions of public policy, but his interview over the weekend
with Fox Business Channel’s Maria Bartiromo is really a sobering reminder
of the levels of ignorance and dishonesty that the country is dealing with.
...
It’s a funny interview in many ways. Along with being comically ignorant,
Trump for some reason keeps referring to Chief of Staff John Kelly as
“elegant.” But the prospect of a president of the United States who’s
incapable of talking about any of the many issues he oversees in a
reasonable way is also pretty scary.]

https://www.vox.com/policy-and-politics/2017/10/23/16522456/trump-bartiromo-transcript

Trump’s latest big interview is both funny and terrifying
POTUS swings and misses at the softest softballs.

Updated by Matthew Yglesias@[email protected]  Oct 23, 2017, 3:57pm
EDT

Screenshot from Fox News

It’s not exactly a news flash at this point that Donald Trump isn’t very
fluent on questions of public policy, but his interview over the weekend
with Fox Business Channel’s Maria Bartiromo is really a sobering reminder
of the levels of ignorance and dishonesty that the country is dealing with.

Bartiromo is an extraordinarily soft interviewer who doesn’t ask Trump any
difficult questions or press him on any subject. That makes the extent to
which he manages to flub the interview all the more striking. He’s simply
incapable of discussing any topic at any length in anything remotely
resembling an informed or coherent way. He says the Federal Reserve is
“important psychotically” and it’s part of one of his better answers, since
one can at least tell that he meant to say “psychologically.”

By contrast, it’s often hard to make any sense at all of Trump’s words.
Asked whether he plans to tie an infrastructure plan to his tax plan, Trump
says, “I was thinking about tying it, but there’s too many honestly.” Too
many what? He then continues: “You lose a few votes, you gain a few votes.
I don’t want to take any chances ’cause I feel we have the votes right now
the way it is.” There is, of course, no tax bill at the moment, so there’s
no way Trump has the votes for it.

It’s a funny interview in many ways. Along with being comically ignorant,
Trump for some reason keeps referring to Chief of Staff John Kelly as
“elegant.” But the prospect of a president of the United States who’s
incapable of talking about any of the many issues he oversees in a
reasonable way is also pretty scary.

Trump doesn’t know anything about any issue
As a table setter, here is Trump attempting to tout a report by his own
Council of Economic Advisers arguing that cutting the corporate tax rate to
20 percent will raise the average American household’s wages by $4,000:

And I think that there’s tremendous appetite. There’s tremendous spirit for
it, not only by the people we’re dealing with in Congress but for the
people out there that want to see something — $5,000, almost. It can be
$5,000 average per individual — per group. And so I’m really looking
forward to it. Let’s see what happens.
Of course $4,000 and $5,000 are different amounts of money, as you will
swiftly learn if you attempt to give someone $4,000 to discharge a $5,000
debt. And individuals aren’t households. Trump seems to have kinda sorta
caught himself on this one and corrected himself from “per individual” to
“per group.” But of course there are all kinds of groups.

That is Trump’s grasp of his administration’s analysis of his own No. 1
policy priority — he can’t remember either the amount of money involved or
the unit of analysis. A bit later, Trump shows a similar grasp of detail in
describing his view of the bipartisan health care legislation from Sens.
Patty Murray (D-WA) and Lamar Alexander (R-TN):

Well, I’ve — I have looked at it very, very strongly. And pretty much, we
can do almost what they’re getting. I — I think he is a tremendous person.
I don’t know Sen. Murray. I hear very, very good things.

I know that Lamar Alexander’s a fine man, and he is really in there to do
good for the people. We can do pretty much what we have to do without, you
know, the secretary has tremendous leeway in the — under the Obama plans.
One of the things that they did, because they were so messed up, they had
no choice but to give the secretary leeway because they knew he’d have to
be — he or she would have to be changing all the time.

And we can pretty much do whatever we have to do just the way it is. So
this was going to be temporary, prior to repeal and replace. We’re going to
repeal and replace Obamacare.
Trump has no information about, interest in, or knowledge of the substance
of the bill. Instead, he judges it entirely on the basis of his personal
impressions of the legislators involved. Except while he vouches that
Alexander is “a fine man,” he hasn’t bothered to get to know Murray at all,
even though she’s the top Democrat on the committee with jurisdiction over
health care and health care was his main legislative initiative for the
first nine months of his administration.

Bartiromo keeps ineptly trying to cover for Trump
Another signature quality of the interview is that since Trump is actually
totally incapable of answering softball questions, Bartiromo has to try to
lead him by the nose to delivering on-message propaganda. Trump, however,
is not that cooperative with this agenda.

Cutting taxes on the rich, for example, is unpopular. So the White House’s
plan to get tax cuts on the rich passed is to lie about it and pretend
they’re actually proposing a big middle-class tax cut. Bartiromo tries to
get Trump to say that, but he keeps getting distracted by his desire to
tell a name-dropping story about the owner of the New England Patriots:

BARTIROMO: If the top earners pay 80 percent of the taxes, why are you so
afraid to cut taxes on the top earners?

TRUMP: I think this, look, you know, I am very happy with the way I’ve done
part of this in my civilian life, all right.

BARTIROMO: Of course. This is not about —

TRUMP: Other people — well, it’s about me representing rich people.

BARTIROMO: Okay.

TRUMP: Representing — being representative of rich people. Very interesting
to me Bob Kraft was down. He was very nice. He owns the Patriots. He gave
me a Super Bowl ring a month ago. And he —

BARTIROMO: Well, Putin took his —

TRUMP: Which was very nice. That’s right. But he left this beautiful ring,
and I immediately give it to the White House and they put it some place,
and that’s the way it is.

BARTIROMO: That’s great.

TRUMP: He said to me — he’s a good man. He said to me you have to do us all
a favor, give the tax decrease to the middle class, we don’t need it. We
don’t need it. We don’t want it. Give it to the middle class. And, I’ve had
many people, very wealthy people, tell me the very same thing. I’ve had
very few say I want more, I want more.
Then Trump meanders off message and admits that what he’s really backing is
a huge tax cut for rich business owners:

TRUMP: So that’s a big factor, but we have so many things that are going to
be so great; bringing the corporate tax down maybe is the most important.
And we have a lot of most important, but bringing it down from 35 down to
20 percent, that’s a massive — that’s the biggest that we’ve ever done.

BARTIROMO: It’s a big deal in the corporate rate for sure.

TRUMP: That’s a big deal for companies; that’s a big deal for investment. I
think one of the other ones is expensing, you know when you write something
off in one year as opposed to, you know, over many years, I think that’s
going to be tremendous.
Trump undermines his own “tough on Iran” policies
In a really striking moment, Trump seems to repudiate his own policy toward
Iran, disavowing any interest in getting foreign countries to crack down on
trade with a country that he’s accused of all manner of misdeeds:

BARTIROMO: Do you think they're going to get Europeans to support you in
terms of sanctions, in terms of not selling technology to Iran?

TRUMP: Honestly, I told them. They're friends of mine. They really are. I
get along with all of them. Whether it's Emmanuel [Macron] or whether it’s
Angela [Merkel], I get along — I really like those people.

I told them, just keep making money. Don’t worry about it. We don’t need
you on this. You just keep making money. When Iran buys things from Germany
and from France and from the various — by billions of dollars, even us,
they were going to buy Boeings. I don’t know what's going to happen with
the deal.

We'll see what happens with the deal, but — but when they buy those things,
it's a little harder for those countries to do something. Would they do it
if I really was insistent? I believe they would.

I told them just keep making money. Don’t worry. We don’t need you on this
one.
The reality is that precisely because the United States has been
sanctioning Iran since the embassy crisis in 1980, the vast majority of the
incremental leverage that was applied to the Iranians over their nuclear
weapons program came from sanctions imposed by European and other foreign
nations. It’s unlikely that the US could persuade those countries to go
back to their pre-deal sanctions just because Trump has decided he doesn’t
like the multilateral deal. But if you disavow any intention of getting
Europeans to sanction Iran, there’s absolutely no point to the whole
exercise.

And of course it’s no surprise that Trump can’t get any of his policy
analysis right, since he keeps misstating very basic facts.

Trump gets all kinds of facts wrong
Sometimes Trump’s factual errors are just a little bit of puffery.

Bartiromo says, “You see the job creation, as well this year,” to which
Trump replies, “It’s been fantastic.” In reality, job creation this year —
while okay — has been somewhat slower than job creation in 2016 or 2015.

He also gets numbers wrong, like when he says, “If we pick up one point on
GDP that’s $2.5 trillion if you think of.” The right number would be $185
billion, so Trump missed the mark by a couple of trillion bucks — which is
a lot of money even for a rich guy.

Trump also brags of last quarter’s 3.2 percent GDP growth that “we haven’t
been there in a long time; it’s been a long time.” In fact, we had a
stronger growth quarters in Q1 of 2015, Q3 of 2014, Q2 of 2014, Q4 of 2013,
and Q3 of 2013. There’s nothing particularly unusual about it, in other
words.

Trump, however, compounds his vague misstatement with some extra detail,
saying, “As you know, the previous administration didn’t hit it for the
year for eight years,” which isn’t remotely true, before reiterating, “In
eight years it didn’t hit it at all.”

He says the trade deficit with Mexico is “almost $70 billion a year” when
the right number is $55 billion, and that “there is hardly a country” with
which the United States runs a trade surplus. “I can name two,” Trump
concedes. The Census Bureau, however, has a full top 10 list, starting with
Hong Kong, the Netherlands, and Belgium but also featuring Australia,
Brazil, Egypt, and the United Kingdom.

Trump claims to “have made more progress against ISIS in the last nine
months than in the last eight years,” when ISIS is only about four or five
years old.

This is how we live now
Over the course of the interview, Trump also claims to be working on a
major infrastructure bill, a major welfare reform bill, and an unspecified
economic development bill of some kind.

Under almost any other past president, that kind of thing would be
considered a huge news-making get for an interviewer. But even Fox didn’t
tout Bartiromo’s big scoops on Trump’s legislative agenda, because 10
months into the Trump presidency, nobody is so foolish as to believe that
him saying, “We’re doing a big infrastructure bill,” means that the Trump
administration is, in fact, doing a big infrastructure bill. The president
just mouths off at turns ignorantly and dishonestly, and nobody pays much
attention to it unless he says something unusually inflammatory.

On some level, it’s a little bit funny. On another level, Puerto Rico is
still languishing in the dark without power (and in many cases without safe
drinking water) with no end in sight. Trump is less popular at this point
in his administration than any previous president despite a generally
benign economic climate, and shows no sign of changing course.

Perhaps it will all work out for the best, and someday we’ll look back and
chuckle about the time when we had a president who didn’t know anything
about anything that was happening and could never be counted on to make
coherent, factual statements on any subject. But traditionally, we haven’t
elected presidents like that — for what have always seemed like pretty good
reasons — and the risks of compounding disaster are still very much out
there.


-- 
Peace Is Doable

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Green Youth Movement" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To post to this group, send an email to [email protected].
Visit this group at https://groups.google.com/group/greenyouth.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to