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In a sad week for America, Trump has fled from his duty

danmand

Well-known member
Nov 28, 2003
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This has to sting. David Gerken is one of the most respected commentators on the Presidency.



In a sad week for America, Trump has fled from his duty
David Gergen

Updated 8:19 AM ET, Sun May 31, 2020


(CNN)This past week has brought tragedy upon tragedy to our nation: the death toll from Covid-19 passed a grim milestone of 100,000 deaths; the brutal killing of George Floyd ignited mass protests in Minneapolis and beyond, and seven were shot dead demanding justice in Louisville.

But our President was mostly busy with other things: getting into a public fight with Twitter, condemning China over Hong Kong and terminating our relationship with the World Health Organization -- an entity that once looked to the United States as the world's leading institution in fighting pandemics.
President Donald Trump also took time, of course, to send out a stream of new, controversial tweets. He called protesters in Minneapolis "thugs" and repeated a racist line from a Miami police chief years ago, "When the looting starts, the shooting starts." He even retweeted a video in which a supporter says, "The only good Democrat is a dead Democrat."
But other than a brief tweet in the midst of another storm, Trump remained silent on the most sensitive issue of his presidency: the pandemic that is killing so many older Americans and people of color living near the edge. Understandably, with the rash of other news, the press is moving on. But we should pause for one more moment to recognize how sad and sharp a departure his silence is from past traditions of the presidency.
Ex-prosecutor: Complaint against Minnesota cop in George Floyd case drops important clues
Ex-prosecutor: Complaint against Minnesota cop in George Floyd case drops important clues
Since the early days of the Republic until now, Americans have looked to our presidents to provide protection, meaning and comfort, especially in moments of crisis. After George Washington was sworn as commander in chief of the Continental Army, Ethan Allen's younger brother, Levi, wrote to Washington in 1776 that he had become "Our political Father and head of a Great People." Shortly thereafter, Washington was frequently referred to as "Father of Our Country." As he steered us through war, the constitutional convention, and two terms as President, the phrase caught on. He wasn't much of a speaker -- he thought his deeds spoke for him -- but he was a leader of such strong character and rock-solid integrity that he became the gold standard of the presidency.
Lincoln began his presidency during great uncertainty about his leadership. He won the election of 1860 with the smallest plurality ever (39%), and his military experience was virtually nil. But over time, he kindled a special relationship with Union soldiers, many of whom called him "Father Abraham." Historians say his homespun ways, common manner and kindly empathy converted them. In his re-election, soldiers were his greatest supporters.
Franklin Roosevelt was known to be self-involved in his early years, but his struggles with polio transformed him into a caring, compassionate leader. Working families and many people of color thought they had a friend in the White House. So attached did his followers become that when he gave a fireside chat on a summer evening, you could walk down the streets of Baltimore and hear every word as families sat in their living room by a radio.
It's been five decades since 1968, and things are somehow worse
It's been five decades since 1968, and things are somehow worse
Historians generally agree that Washington, Lincoln and FDR were our greatest presidents. All three are remembered for their empathy and steadfastness in caring for the lives of average Americans. They continue to set the standard.
In contemporary times, it is harder for any president to sustain deep ties with a majority of Americans. We are too sharply divided as a people, and the internet often brings out the worst in us. Even so, several of our recent presidents have found moments when they can unify us and make us feel that at the end of the day, we are indeed one people. In many cases, these moments have come to define their presidencies: Ask any American adult and they can generally remember one, two or even three occasions in which recent presidents connected with us emotionally, stirring our hearts.
I remember with absolute clarity the Challenger disaster in 1986. One saw the plumes of the rising space craft against a bright blue sky -- and then that horrific explosion as it instantly disappeared. Ronald Reagan was one of the few presidents in our history who expressed our emotions so well in a moment of shock and mourning. For hour upon hour, the networks had replayed the explosion, and it seemed so meaningless. But then Reagan used his speech to replace that picture in our minds with a different one: the astronauts waving goodbye. They became our heroes, especially as Reagan (drawing upon speechwriter Peggy Noonan) closed with lines from a World War II poem: "We will never forget them, nor the last time we saw them, this morning, as they prepared for their journey and waved goodbye and 'slipped the surly bonds of earth' to 'touch the face of God.'"

One thinks, too, of Bill Clinton traveling to Oklahoma City after the bombing there of a federal building in 1995. Clinton, like Reagan, was at his best when he captured tangled emotions and gave meaning to deaths of some of our finest citizens. He not only consoled families in private but moved the nation when he mourned them publicly. As I recall, that's when presidents were first called "Mourners in Chief" -- a phrase that has been applied repeatedly to presidents since. (Not coincidentally, Clinton's speech of mourning in Oklahoma City is widely credited with resurrecting his presidency, then in the doldrums.)
One remembers, too, George W. Bush standing on the top of a crushed police car in the rubble of the World Trade Center bombing. When a first responder said he couldn't hear the President, Bush responded through his bullhorn: "I can hear you. The rest of the world hears you. And the people who knocked these buildings down will hear all of us soon."
One also remembers Barack Obama flying again and again to speak at gravesites where young children or church parishioners were being buried, victims gunned down in a gun-obsessed nation. Thinking about the mass shooting at Emanuel African Methodist Church in Charleston, one's mind returns to the image of the President of the United States leading a memorial service, singing "Amazing Grace."

Reagan, Clinton, Bush, Obama -- two Republicans, two Democrats -- served as our "Mourners in Chief." All four bound us together for a few moments, and we remembered who we are and who we can be.
Why has our current "Mourner in Chief" gone AWOL? God knows. But his flight from responsibility is yet another sadness among this week's tragic losses.
 

Anbarandy

Bitter House****
Apr 27, 2006
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WTF is Gergen smoking.

Trump has not dodged his duty at all because his duty was, is and always be solely and only to himself.

Everyone knew what they were getting and that is why the American people love him, voted for him, defend him and will vote for him until someone rips their machine guns from their bloody hands.

God bless not America, but America's beloved Donald Trump.

Sieg Heil.
 

jcpro

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Jan 31, 2014
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LOL! The riots are still in progress. How is Trump suppose to "mourn"? When Baltimore was burning under Obama, that president said the same thing as Trump when Obama called the rioters "criminals and THUGS". Memory problems, double standard, much? Those are Democrat run cities. If the racism is so prevalent among their institutions and justice and the law enforcement in particular, how is this being laid at the White House's door? Those are state's responsibilities that have been neglected by those now screaming the loudest about this whole situation. Why is the mayor of Minneapolis not being taken to task for tolerating substandard police officers in his employ???? You can blame Washington all you want, but the rot is local.
 

Anbarandy

Bitter House****
Apr 27, 2006
10,178
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LOL! The riots are still in progress. How is Trump suppose to "mourn"? When Baltimore was burning under Obama, that president said the same thing as Trump when Obama called the rioters "criminals and THUGS". Memory problems, double standard, much? Those are Democrat run cities. If the racism is so prevalent among their institutions and justice and the law enforcement in particular, how is this being laid at the White House's door? Those are state's responsibilities that have been neglected by those now screaming the loudest about this whole situation. Why is the mayor of Minneapolis not being taken to task for tolerating substandard police officers in his employ???? You can blame Washington all you want, but the rot is local.
Farkin hilariously predictable.

Your post is redundant as it has already been documented in post #2.
 

apoptygma

Well-known member
Dec 31, 2017
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LOL! The riots are still in progress. How is Trump suppose to "mourn"? When Baltimore was burning under Obama, that president said the same thing as Trump when Obama called the rioters "criminals and THUGS". Memory problems, double standard, much? Those are Democrat run cities. If the racism is so prevalent among their institutions and justice and the law enforcement in particular, how is this being laid at the White House's door? Those are state's responsibilities that have been neglected by those now screaming the loudest about this whole situation. Why is the mayor of Minneapolis not being taken to task for tolerating substandard police officers in his employ???? You can blame Washington all you want, but the rot is local.
If it is a local problem, why is your dear leader sticking his nose in where it doesn't belong?
 

Boober69

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Feb 23, 2012
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If it is a local problem, why is your dear leader sticking his nose in where it doesn't belong?
So you just ignored everything jcpro said and conveniently twisted the narrative to ask why he is getting involved? Maybe because if he didn't then you would condemn him for not "sticking his nose in"?

Trump's speech at the Space X launch was perfect...but don't hear anyone saying anything about that?
 

Frankfooter

dangling member
Apr 10, 2015
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So you just ignored everything jcpro said and conveniently twisted the narrative to ask why he is getting involved? Maybe because if he didn't then you would condemn him for not "sticking his nose in"?

Trump's speech at the Space X launch was perfect...but don't hear anyone saying anything about that?
Trump's speech was too late and too little.
He called Floyd's brother and wouldn't listen to him.

Nothing he has said cancels out:
'when the looting starts, the shooting starts'.
or this.

Big crowd, professionally organized, but nobody came close to breaching the fence. If they had they would have been greeted with the most vicious dogs, and most ominous weapons, I have ever seen,” Trump wrote. “That’s when people would have been really badly hurt, at least.”
 

Boober69

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Feb 23, 2012
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Trump's speech was perfect. You just can't admit it and now claim it was too late. Making that speech when the world was watching the success of the launch reached more people than any other speech he would have made days prior.

I guess seeing as you support vandalism in general, no wonder why you condone looting and get your back up when someone actually says something against it.
 

Boober69

Well-known member
Feb 23, 2012
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Wrong speech but nice try.

btw next time you want to post a quote, you should include the whole thing rather than being selective to suit your purpose:

“Big crowd, professionally organized, but nobody came close to breaching the fence. If they had they would have been greeted with the most vicious dogs, and most ominous weapons, I have ever seen,” Trump wrote. “That’s when people would have been really badly hurt, at least.”

Regardless of the president in power, anyone who breaches that fence would be greeted with dogs & weapons...nothing new here. It's called security...you should read up on it or try and hop that fence and get real proof.
 

Darts

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Jan 15, 2017
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Apparently, there's been a threat on Trump's life. His security detail have taken him to the White House bunker.
 

Frankfooter

dangling member
Apr 10, 2015
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Apparently, there's been a threat on Trump's life. His security detail have taken him to the White House bunker.
I thought Trump had his vicious dogs and 'ominous' weapons to defend himself.
He's such a pansy he had to hide in the basement and fix his makeup.
 

derrick76

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May 10, 2011
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Apparently, there's been a threat on Trump's life. His security detail have taken him to the White House bunker.
Was this before or after he took spoke to Floyd's brother on the phone? Same call he reportedly didn't bother listening to what the brother has to say.
 

Anbarandy

Bitter House****
Apr 27, 2006
10,178
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Trump is afraid of Americans now?
He had to turn the lights off in the White House and hide in the basement.
Probably had to change his diapers too.
He also can always reach into his Big Mac sauce stained back pocket and pull out his trusty "weasel out of the heat free" Bone Spurs card,
 

SchlongConery

License to Shill
Jan 28, 2013
11,717
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You dont know the difference between municipal and federal govt it seems?

If the mayor wont do shit, who's issue does it become?

The State.

Municipal Police departments are created, authourized and overseen by State govt.

Municipal policing is not a Federal issue.

Having said that.... Federal leaders including the President have a leadership role. In this case, his bully threats of escalating violence only serves to pour gasoline on this fire. A good leader would look to find ways to de-escalate violence and unify people. The very thing being protested is government/police escalating violence in situations where other alternatives are possible.

Trump is governed what is best for his political future. In this case, his "base" loves him for threatening niggers* to fall back in line... or else we'll release the dogs on them.



* I used that word specifically because it drives home the reality of many of those who have a visceral dislike of black people look at them that way.
 

Darts

Well-known member
Jan 15, 2017
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Surrounding the White House and threatening Trump's life is a dangerous escalation. A bunch of Trump supporters are liable to show up with their AR 15s.
 
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