Trump delivers his State of the Union
‘Round one day and seven minutes ago, Donald Trump brought forth on his nation, a new genius, conceived in Stability, and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal, save for those who are absolutely not. If you were of an unequal many not to view the President’s State of the Union (SOTU) address — the very, very best and most watched speech in history. Period. — Crikey has your back. I endured it for you, Snowflake. And it is a privilege to report that the US hegemon, ergo the world, is headed quite directly down the latrine of all known history.
The White House is yet to reveal the true authors of the speech. No matter. For ease of our interpretation, we’ll say that these may as well have been Jared Kushner, Stephen Miller and the ghost of Ronald Reagan. To know their résumés is to grasp the interests informing the speech. Let’s crack ‘em open and see what these men brought to the SOTU.
Kushner is Trump’s son-in-law, a long-time admirer of Israel’s prime minister and currently has a grey-ops role to broker peace in the Middle East—by which we mean Saudi Arabia and Israel. A chap with business ties to Goldman Sachs and George Soros, he retains the neoliberal progressive vibe that Trump, a former Clinton-aligned Democrat, pretended to leave behind in New York.
The Kushner gifts to SOTU were (a) the joyous declaration that Jerusalem was the true capital of Israel — one for which Democrat Senate minority leader Chuck Schumer stood to cheer and (b) some boilerplate liberal stuff about “all Americans” and “the world”. So: blancmange liberal pronouncements to feed those still living on the American Dream diet, and the reinvention of Israel and its lobby as “the world”. These were the Kushner contribution.
Miller is a senior policy adviser to the President and unvarnished bigot. He may truly believe that brown immigrants to the USA are mud people or that the white hot misogynistic rage of his associate Richard Spencer is a source of energy second only in efficiency to coal. Then again, he could have adopted this rhetoric just to get ahead, while covertly attending Manhattan drinks hosted by Jared and Ivanka, where all three laugh at the poor and the sick who attended Trump’s campaign rallies.
From Miller, the most cruel and nativist moments came. It’s true that many commentators have called Trump’s SOTU tame or dishonest. But, if this speech—one we Australians must compare to many of Dutton’s worst talkback radio interviews—were to be heard with the ears Americans had a year ago, it’d sound very wild and frank.
The racism was, in my view, overt. The militarism, the fondness for torture, the beyond-Bush insistence that all our enemies should now be called terrorists and possibly placed in Gitmo, which he says he has no intention of closing, was extreme. Perhaps after a year of this caffeine and a year without the warm cup of milk that was Obama—whose defence and deportation policies Trump continues—everyone is a little hard-of-hearing.
Zombie Ronald Reagan requires scant introduction. Like Trump, he was very good with a teleprompter. Like Trump, his belief that deregulation of firms would benefit the masses was inflexible. Like Trump, his apparent stupidity worked for the base as a boon. Like all who have since delivered a televised SOTU—Reagan was the first to choreograph the thing—he had an “everyday hero” sat in the First Lady’s box.
All SOTUs employ at least one Real Human whose function is to (a) appease the US hunger for storytelling and (b) underscore a policy point. In honour of Reagan, these human symbols are known as Skutniks, after Lenny Skutnik whose heroic dive into the Potomac River to assist victims of an air crash served as a can-do example for those go-go US eighties. Trump’s Skutniks were, naturally, several.
We had a North Korean defector. We also had distraught families of teen victims slain by the gang known as MS-13 sat with Melania. They had come, as any grieving person might, to accept formal sympathies. They were invited, however, to frame a key SOTU statement, “Americans are dreamers, too.”
The intentions of the Cheezel in Chief here were, again, several. He intended to discredit the Dreamers, 1.8 million kids born in the US to “undocumented” parents that a good majority of US voters, both Republican and Democrat, wish not to see deported. The name “Dreamers” is derived from the initials of the Act passed to protect them, so to state that all Americans were also “dreamers” is a bit of a stretch. It’s one, though, enthusiastically permitted by Trump’s Republican audience and supportive alt-right commentators, who both gratefully heard the echo of the Paleo-conservative response to Black Lives Matter: all lives matter.
To understand Trump, whose presidency has coincided with a brief spike in the economic cycle and slight return of manufacturing jobs negotiated under Obama, as a jobs president, you’ll learn nothing from the SOTU. His claim that company tax cuts have resulted in bonuses to workers is hooey. It’s always going to be hooey, because companies must prefer profits to compassion if they are to remain companies. Bernie Sanders’ unofficial response to the SOTU is far better than the SOTU itself if an understanding of labour is what one seeks.
For me, and for others, the SOTU served only to remind that a true resistance, and not the McResistance of franchisor Hillary Clinton, must be formed to turf out Trump. He’ll be able to offer years of theatrical bullshit if all the DNC continues to protect are sober lies.
Who knows what this true resistance will look like? We only know, as wages continue to stagnate, that it will occur. Expect more awful speeches. And prepare yourselves for a hegemon that finally falls beneath the charge of old-fashioned class warfare.
He really did lay on the ordinary Americans and their tragic/inspiring stories a bit thick. It was like Oprah was already President.
I thought so, too, BDlair. Then, I looked at older speeches. It’s just what that strange nation does.
It was clear he had some help saying the “inspiring” stuff. And prompts to emphasise words like “god” and “AMERICAN FLAG” to appease the crazy nativists.
Then, it was pure Sam Huntington unmasked neocon kill ’em all rhetoric. Guess someone has to justify the 738 billion spend on toys with which to deter Russians.
“And prepare yourselves for a hegemon that finally falls beneath the charge of old-fashioned class warfare.”
Pretty much. Even though it seems like business as usual, I think it’s probably anything but.
Of, for sure. Something is going to happen. And it’s not going to be wearing pussy hats.
Just don’t plan any family trips to Disneyland for the next decade or so. When Donald’s base realise that the sun ain’t gonna shine any brighter, who knows what will happen.
Instead of becoming a major arms exporter could we perhaps become a major pitchfork exporter? The US could be a big market.
I think you deserve one of Malcolm’s innovation grants, Rais.
As you probably already know, his base is absolutely convinced he is about to indict Clinton and Obama [https://twitter.com/Imperator_Rex3/status/958925494484836352]. They’ve been terrifically excited about a ‘Second Memo’. I tend to think the orange man is crazy enough to try it (I remember him telling Clinton in a debate that she should be in jail and thinking that was wacky, even for him).
It’s an orgy of conspiracy theories out there. A person could get whiplash keeping up with the conflicting ones coming out of each camp.
If that’s how this plays out … well, actually, I have no idea. But I’m picking it would be pretty unforgettable.
This morning I saw a Smart Politics Man For Serious News Network With A Bluetick And Everything on twitter declare that keeping open gitmo is more evidence that the Trump presidency is ‘all about erasing the Obama legacy’. Scrolling through the replies, most of which were people saying variations on ‘you idiot!’, my eyes fell upon partisan posters agreeing, and adding that it is a good or bad thing depending on their party.
:\
The Gitmo thing has been nagging at me since SOTU. Does no one remember that Obama vowed to close the obscenity within his first year? Even as one whose party who controlled both houses, he did so little, while promising so much good.
His speech to bankers in 2009 with the passage of his Recovery Act, too. Within weeks of inauguration, Hope Change was sold to Wall Street. (Michael Hudson writes a good piece somewhere on this.)
I do understand he’s a very good speaker. He appears genuinely nice and rather bright. He’s a person Sorkin would have dreamt up were Sorkin not the sort of writer who populates his saccharine films with an all-white cast.
Anyhow. A response to a piece I wrote comparing the administrations foreign policy elicited this response on social media the other day:
“Obama may have bombed a lot of countries and killed a lot of people but he spoke well and brought dignity to the office. And when he looked at his wife? Be still, my heart!”
I think this is a concise statement of how many see the function of the President. To “represent” the West as it would like to see itself. Not to govern its reality., especially in the Global South.
yep, marchons citoyens
I thought it a prudent investment to put some money on Trump winning the 2020 Presidential election, given that the Democrats have apparently doubled down on the identity politics that got Trump elected in the first place. Checked Sportsbet’s odds this morning – and he’s at $3.50. Granted the Democrats do not yet have a nominee, but all of the Democrats’ alternatives began at $11.
What did you make of the reactions from the Democrats in the House, MzRaz? Sour faced and refusing to stand, even when Trump announced paid parental leave, billions in infrastructure spending, amnesty for 1.8 million illegal immigrants, American freedom, low black unemployment. Aren’t those things the Democrats want?
I seem to recall Republicans, no cheer squad for Obama, at least standing to applaud the parts of his SOTU addresses they liked.
I wonder what Americans thought.
It is important to distinguish between what Trump says and what he does. A SOTU speech is not a good place to start an analysis. Trump is conscious that the US is going down the economic gurglar and that the US has lost its competitive edge. The US dollar is also rapidly losing its reserve status role and with it the ability of the US to print money like there is no tomorrow.
There are huge geopolitical changes occurring and Trump, for all his manifest personal failings, appears to grasp that fact. It is going to be an interesting year (to invoke an old Chinese curse). Just don’t confuse the rhetoric with the reality.
No. I know it’s something to decode, and not a statement of intention.
But, the 738 billion for the military will happen. And so, too, the wall. Everything else, you’ve got to read around. He has every intention of not actually punishing Dreamers, but trading their lives for a big dumb wall.
As I said (and as many here commenting on Crikey predicted across the months) his policy will not be markedly different from that of administrations of the past thirty years. It’s just interesting to think about the rhetoric and trace its origins so we know what particular flavour of hell to expect.