Remember
back in 2008, when Sarah Palin used to talk about the “real America”?
She meant rural and small-town residents — white residents, it went
without saying — who supposedly embodied the nation’s true essence.
She
was harshly condemned for those remarks, and rightly so — and not just
because the real, real America is a multiracial, multicultural land of
great metropolitan areas as well as small towns. More fundamentally,
what makes America America is that it is built around an idea: the idea
that all men are created equal, and are entitled to basic human rights.
Take away that idea and we’re just a giant version of a two-bit
autocracy.
And
maybe that is what we have, in fact, become. For Donald Trump’s refusal
to condemn the murderous white supremacists in Charlottesville finally
confirms what has become increasingly obvious: The current president of
the United States isn’t a real American.
Real
Americans understand that our nation is built around values, not the
“blood and soil” of the marchers’ chants; what makes you an American is
your attempt to live up to those values, not the place or race your
ancestors came from. And when we fall short in our effort to live up to
our ideals, as we all too often do, at least we realize and acknowledge
our failure.
But
the man who began his political ascent by falsely questioning Barack
Obama’s place of birth — a blood-and-soil argument if ever there was one
— clearly cares nothing about the openness and inclusiveness that have
always been essential parts of who we are as a nation.
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Real
Americans understand that our nation was born in a rebellion against
tyranny. They feel an instinctive aversion to tyrants everywhere, and an
underlying sympathy for democratic regimes, even those with whom we may
currently have disputes.
But
the present occupant of the White House has made no secret of
preferring the company, not of democratic leaders, but of authoritarian
rulers — not just Vladimir Putin, but people like Turkey’s Recep Tayyip Erdogan or Rodrigo Duterte, the homicidal leader of the Philippines. When Trump visited Saudi Arabia, his commerce secretary exulted in the absence of hostile demonstrations, an absence ensured by the repressiveness of the regime.
Real
Americans expect public officials to be humbled by the responsibility
that comes with the job. They’re not supposed to be boastful blowhards,
constantly claiming credit for things they haven’t done — like Trump
bragging about job creation that has continued at more or less the same
pace as under his predecessor — or which never even happened, like his
mythical victory in the popular vote.
Real
Americans understand that being a powerful public figure means facing
criticism. That comes with the job, and you’re supposed to tolerate that
criticism even if you feel it’s unfair. Foreign autocrats may rage
against unflattering news reports, threaten to inflict financial harm on
publications they dislike, talk about imprisoning journalists; American
leaders aren’t supposed to sound like that.
Finally,
real Americans who manage to achieve high office realize that they are
servants of the people, meant to use their position for the public good.
In practice, human nature being what it is, many officials have in fact
taken financial advantage of their office. But we’ve always understood
that this was wrong — and presidents, in particular, are supposed to be
above such things. Now we have a leader who is transparently exploiting
his office for personal enrichment, in ways that all too obviously
amount in practice to influence-buying by domestic malefactors and
foreign governments alike.
In
short, these days we have a president who is really, truly, deeply
un-American, someone who doesn’t share the values and ideals that made
this country special.
In
fact, he’s so deeply alienated from the American idea that he can’t
even bring himself to fake it. We all know that Trump feels comfortable
with white supremacists, but it’s amazing that he won’t even give them a
light tap on the wrist. We all know that Putin is Trump’s kind of guy,
but it’s remarkable that Trump won’t even pretend to be outraged at
Putin’s meddling with our election.
Speaking
of which: I have no more idea than anyone else what Robert Mueller’s
probe into potential collusion between Russia and the Trump campaign,
questionable financial ties, possible obstruction of justice and more
will find. Trump is acting very much like someone with something big to
hide, but we don’t yet know exactly what that something is.
Whatever
role foreign influence may have played and may still be playing,
however, we don’t need to wonder whether an anti-American cabal, hostile
to everything we stand for, determined to undermine everything that
truly makes this country great, has seized power in Washington. It has:
it’s called the Trump administration.
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