Bob Woodward's new book, Rage, is an documentation of
parts of the Trump presidency from a respected journalist. It
is based on facts and research using interviews with President Trump,
the public record and trusted sources. Much of what I'm reading
confirms what I had already heard, but Woodward brings them together
in a time line.
Woodward clearly shows Trump is a liar. That is, a person
who does not tell the truth. President Trump is clearly a liar,
but I'm convinced most of his lies are not really intentional because
he does not actually understand the concepts of truth or facts.
Occasionally he seems to logically determine what response is best
for him. But in many cases, he seems to just say whatever his
gut tells him is most expeditious at the moment. That is why he can
say something and them shortly thereafter he can say the complete
opposite.
I must admit I've long believed President Trump is an idiot, but
Woodward recounted incidents that make me pause to consider maybe
Trump has more substance than I gave him credit for. That was
until I read chapter 33.
In chapter 33 Woodward describes the advice he received years ago
about writing biographies. An English professor suggested
finding true "reflectors" of the subject. People who
are or were close to the subject. People whose close
experiences with the subject allow them to make accurate assessments
of the person.
Woodward choose President Trump's son-in-law, Jared Kushner, as
such a person.
In February, 2020 Kushner suggested four texts that should be
consulted to help understand Donald Trump. Texts in this case
meant writings, not text messages.
The first is a 2018 opinion piece by Peggy Noonan in The Wall
Street Journal. In this piece she describes the President
as a "crazy act", "a living insult", and "epic
instability, mismanagement and confusion".
I think Noonan was basically saying Trump is not rational and has
no desire to use rational thought to perform his presidential duties.
The second text Kushner recommended consulting was Alice in
Wonderland. Specifically the Cheshire Cat whose strategy,
according to Woodward, "was one of endurance and persistence,
not direction”.
I understand this to mean Trump does not think ahead. He doesn't
believe that goals and steps to achieve those goals are needed. He
just needs to survive the moment, psychologically satisfy his
narcissism and boost his low self-esteem.
Then Kushner suggested the book The Gatekeepers: How White
House Chiefs of Staff Define Every Presidency, by Chris Whipple.
I think Kushner recommended this book to high light that while other
presidents chose people with talents, knowledge and experience to
help them determine how to handle difficult issues, Trump feels he
needs little help since he is more qualified than anyone to best
decide what to do.
I believe, President Trump wants people who just do whatever he
says and sometimes realize what he wants done without him having to
put himself in jeopardy by saying something incriminating. He also
wants people who will tell him what a great job he is doing and
people to blame when things go badly.
The final text was Scott Adam's book, Win Bigly: Persuasion in
a World Where Facts Don't Matter. Scott Adams is the
creator or Dilbert. Adam's argues that Trump's lies "are
not regrettable errors or ethical lapses”. In Adams' words, Trump
“can invent any reality”.
We see this all the time. Trump lies and some people will accept
whatever he says. Trump supporters have been conditioned to believe
that anyone who tries to correct Trump is the liar. They are just
creating fake news.
As I said earlier, I'm not convinced Trump's lies are that
strategic. He knows his followers will believe whatever he says. He
suffers no penalties for repeating and expanding a lie. In Trump's
world, the old saw, “go big or go home” is a guiding principle
for his lies.
Woodard summarizes Kushner's insight into Trump by saying, “When
combined, Kushner's four text's painted President Trump as crazy,
aimless, stubborn and manipulative.”. It sounds like neither
Kushner or Woodward think Trump is a stable genius.
I would phrase Woodward's analysis a little differently.
President Trump is not rational, has no goals other than surviving,
only needs people who will serve him and has no compunction abusing
people to meet his needs.
That sounds a lot like COVID-19.
To make this comparison even stronger, President Trump would like to be King Trump and COVID-19 is a corona virus.