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Ron Paul See other Ron Paul Articles Title: WhatÂ’s Wrong with TrumpÂ’s Tweets? It's more than his tone and demeanor. President Trumps latest spate of vitriolic tweets about Morning Joe co-hosts, Psycho Joe (Joe Scarborough) and low IQ crazy Mika (Mika Brzezinski), have once again drawn the ire of legislators on both sides of the aisle. House Speaker Paul Ryan characterized the tweets as inappropriate, lamenting that they didnt help to improve the tone and the civility of the debate. Similarly, Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi asserted that the tweets set a low standard for public officials in terms of their demeanor. Yet the crux of the issue with the presidents tweets remains largely overlookedmuch more than his tone and demeanor, its his regular aimlessness thats worth criticizing. As the first lady once said, whenever the president is attacked, he strikes back ten times harder, and anyone caught in his daily flood of tweets knows that she isnt exaggerating. But the presidents tweets dont provoke outrage merely because theyre colorful. The issue is that theyre often directed at inappropriate targets. For example, when Ronald Reagan described former Libyan dictator Muammar Gaddafi as the mad dog of the Middle East, few bothered to yowl about his lack of decorum. Likewise, when Trump, in the wake of the Manchester bombing, labeled the terrorists as evil losers, the level of outrage at his wording was noticeably lower than usual. Its no accident that people dont mind coarse language when its used to debase Americas enemies. If the president brandished his characteristic tone and demeanor only for that stately purpose, none but rhetorical prudes would denounce the crudeness of his tweets. Unfortunately, Trump has devoted inordinate amounts of energy to mock and deride celebrities ranging from Megyn Kelly and Samuel L. Jackson to Ronda Rousey and Snoop Dogg. Nevertheless, the presidents lack of aim doesnt mean that he should be admonished for putting rhetorical color to use. Hyperbole, profanity, and vulgarity are efficient tools. In Aristotles Rhetoric, he advises aspiring orators to employ the language of anger in speaking of outrage and the language of disgust and discreet reluctance to utter a word when speaking of impiety or foulness, because doing so increases a speechs persuasive power. These notions arent alien to Trump. In The Art of the Deal he writes, A little hyperbole never hurts
.Its an innocent form of exaggeration and a very effective form of promotion. Aristotle and the president have the right idea. History is replete with significant figures who unsheathed garishly colorful language to great effect: Christ pegged the Pharisees as folk who love the uppermost rooms at feasts and the children of them which killed the prophets before marking them all as a generation of vipers. In a less eloquent, but equally effective lambaste, Martin Luther styled Henry VIII, King of England, as a pig, an ass, a dunghill, the spawn of an adder, a basilisk, a lying buffoon and a mad fool with a frothy mouth. Compared to either, Trump is a mere amateur at doling out verbal abuse. Yet Trump isnt entirely to blame for his poor choice in targets. The president, being a former entertainer, knows that his philippics will fall flat if his audience cant grasp a crucial reference or allusion, so he makes frequent use of those figures that Americans easily recognize: actors, athletes, and TV news anchorsfigures that hold an unduly large proportion of Americas national attention. If the average American knew the names of the thousands of peoples and groups that have nothing but a violent contempt for America and the American way, Trump would undoubtedly spend more of his time tweeting out hourly invectives against them instead of TV hosts (terrorists and tyrants make for easier targets). To a limited extent, the presidents choice to focus his vitriol on celebrities reflects the average Americans tragic ignorance of the people who actually threaten our national welfare. Until Trump takes better aim or American culture changes dramatically, he will continue not only to stoke bipartisan outrage, but hell persist in destroying his reputation among that fast-diminishing, politically unaffiliated segment of the American population. These Americans hoped and imagined that the president would become capable of prioritizing threats to national well-being over petty squabbles. When 2020 rolls around corner, theyll take their insights to the polls. Michael Shindler is an Advocate with Young Voices. Follow him on Twitter here. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest
#1. To: Ada (#0)
His tweets are my favorite part of his presidency so far. At least I'm getting entertained at the expense of preening pissants who richly deserve to be mocked.
Amen.
The most dangerous man to any government is the man who is able to think things out... without regard to the prevailing superstitions and taboos. Almost inevitably he comes to the conclusion that the government he lives under is dishonest, insane, intolerable. ~ H. L. Mencken
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