I hate to say this, but I’m starting to feel sorry for Donald Trump. He’s only been in office for half a year, and already he’s running out of Americans to attack.
Of course, he came into office already having notched his AK-47 Twitter rifle with hundreds of hits on the American citizenry—including “nasty women,” Mexican Americans, and Muslim Americans.
Since then, he’s repeatedly used the presidential bully pulpit for mass-bullying assaults on every reporter who refuses to be a Sean Hannity-style suck-up to The Donald.
The trigger-happy tweeter-in-chief also relishes gunning down his own political kin.
He blasted all House Republicans who voted for a “mean” health care bill, after he’d personally pushed them to pass it. He called for Republican Senate leader Mitch McConnell to commit political hara-kiri for failing to pass his abominable Trumpcare bill, which was meaner than mean. And he publicly shoots down his own top appointees, from Attorney General Jeff Sessions to his short-lived mouthpiece Anthony Scaramucci.
Even White House chief Strategist Stephen Bannon has taken a hit and been sent packing.
Then there was “The Great Donald Debacle”—his bumbling, shameful response to the racist, anti-Semitic rampage in Charlottesville by a menagerie of neo-Nazis, KKK thugs, and swastika-clad white supremacists.
Trump’s empathy with these far-right extremists was so appalling that even his multimillionaire allies in Fortune 500 corporations gagged. Led by Merck CEO Kenneth Frazier, Trump’s two big corporate advisory panels abolished themselves in protest.
The petulant president, clueless as usual about political symbolism, tweeted an angry potshot at Frazier—who happened to be one of only two African Americans on Trump’s 47-member corporate committees.
But our foam-at-the-mouth president still has one loyal friend by his side: Ku Klux Klan veteran David Duke. Perfect—they deserve each other.
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OtherWords columnist Jim Hightower is a radio commentator, writer, and public speaker. He’s also the editor of the populist newsletter, The Hightower Lowdown. Distributed by OtherWords.org.
Trump’s running out of friends and it’s his own fault
Seems like the only one still standing by him is David Duke. They deserve each other.
Posted on August 28, 2017 by Jim Hightower
I hate to say this, but I’m starting to feel sorry for Donald Trump. He’s only been in office for half a year, and already he’s running out of Americans to attack.
Of course, he came into office already having notched his AK-47 Twitter rifle with hundreds of hits on the American citizenry—including “nasty women,” Mexican Americans, and Muslim Americans.
Since then, he’s repeatedly used the presidential bully pulpit for mass-bullying assaults on every reporter who refuses to be a Sean Hannity-style suck-up to The Donald.
The trigger-happy tweeter-in-chief also relishes gunning down his own political kin.
He blasted all House Republicans who voted for a “mean” health care bill, after he’d personally pushed them to pass it. He called for Republican Senate leader Mitch McConnell to commit political hara-kiri for failing to pass his abominable Trumpcare bill, which was meaner than mean. And he publicly shoots down his own top appointees, from Attorney General Jeff Sessions to his short-lived mouthpiece Anthony Scaramucci.
Even White House chief Strategist Stephen Bannon has taken a hit and been sent packing.
Then there was “The Great Donald Debacle”—his bumbling, shameful response to the racist, anti-Semitic rampage in Charlottesville by a menagerie of neo-Nazis, KKK thugs, and swastika-clad white supremacists.
Trump’s empathy with these far-right extremists was so appalling that even his multimillionaire allies in Fortune 500 corporations gagged. Led by Merck CEO Kenneth Frazier, Trump’s two big corporate advisory panels abolished themselves in protest.
The petulant president, clueless as usual about political symbolism, tweeted an angry potshot at Frazier—who happened to be one of only two African Americans on Trump’s 47-member corporate committees.
But our foam-at-the-mouth president still has one loyal friend by his side: Ku Klux Klan veteran David Duke. Perfect—they deserve each other.
OtherWords columnist Jim Hightower is a radio commentator, writer, and public speaker. He’s also the editor of the populist newsletter, The Hightower Lowdown. Distributed by OtherWords.org.