The "invisible enemy" now has a foreboding face; it's the one President Donald Trump sees glaring back when he looks in the mirror.
Since the President first dismissed the Coronavirus threat more than three months ago, claiming "it's totally under control," Trump has served more like a facilitating, destructive agent of the Coronavirus, than anything remotely resembling a commander-in-chief.
Peddling preposterous theory, incessantly inciting and brazenly boasting, the autocrat President has insufferably sown uncertainty across the homeland while the deadly virus morphed into a pandemic that has claimed more than 58,000 lives.
When the American people desperately needed a capable, compassionate leader committed to upholding his oath of office and look out for the common good, Trump consistently has proven himself not only incapable, but uninterested.
"I don’t take responsibility at all,” Trump said way back at his landmark March 13, press conference, when asked to explain his administration’s failure to ensure that Americans had enough Coronavirus test kits, which are key to tracking and ultimately minimizing the disease’s death toll.
Not only does the President deny any culpability for failing to ensure testing for a beleagued nation,, Trump still is shirkinking responsibility for blowing off the pandemic threat even after it was clearly incubating death in the homeland in February and the first half of March.
President Trump incessantly comes off like the panicked kid who breaks the treasured heirloom antique vase while carelessly tossing the football in the house, and then repeatedly, exhaustively – hence guiltily – denying culpability to his mother.
His younger brother did it. Or, it could have been that tremor that shook the house violently, but nobody else in the neighborhood felt. Maybe it was the wind blowing through the closed window.
As far as Trump is concerned, it seems, what’s broken or lost for good, mind as well just be an inanimate nick-knack with a price tag. Something he can buy off with bluster that bamboozles a strained and fearful citizenry on the brink.
As far as Trump is concerned, it seems, what’s broken or lost for good, mind as well just be an inanimate nick-knack with a price tag. Something he can buy off with bluster that bamboozles a strained and fearful citizenry on the brink.
But, Trump is stiff and unconvincing when he occasionally feigns to care about the mounting number of lives lost, largely due to his atrocious failures. He seems to relish the talk of death, mentioning body bags and bodies.
Despite what the President and his cheerleading sycophant Vice President Mike Pence claimed at this evening's Rose Garden press conference, there still aren't enough test kits and test components to go around for the country to safely open back up come Friday, or soon thereafter.
And Trump should have stuck to his crybaby threat to cool off on the virus pressers after taking heat for last Thursday's disastrous display of, what Common Dream's Robert Reich today appropriately described as "quackery."
Anymore, when the President isn't insulting a reporter or stroking his ego about the "great job" his administration has done to keep the death toll down, he sounds like one of Big Pharma's TV ads, pushing a drug that might make you feel better -- if it doesn't kill you, first.
First, it was Hydroxychloroquine, a malaria drug unproven to fight Covid-19. Of late, it's household disinfectant and ultraviolet rays he's floating as a Coronavirus cure. If the virus doesn't get you, Trump will.
When asked tonight about why he thinks poison control hotlines lit up from people inquiring whether it's safe to ingest or inject disinfectant, Trump predictably played dumb.
"I can't imagine why," he said. Asked if he took responsibility for the public's confusion, Trump answered "No, I don't," and quickly moved on to another reporter.
Trump may be thinking he can bamboozle his way forward with sleight-of-hand doublespeak to magically make last week's "disinfectant" advice "disappear" like a "miracle" -- as he promised the Coronavirus would two months ago.
But, just as the virus isn't dispelled by distracting bluster or disparaging tweets, Trump's latest snake oil remedy will stick in memories for sometime.
Unfortunately, as if we all didn't have more urgent matters to address, you just have to wonder what poisonous "elixir" Dr. Don will be recommending next?