Sunday, October 4, 2020

Recalling Trump's Boardwalk Hustle - Funhouse Floor, No More

(A version of this essay was published in the Cape May Star and Wave on Wed. Oct. 7, 2020)

The daddy of all boardwalk hustles on a surreal, cold night in the dead of winter in a boarded-up, barrier island, boardwalk town, beckons.

A carnival barker President takes center stage inside the 7,400-seat capacity Wildwood Convention Center this evening, Jan. 28, 2020, to an amusement-park roar from thousands of fevered fans.

Something’s amiss. Wildwood boardwalk’s famous, sequence-lighted, giant Ferris wheel – which on summer nights, lures thrill seekers from miles away – is ominously dark.

There's no rumble and "clickety, clickety, clack" of the Great White roller coaster, eliciting screams from daring riders. No mic-upped barkers beckoning from either side of “the boards.” 

And there’s no creepy, sideshow illusion of a giant snake with a man's head, attracting gawkers. (Yes, I’ve witnessed this.)

There is only the brash, inciting spectacle of impeached President Donald J. Trump.

And boy, does he draw a crowd.
  
The grand illusionist President and his traveling “Keep America Great” circus sideshow act, with a snap of Trump’s fingers, has turned the boardwalk convention center into one huge, jam-packed, mirrored funhouse.

In this masterful magical trick, the warped, contorting effect of the shifting funhouse mirrors flatteringly work in reverse – reflecting the unrepentant con man as a genuine Superman, fighting for truth, justice and the American way.

It’s smoke and mirrors on a twisted, Twitter-fueled, in-your-Facebook, insult-driven, black ops-level scale.

Yet, it's all so fitting.

Reality is always askew, deceptively grander, amidst the glitzy allure of Wildwood’s renowned two-mile long, sprawling boardwalk, where suckers drop big coin for long odds.

And at a rowdy Trump rally, truth and sensibility are just hostile bubble busters. Trump is his rabid believers’ ticket to shirk reality, sneer at justice, decry the righteous and disparage the less fortunate with impunity.

"While we are creating jobs and killing terrorists, congressional Democrats are obsessed with demented hoaxes, crazy witch hunts .." decried Trump to loud cheers. ""Which is worse? The impeachment hoax or the witch hunt from Russia?"

Watching it all up on the Jumbotron outside the boardwalk convention center with a few thousand uproarious Trump lovers, I’m reminded of the “World’s Greatest Showman” P.T. Barnum’s famous quote:

“The public appears disposed to be amused even when they are conscious of being deceived.”

Trump's raucous fans seem oblivious to the fact that the funhouse floor could drop out from under them at any time.

Death Incubates In The Homeland

Back to reality. 

While Trump deluded and distracted both himself, as well as his impressionable fans that night at the Jersey Shore, the Coronavirus had already invaded other American shores – and was incubating death.

More than a week earlier, the first case of Covid-19 infection was reported in Washington State. And studies now suggest that New York's 32,000 Covid-19 deaths can be traced to infected travelers arriving from Europe "as early as January."

It wasn't like Trump was in the dark.

Earlier that day of the Wildwood rally, Jan. 28, according Bob Woodward's book "Rage," Trump was briefed by his national security adviser Robert C. O’Brien on the looming threat of the virus.

"This will be the biggest national security threat you face in your presidency," O'Brien told President Trump. “This is going to be the roughest thing you face.”

Also, at the meeting, Matthew Pottinger, the deputy national security adviser, concurred with O'Brien. He told the President that "it was evident that the world faced a health emergency on par with the flu pandemic of 1918, which killed an estimated 50 million people worldwide."

On Jan. 23,  the World Health Organization had already confirmed that Covid-19 was a contagion that spread from “human to human."

The President also had been briefed by intelligence officials on the deadly virus originating from Wuhan, China, as early as the first week in January.

Trump was fully informed. He knew a disastrous lethal pandemic, threatening to afflict millions of Americans, was looming just over the horizon.

But the President had other priorities: touting the stock market numbers; playing golf at one of his properties on the taxpayer's dime; seeking vengeance against patriots who testified to Trump's malfeasance during his impeachment; and yes, holding campaign rallies.

President Trump wasn't going to allow such alarming reports about a plaque poised to wipe out untold numbers of American lives, sour that night's planned boardwalk hustle in Wildwood.

Newly minted U.S. congressional Republican turncoat Jeff Van Drew was counting on Trump's hucksterism to gin up support for his upcoming face off with his old party come November.

As Barnum, one of Trump's mentors would declare -- the show must go on. And as Bobby Rydell sang in his famous song of the summertime beach resort "Wildwood Days": "Every day's a holiday, and every night is a Saturday night." 

Apparently, even in the dead of winter.
To hell with reality. Let's just party, man. Of course, Trump failed to utter even a peep of precaution to the people about the Coronavirus encroaching chaos on their lives that night at the rally. 

Funhouse Floor Starts To Give

It wouldn’t be for another grueling six weeks of inexcusable denial on Trump’s behalf before he was forced to publicly recognize the virus menace in mid-March, and only then go through the motions of taking the virus seriously.

The funhouse floor was starting to give.

Even so, Trump has yet to take the Covid-19 virus seriously -- even as the virus has claimed more than 208,000 American lives.

The President called the virus a "hoax," claimed it was “totally under control” and suggested it will simply disappear come April – in essence, the way truth evaporates at one of his ugly, demagogic rallies.

By shirking blame, playing politics and stoking the racial divide, the President has served more as a complicit, facilitating, destructive agent of the Covid-19 virus, than anything remotely resembling a commander-in-chief.

Turns out, Trump's boardwalk hustle carnival act rally is the perfect metaphor for his entire presidency, which, for four chaotic years has lacked anything redeeming, genuine or good.

The Trump presidency literally has been one giant, caustic, distracting sideshow -- playing the citizenry for a bunch of thoughtless fools.

Featured Freak Running Sideshow

And now, the featured sideshow freak has escaped the red-and-yellow circus tent, hi-jacked the barker's box and is peddling discount tickets for a peep inside an empty tent.

And the suckers are still lining up. Trump's cult-like believers are still guzzling down the snakeoil. Will they ever snap out of it?

Nine months since Trump's wild Wildwood rally, the Covid-19 pandemic is on pace to have killed at least a quarter million Americans by the year's end. More than 7 million people -- including the President himself, his wife, White House staff and campaign officials, have been infected. 

And just as troubling, millions of Americans have lost their jobs and health insurance.

If Trump had acted just a couple weeks earlier, experts and common sense tell us,  instead of waiting until the middle of March to alert Americans of the immediate danger and implement nation-wide social distancing, the overwhelming majority of American lives lost to the Coronavirus, would have been saved. 

Trump did this. Again and again, he did this.

The repercussions from President Trump's disastrous and criminal failures to take the pandemic seriously, are seemingly endless and ever painful.

Whether Trump believers allow themselves to see it or not, the show is over. The funhouse floor has finally given way.

(Kevin McKinney is a freelance writer and former daily newspaper journalist, living at the Jersey Shore. He traveled with a small circus in the mid 90's and for a strange, few days filled in as a sideshow barker. His essays have appeared in The Philadelphia Inquirer, The Hill, Counter Punch and McClatchy Newspapers.)

Saturday, September 12, 2020

What "Pivot"?

What didn't sit so well with me in the just-released audio from Bob Woodward's new book "Rage", is how Woodward sounds more like a public relations man for the President, trying to coax the best PR storyline for public consumption.

Not to detract from the author's past exemplary investigative work, primarily during the Watergate scandal that exposed President Richard Nixon's foul play.

But, from the tape alone, Woodward sounds as if he's feeding into President Donald Trump mania, assuming Trump had a wake up call "pivot" in his realization of the Coronavirus' deadly potential.

We knew Trump knew. And the President never demonstrated any kind of "pivot" to take heroic action on behalf of the people. He was forced to finally warn the public after the stock market numbers dived.

Trump blew off the virus and he's still blowing it off because he's never taken his duties as President to the American people, seriously.

The President's admission to knowing the virus' lethality, but doing nothing to alert the citizenry, and even intentionally play it down, is damning and his actions are criminal. In a matter of months, Trump facilitated the deaths of nearly 200,000 human beings in America. He should be charged with manslaughter.

However, in a queer way, the interview gives Trump an opportunity to insert his alibi into the public record -- that he was simply thinking of the people all along. 

It leaves wiggle room for the likes of White House mouthpiece Kayleigh McEnany to contrivedly portray Trump as some kind of compassionate leader who "didn't want to panic" his constituents -- with the truth they urgently needed to hear.

When was the last time Trump ever tread gently on the hearts and minds of the American people? 

Instilling "panic" is Trump's lifeblood. Stirring uncertainty and civil unrest is the only thing the President does exceedingly well.

Fear-mongering about "the other" while encouraging white supremisct violence and snuggling up to dictators while subbing our allies is the President's forte.

Like all Trump Loyalist defenses, the propagandist proffering of compassion on Trump's part is absurd and isn't a defense at all.

Still, it's virtually guaranteed that pro-Trumpers of all walks will seize on this pathetic narrative that the President was simply looking out for the people's best interests.

Words matter. Those who haven't buried their heads in the sand, or hid behind a false God to excuse Trump's criminal behavior, know that the President's words can be as caustic as they are empty. And yes, Trump's words often are unsettlingly revealing.

But, they are distracting, too.

The President is sabotaging the vote. He's ignoring the desperate cries for racial and economic equality. He's squashing intelligence warnings of Russia's persistent efforts to manipulate the presidential elections -- again. 

And nearly 200,000 Americans are dead from the Covid-19 pandemic, the President simply blew off and lied to the American people about.

The President is exacerbating death, stoking extremism and threatening to destroy this nation. Regardless of what Trump uncredibly utters, he must answer to these and the rest of his crimes.

Tuesday, June 23, 2020

How Does A Citizenry Thrive With A President It Can't Trust?

So, I'm thinking that it's not so healthy for the American people or a democracy, if the citizenry must constantly wonder whether its President's words are serious, a joke or simply insane.

Anyone?



Sunday, June 21, 2020

Stand-up To Trump

Which side are you on?

While The Poor People's Campaign was celebrating its "National Call For Moral Revival" in a virtual march on Washington, DC, this past Saturday, President Donald Trump was performing his self-gratifying, demagogic, stand up comedy act in Tulsa -- mocking the nation's plight as it awakens to systemic racism and battles an unprecedented pandemic that has killed more than 120,000 people in just a few months.

The contrast between the two events couldn't be greater.

The choice between which movement to support, couldn't be more grave.

While people are still dying from Covid-19, and others are still grieving the deaths of loved ones at the hands of the lethal virus and racist, militarized cops, the President went up on stage and played the class clown for a let down crowd of some 6,000 or so.

"You know testing is a double-edged sword," Trump said, bragging that the United States had tested 25 million people. "Here's the bad part ... when you do testing to that extent, you're going to find more people; you're going to find more cases. So I said to my people, slow the testing down, please." 

Ba-dump-bump.

Whether he was kidding or just further muddying up his criminal role in exacerbating the virus, by pretending that he was kidding about something he very well may have done, it doesn't much matter. 

It's a creepy, shallow, damning thing to say. But that's Trump. As I tweeted when he said it, he'll say he was kidding. And his camp did. Hey, it's all part of the Trump schtick.

And it's just another reminder that the press should pay little mind to his clown show, stand up rallies that are devoid of substance or anything redeeming, and pay closer attention to his actual war on law and order in this country.

So, which side are you on?

Join the right movement:

Friday, June 19, 2020

Celebrate Juneteenth

Celebrate Juneteenth

Trump's Tulsa Hate Rally

President Donald Trump is escalating his war against decency, common sense, compassion and justice to a whole new level.

Trump will hold a rally Saturday evening in Tulsa, Oklahoma, where the ravages of endemic racism and a spiking Coronavirus will collide in an unpredictable, in-your-face, volatile mix that strips away any remaining vestiges of the crumbling facade that Trump gives the slightest  damn about anything, or anyone, but himself.

In other words, Trump is holding a divisive, delusional rally, revealingly, at precisely the wrong place and exactly the wrong time.

While Tulsa and the state of Oklahoma have seen Covid-19 cases spike in recent weeks, the Trump campaign plans to pack a 19,000-seat arena with rabid fans without requiring they wear face coverings to protect them from the virus' spread.

As health officials from every walk strongly advise against such insanity -- Trump doesn't care. 

Press secretary Kayleigh McEnany, 

Descript

Trump's own personal Squealer the pig -- who in Animal Farm constantly and enthusiastically twisted the truth for the leader pig, Napoleon -- assures, temperatures will be taken at the door, sanitizer handed out and masks supplied. 

The Trump campaign, however, won't mandate that the masks be worn. Trump is thumbing his nose at science, rejecting all reason, misleading masses so he can satisfy that Realty TV-shtick  impulse to shock, delude and incite.

So, why would a demonstrated demagogue like Trump, amidst national racial upheaval, decide to hold a rally on Juneteenth (Fri., June 19) weekend that celebrates Slavery's end, and in a city that, this same month 99 years ago, was ground zero of the "Tulsa Race Massacre" which left 300 black people slaughtered and an entire wealthy black community destroyed?

Some 35 blocks of America's wealthiest black community, known as "Black Wall Street," was burned to the ground and estimated 10,000 black citizens we're left homeless in one the gravest acts of racial violence in American history.

The answer is clear. Just as he has done -- ever since this country saw the misfortune of Trump entering the presidential race five excruciatingly long years ago -- the divider-in-chief is stoking the fires of hatred and violence.

In 2019, the Southern Poverty Law Center identified four different hate groups active in Oklahoma: the American Identity Movement (White Nationalist), Patriot Front (White Nationalist), Patriotic Brigade Knights of the Klu Klux Klan and Proud Boys (classified as "General Hate").

So what further pain will Saturday's hate rally bring?

Whether he's aware of it or not, Trump has abandoned any pretense of caring about racial hatred in the country or the Covid-19 virus which has claimed more than 120,000 lives in America. 

Trump never gave any indication that he genuinely cared, of course. While Covid-19 was clearly incubating death across the homeland, Trump blew it off, downplayed it. He's never embraced the full magnitude of this pandemic. He only went through the motions of pretending to care. 

And now, when it's simply too damn inconvenient to his re-election hopes and his narcissistic drive to grandstand and bamboozle the desperately gullible, the President is hedging his bets, irresponsibly, criminally, throwing caution and the health and safety of Americans, to the wind.

Thursday, June 18, 2020

Time To Make This Land A Land For All Of Us

"This land is your land, and this land is my land
From California, to the New York Island
From the Redwood Forest, to the Gulf stream waters
This land was made for you and me."

- Woody Guthrie

Those lyrics from Woody Guthrie's song, "This Land is your land," ran through my head as I awoke yesterday morning.

Great song. A great reminder that this land, this country, under the great Democratic experiment of America, is supposed to be the home of equal rights and justice for all. 

But it's a idyllic notion, that's never been realized -- for all of us.

This land has never really been black Americans' land. African Americans never have been made to feel welcome, dating back more than 400 years ago, to 1619 in Jamestown, VA, when Africans were first introduced to American soil as slaves.

And before this land was claimed by the white man as their own, the land, for all intents and purposes, belonged to native Americans until so many of them were slaughtered at the white man's hand.

So whose land is it, really?

Like many of us, I've been pondering the vast injustices of "our land."

The intense hatred and engrained racism is borne of fear. And that fear is covered up by the pathetic political posturing of ruthless, alarmist, greedy, elitist, controlling miscreants, posing as heroic defenders of righteousness, so they can satisfy their obsessions with self, and have their way.

So much has been written about the horrible killing of George Floyd for the past three and half weeks. What is there left to say? Plenty. Hundreds of years of oppression, discrimination demands it.

How does a cop crush the life out of a man for more than eight minutes, seemingly without a care in the world, while being video-tapped doing it?

What makes Floyd's killing so unfathomable was that it wasn't the result of an impulsive, adrenalin-fueled, act of fear, where a cop fires his gun at an unarmed black man.

Former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin, charged with Floyd's murder, acted like a wild animal, a jungle cat which, after it initially takes down a vulnerable Gazelle, firmly clamps it's jaws down on its prey's throat, patiently squeezing out its last breath. 

Chauvin's act, coupled with the look on his face, was evil.  Period. It was cold-blooded murder, which is how I described it when I first saw it on Twitter, shortly after Memorial Day.
When I watched it again, incredulous, like many of us, I cried.

On Tuesday, Minneapolis state police filed court documents, indicating it too is reviewing former cop Chauvin's actions.

Now, amidst the inspiring  peaceful protests, demanding police accountability and serious reform, all across this land and the world, it feels like real change, real justice is finally possible.

Jesus Christ, who preached love, truth and forgiveness was crucified on a crude cross, to save man, according to God's plan. God's righteousness demanded such a price.

George Floyd, who once told a friend "I want to touch the world" and who mostly spread love and joy during his 46 years on earth, was also killed by hate, it seems, to save the rest of us.

(I wrote the piece below for Counter Punch a year and a half ago, amidst racial tensions surrounding a Mississippi senate race. It relates my experience with southern racism when I lived in the Magnolia State in the late 1990's.)