Alternet
- "Trump is essentially beyond the reach of
the law in terms of actions,” Jonathan Swan, who with Maggie Haberman
co-authored the book “Regime Change,” told Peter Slen from C-SPAN on Monday.
“Trump has told senior advisers in the Oval Office that he's going to pardon
anyone who came within 250 feet of the Oval Office. I don't think they feel any
real concern about illegality."
Trump has
undertaken a number of actions that cause people to worry he plans on becoming
a dictator. The Atlantic assistant editor Marc Novicoff explained in April that
Trump has acted like a dictator in that he “prosecutes his political opponents;
deports immigrants … to foreign prisons without due process; solicits tribute
payments from corporations and foreign governments; deploys soldiers to
American cities that are not, in fact, in civil-war-level chaos; and puts his
name and image on government buildings that quite obviously don’t belong to
him.”
Trump has
renamed government buildings and institutions including the John F. Kennedy
Center for the Performing Arts, the U.S. Institute of Peace, Trump Coin, Trump
Accounts, TrumpRX, the Trump Gold Card and future U.S. paper currency. He has
also unfurled banners with his image over the Department of Agriculture, the
Department of Justice and the Department of Labor and urged lawmakers to pass a
bill to carve his image onto Mount Rushmore.
"Dictators, once they've secured their grip on near-absolute power — and often once they start to get older — have a tendency to lose touch with reality, which often manifests in the form of grandiosity," UK-based i Paper journalist James Ball said in April. "Stalin was still relatively young when he renamed the city of Tsaritsyn as 'Stalingrad,' but building monuments and renaming things is very much the stereotypical out-of-control dictator move: Saddam Hussein had endless statues and monuments built in his image, while Saparmurat Niyazov of Turkmenistan renamed months, animal breeds, days of the weeks and cities…. The combination of endless flattery from courtiers, unbridled ego, lack of restraint from constitutional processes — and, quite often, the effects of an increasingly superannuated brain — drives many despots in this direction.
1 comment:
It's obvious that this is a flailing, rootless man who is addled by the senility he inherited from Fred Trump. He needs to go but it's now dangerous to do so thanks to the Supreme Court giving Trump near-Godlike powers over the entire Federal government....I have no truest in JD Vance.
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