TPM - Josh Marshall "The Calm Before the Storm"
https://talkingpointsmemo.com/edblog/the-calm-before-the-storm
By Josh Marshall
September 3, 2018 12:15 pm
A few times over the last month Ive had the sense that I may actually struggle to acclimate to a post-Trump politics. That doesnt mean I dont want it or look forward to it. As basically every sensible person has argued, the rise of Trump has been a catastrophe for the United States and every day he remains in office inflicts greater damage. But recently Ive been thinking back to the Obama years and crazy as they often seemed how comparatively placid they were, even though they were not really placid at all. But the sheer intensity, drama, bad-acting nature of Trumps presidency is in an entirely different category.
As I wrote before Trump even became President, living with a Trump presidency, at least if your work is politics, is comparable to living in the home of an abuser or someone with a severe personality disorder. People who live in those settings develop tools, coping mechanisms to handle that level of emotional turbulence, aggression, craziness. They can require a degree of unlearning once they find a more healthy environment. The tools you develop living in close proximity to an abuser are usually mal-adaptive when the abuser is no longer present.
I should state explicitly that the Trump presidency is of course an entirely different experience for those who are its direct targets: undocumented immigrants as the central focus of Trumps aggression, all immigrants, all non-whites, women, in differing degrees members of the LGBT community. But the living in close proximity to an abuser still applies to a lesser degree to everyone who doesnt view Trump as their champion. Indeed, living in close proximity to an abuser has an effect on those who are not even the primary targets of abuse.
I say all this as a preliminary to saying that I think it is all about to get, if not worse, than more intense, accelerated and more kinetic.
snip - lots more at the link above
last two para.
The United States has been gripped by a profound polarization for almost two years. Yes, the polarization predated Trumps presidency. But having a maximalist representative of the right in power in the White House has intensified it massively. Weve had public shouting matches, one-sided legislative fights, political mobilizations and protests. But in a constitutional sense the battle has really yet to be joined. The Courts have played some role restraining Trump. But that has been at the margins. Indeed, Trumps additions to the Supreme Court signal that he is likely to be backed at the highest level, at least on the ground of presidential power if not immunity to the law. The President has vast powers which are matched, or potentially matched, by Congress. But Congress has been AWOL in the face of President Trumps abuses and lawlessness for going on two years. Theres a decent chance that is about to change. It will change just as the Special Counsel investigation appears to be arriving at President Trumps inner circle.
All of this suggests that the pace of events is likely to accelerate and become more kinetic, volatile and potentially dangerous.