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Zorro

(15,740 posts)
Thu Jun 18, 2020, 01:05 PM Jun 2020

Trump's Bolton problem is nothing compared with Senate Republicans' woes

Former national security adviser John Bolton, author of “The Room Where It Happened,” refused to come forward to testify before Congress that President Trump betrayed his oath by, among other things, allegedly seeking help from China to help his reelection. In Bolton’s telling, Trump was willing to make a sweetheart trade deal, lift sanctions on China’s telecom company ZTE and decline prosecution against Huawei to ingratiate himself with China and get what he thought would power his reelection.

Bolton, who chose to continue working for Trump while he says this was going on, remained silent, making him a mercenary who put a book deal above his country. That also makes him nearly as despicable as the man who he says betrayed his country, for without Bolton’s silence, Trump might have been caught red-handed in selling out the United States’ interests to retain power. This suggests that decent Americans should not reward Bolton by buying his book. But what does it say about Trump and the Republican senators who voted to acquit?

Trump’s alleged disdain for elections and enthusiasm for China’s concentration camps that Bolton conveys should not surprise informed voters. Trump, who responded to Bolton’s claims by calling him a “liar,” has been sucking up to dictators and demeaning democratic institutions from the day he was elected. Such entreaties to China would be analogous to his scheme to extort Ukraine; both entail selling out U.S. interests.

In a written statement, former vice president Joe Biden persuasively argues: “Donald Trump’s behavior disgraces the American presidency. We knew that long before today’s revelations.” He also implies, not unreasonably but without direct evidence, that Trump’s refusal to defend the United States against the novel coronavirus pandemic resulted from his desire to curry favor with China. Biden asserts:

For months, our country and the world have suffered through the COVID-19 pandemic. More than 117,000 Americans have lost their lives and tens of millions of workers are unemployed — and we’ve been hurt far worse because of Donald Trump's inability to lead and his failure to meet the crisis. Today we learned more about the depth and nature of that failure.

Why didn’t he act when the warning signs were so clear? Why did he ignore his briefings from the intelligence community, the warnings from his own team, and from me? Why did he repeatedly praise the Chinese government and President Xi as the coronavirus spread? Because he wanted to have a trade deal with China as a talking point for his re-election campaign.

Many of us suspected that this might be the case given Trump’s incessant groveling to China (or other dictatorships). Perhaps this influenced his unwarranted praise of China’s response to the pandemic, his aversion to calling out China earlier and his failure to cut off travel from China sooner. He is quite simply an easy mark for dictators who recognize how easily he can be manipulated.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2020/06/18/trumps-bolton-problem-is-nothing-compared-senate-republicanss-woes/
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Trump's Bolton problem is nothing compared with Senate Republicans' woes (Original Post) Zorro Jun 2020 OP
His fondness for concentration camps will be clearer if he is able to put us all in one. Eliot Rosewater Jun 2020 #1
trump has been trying to cut a traitorous Election deal with China. Period. empedocles Jun 2020 #2

Eliot Rosewater

(31,109 posts)
1. His fondness for concentration camps will be clearer if he is able to put us all in one.
Thu Jun 18, 2020, 01:07 PM
Jun 2020

That he wants to is I hope a known fact that nobody will argue with.

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