The driving psychological force of his administration
Jamelle Bouie asks probing questions about Trump’s hypothetical “reasons” for the tariff war.
…How do you revitalize American manufacturing if manufacturers can’t reasonably import the materials they need to build factories and produce goods? Where is capital supposed to come from? How do you reset the nation’s relationship with its trading partners if those partners are forced to treat you as a bad force that can’t be trusted?…
There is a hypothetical president with a hypothetically similar agenda who could answer these questions. This actual president cannot. He did not reason himself into his preoccupation with tariffs and can neither reason nor speak coherently about them. There is no grand plan or strategic vision, no matter what his advisers claim — only the impulsive actions of a mad king, untethered from any responsibility to the nation or its people. For as much as the president’s apologists would like us to believe otherwise, Trump’s tariffs are not a policy as we traditionally understand it. What they are is an instantiation of his psyche: a concrete expression of his zero-sum worldview.
Egzactly. Nothing he does is the product of a rational thought process. It’s all libido, all rage and greed and spite. He’s not a guy who thinks. He’s a guy who erupts. You might as well seek reasons for his belches.
The fundamental truth of Donald Trump is that he apparently cannot conceive of any relationship between individuals, peoples or states as anything other than a status game, a competition for dominance.
I suspect that “apparently” was forced on Bouie by the editors – as a hedge against accusations of libel. It weakens the claim.
His long history of scams and hostile litigation — not to mention his frequent refusal to pay contractors, lawyers, brokers and other people who were working for him — is evidence enough of the reality that a deal with Trump is less an agreement between equals than an opportunity for Trump to abuse and exploit the other party for his own benefit. For Trump, there is no such thing as a mutually beneficial relationship or a positive-sum outcome. In every interaction, no matter how trivial or insignificant, someone has to win, and someone has to lose. And Trump, as we all know, is a winner.
So what does that tell us about Trump? That basically he sees everyone as a rival and, in fact, an enemy. Literally everyone, his own children included.
Trump’s desire to dominate others is the driving psychological force of his administration. His obsession with territorial conquest — seen in his effort to coerce the Canadian government into relinquishing its sovereignty as well as his calls for the acquisition of Greenland and the Panama Canal — is an obvious product of his predatory approach to human interaction. His authoritarian attempts to cow and coerce key institutions of civil society into compliance with his agenda and obedience to his will are, likewise, a kind of dominance game. They are meant to demonstrate his mastery over his perceived enemies more than they are to achieve any policy aim. He even said as much during an event on Tuesday, when he bragged about the law firms “signing up with Trump” and said that “they give me a lot of money, considering they’ve done nothing wrong.”
That goes a long way to explain what’s so loathsome about him. It’s the emptiness. That’s always been obvious – he’s an empty bladder with a lot to say, all of it wrong and bad and hostile. It’s been obvious but it’s also been elusive, because how does a person like that not jump off a cliff?

“It’s been obvious but it’s also been elusive, because how does a person like that not jump off a cliff?”
He’s too busy gleefully pushing everyone else off.
It’s the very reason why he ran for president, especially this time around. He needed to dominate people he didn’t like, including Obama and Hillary. After his loss to Biden, the only way to keep him from running again would have been if he died, or if he was prevented from running by some legal restrictions – and I have my doubts that the last would have stopped him. In his mind, the law is for other people.
After his loss to Biden, the only way to keep him from running again would have been if he died, or if he was prevented from running by some legal restrictions – and I have my doubts that the last would have stopped him. In his mind, the law is for other people.
Duerte – Turned over to the ICC
Bolsanaro – Probably going to prison
Marine La Pen – banned from politics
The Biden Administration should have jailed Trump when they had the chance.
But you cannot blame Trump alone for this. He only employs the very best people, people who call him “Sir”, people who … Oh, forget it. The only competent person, the only one who knew how to do theiur job properly, Trump ever employed was Stormy Daniels.
Given his on-again, off-again tariffs, and with share markets bouncing around like so many yo-yos, impeachment will be circling overhead as an ever-growing possibility. But in the mean time, the rising chorus will be: ‘All hail Donald Duck!; All hail President Goofy.! All hail President Dumbell.!’ Etc.
Nooooooo, there’s not a snowball’s chance in hell of impeachment.
With such enormous pomposity, impeachment is barely a bump in the road. In this case, two (so far).
Well they might finally take at least some of his “emergency” powers away from him. But no, impeachment is never happening. A military coup is more likely than impeachment, if that says anything about the impossibility thereof.
Even if he were successfully impeached and removed, that would just leave us with President Vance, hardly an improvement. (And I suspect we’ll have Vance as president before Trump’s term is over anyway.)
WaM:
But for that to happen, President Goofy would have to resign, or be pushed. Either way, I do not think it will be noise-free.
Or die, unless that’s included in what you mean by “pushed”.
I’m finding it grimly amusing to imagine Trump passing away in office, and then having J. D. Vance trying to pretend to be grief-stricken in public.
“We have lost not only a great leader, but also a dear friend of mine….Ha, ha, ha, sorry, I can’t do this! Ha! Ha! Ha!”
An obese man pushing eighty who never exercises and has a terrible diet probably isn’t long for this world. They’ll find a way to keep him going for two years (even if they have to use the Franco strategy), but not much more.
Well that’s been true all along and just look at it – he even got Covid and snapped back in a day or two. He should be a physical wreck yet he keeps going like the god damn Energizer bunny.
Perhaps it’s wishful thinking on my part, but he can’t be immortal.
Can he?
I dunno, if they hadn’t discovered the cocktail by that point (and those were powerful roids) there was a good chance he’d have died or been permanently damaged. Being lucky is one of his most significant traits.
But he ages rather obviously; he will be gone. Presumably the Chances of the world are hoping that’s long after anyone is willing to oppose them without the cult leader’s magic.