Over the past week, Trump has repeatedly cited the Mexican heritage of U.S. District Judge Gonzalo Curiel, who is overseeing a lawsuit brought by former students of Trump University alleging fraud against the institution. Trump accused Curiel of a conflict of interest in hearing the case because, according to his reasoning, the judge’s Mexican heritage puts him at odds with Trump’s proposal to build a wall on the U.S.-Mexican border....But Maureen Dowd, in her latest column, says that racist one-liners and cheap shots will actually be beneficial to Trump in the fall (emphasis added below):
... House Speaker Paul D. Ryan ... said Trump’s accusations against the judge had come “completely out of left field,” adding, “It’s reasoning I don’t relate to. I completely disagree with the thinking behind that.”
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) criticized Trump for an earlier attack on New Mexico Gov. Susana Martinez, a Republican, and expressed his concern that Trump’s language and behavior could permanently alienate Hispanics from the Republican Party...
[Hillary Clinton] made a really good speech in San Diego. But even if she dispatches Sanders on Tuesday, Trump isn’t going to be easy. Given the slurs and punches and eggs and salacious, hellacious stuff flying around, this could be the wildest, meanest election in modern history.So even though Dowd calls some of these attacks "nutty," and even though she acknowledges that they've alienated Paul Ryan, and even though she herself seems put off by them, she thinks they're the reason "Trump isn’t going to be easy" to beat.
Just look at Friday alone.
Trump was on a tarmac in Redding, Calif., recounting a story about a black “great guy” who slugged a protester at a prior rally. He interrupted himself to point at a random black supporter in the crowd, saying: “Oh, look at my African-American over here. Look at him.”
This followed an interview with CNN’s Jake Tapper in which Trump was unyielding in his insistence that he was not being racist when he said that the judge presiding in a lawsuit over Trump University was biased because “he’s a Mexican” and “we’re building a wall between here and Mexico.”
Tapper gamely tried to point out, more than once, that the judge, Gonzalo Curiel, was born and raised in Indiana. But Trump held his ground: “He’s proud of his heritage. I respect him for that.”
The latest installment in a nutty attack on the judge -- coming more than a week after a nutty attack on New Mexico’s Republican governor, Susana Martinez -- forced Paul Ryan, who had finally dragged himself over to Trump a day earlier, to start skittering away again.
It would be one thing if Dowd were arguing that Americans approve of Trump's racism to a greater extent than we're comfortable acknowledging. But her point seems to be that Trump is such a savage brawler that Hillary might not be able to outfight him -- even if he's flailing blindly and doing more damage to his party than to his opponent.
But maybe I'm looking for more coherence in this column than is actually there -- after all, at the top of the column Dowd seems to imply that Trump (yes, Trump!) is a woman. Or at least I think she does:
LOS ANGELES -- THIS is a town where scripts routinely come back to writers from entertainment executives with the same scrawled command about a female character: “Make her more likable.”What does that Taming of the Shrew reference mean? Is Dowd saying that the GOP is trying to tame Trump, who is Katherina in this analogy? Or is Trump the tamer and Clinton the shrew? I think it's the former, in which case it's the first time in my memory that Dowd has played gender games while writing about a Republican.
As Hillary Clinton fights up and down California to fend off Bernie Sanders and clinch the nomination, Democrats watch with clenched teeth. Sure, the Republicans are engaged in a hilarious performance of “The Taming of the Shrew” with their tart-tongued presumptive nominee.
But can plodding Hillary be, as Barack Obama famously put it, likable enough?
If that's what she's saying, Dowd gets the gender politics all wrong. Why would you describe a notorious dick-swinging sexist as an untamed woman?
What else does Dowd get wrong? Well, she approvingly quotes this:
Naturally, Lin-Manuel Miranda of “Hamilton” fame provided the perfect kicker for the week in a new Rolling Stone interview, saying that this election is “no more bizarre than the election in 1800 wherein Jefferson accused Adams of being a hermaphrodite and Adams responded” by spreading rumors “that Jefferson died so that Adams would be the only viable candidate. He was counting on news to travel slow! That, weirdly, gives me hope.”You might imagine that a veteran columnist at America's Finest Newspaper would want to quote an actual historian on this point, but this is Dowd we're talking about, so an entertainer who reads history books is the best we'll get. In fact, the "hermaphrodite" charge against Adams wasn't literal, and it didn't come directly from Jefferson:
[Jefferson's] supporters accused the incumbent president Adams of having a "hideous hermaphroditical character, which has neither the force and firmness of a man, nor the gentleness and sensibility of a woman." In response, a leaflet by Adams' team called Jefferson "a mean-spirited, low-lived fellow, the son of a half-breed Indian squaw, sired by a Virginia mulatto father."The Adams leaflet sounds a lot like Trump -- and the attack by Jefferson's backers sounds like a line from a Maureen Dowd column.
Increasingly, I'm driven to conclude that the main reason the NYTimes employes ModO, Brooks and Douthat is so liberal pundits will have less coded rightwing inanity to write about.
ReplyDeleteNo MoDo column read in [11,686 tick tick tick 11,687] consecutive days. I am the Joe Dimaggio of not reading MoDo pieces. People used to be amazed, until they realized, Oh, crap: that same thing can be said by upwards 320 million Americans and almost every single human outside this country in the entire history of organic life on this planet.
You must always read the comment section to every Modo column if you read the article itself. You will find. like in my comments to MoDo that get printed. a general consensus that Menopause Can Really Be a Bitch.
ReplyDeleteMoDo needs to go!
ReplyDeleteShe writes columns that belong in a HS newspaper's gossip page.
The only time she was useful, was in taking down W & Dick. Outside of that, she's a useless hack.
But, so are Bobo and Douche-hat!
OY!!!!!
What a waste of valuable Op-ed space.................
I believe Jefferson was retaliating for the claim that he had impregnated Ms. Jennings, which, of course, was true.
ReplyDeleteDoes anyone know why Dowd still has a job as a journalist?
ReplyDeleteTrump has, nevertheless, succeeded in moving the media towards his chosen terms of engagement. For example "Tapper gamely tried to point out, more than once, that the judge, Gonzalo Curiel, was born and raised in Indiana" may seem like a point in Tapper's favor. But all he's doing is tacitly accepting that Trump would have a valid complaint if the judge had been born in Mexico. In other words it's not unreasonable to expect racial bias from judges born overseas, which helps feed the general xenophobia Trump's trading on.
ReplyDeleteMoDo still has a job because she generates page views.
ReplyDeleteI stopped reading modo years ago.. Then safire, then the human trafficking guy, then Collins, then they got doughat and I never read him but a few times. Then I just stopped reading the entire oped pages but the letters. Then them.. And lately the NY times piles up in the nook and I skim them after a while.
ReplyDelete
ReplyDeleteDespite her initial protestations, it's increasingly obvious that those seemingly innocent caramel-chocolate
candy bars have become a staple in the Dowd household.
But maybe I'm looking for more coherence in this column than is actually there...
ReplyDeleteIs it a Maureen Dowd column? Then the answer is yes.
But I think the assumption underlying all the "Trump is going to be tough to beat" talk (including Scott Adams, who is massively impressed by Trump's enormous powers of persuasion) is that the votes of white guys are still dispositive. In fact, these people are writing about the election as if African-Americans and Latinos and Muslims and Asians didn't even exist.