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Writer's pictureHowie Klein

Is Trump God's Wrath? Is It The Punishment America Deserves For All The Fucked Up Crap We've Done?

Can Things Get Even Worse?



If later today, Trump sent out another social media post falsely claiming that the the Trump supporter who committed suicide in the CyberTruck outside  of his Las Vegas hotel or that the New Orleans mass murderer from Texas would have been stopped if the border was shut down, would you be angry? What about if you heard Republican members of Congress, like MAGA Mike and Mike Waltz (Trump’s nominee to be his national security advisor), on TV parroting Trump’s lie but knowing full well it is a lie? Get you pissed off? How pissed off. Enough so that if Trump fell out of a helicopter and splattered all over the ground you would be happy? How happy— one to ten, one being just a little happy and 10 being… well, awash in a tidal wave of joy, as if the stars themselves conspired to light your heart and your soul?


Count me as an 11. I’ve never urged anyone to murder Trump or the 77,303,568 people who voted for him; that’s totally illegal and, in the case of the 77,303,568 people who voted for him (49.7% of the voters), absolutely insane, deranged, amoral and impractical. But what has this man and these enablers done to our country?


I moved out when Nixon was elected. Trump on an average day is worse than Nixon at his worst. I’m too old to do it again. If I was 20, though, I surely would. I loved the places I spent time in, especially Amsterdam and Afghanistan, but you can’t go to Afghanistan— don’t even try it… and you’ll understand why in a couple of minutes.


If you already read the Phil Klay essay, Trump, Hegseth And The Honor Of The American Military in the NY Times yesterday, you already do understand why Afghanistan is a no-go, even though that wasn’t what his essay was about. It’s far more artful than most Times’ OpEds. I wasn’t even 100% sure— despite the title— which side he was on ’til the end. Was he admiring Señor T when he wrote that “When it comes to articulating a vision of American warfare, Trump is the least hypocritical president of my adult life. He does not promise to spread democracy or human rights or a liberal, international rules-based order. He does not claim we’re a shining city on a hill. ‘We’ve got a lot of killers,’ he has said instead. ‘What? You think our country’s so innocent?’ He has stated smaller, less idealistic goals: our borders, secure; our economy, soaring; our wars, ended. These are most presidents’ goals, of course, but Trump expresses them plainly, even crassly. Given this, it seems unlikely that Trump will start a disastrous war in a faraway country to ‘free its people and defend the world,’ as George W. Bush did, or make appeals to international law in Ukraine while ignoring it in Gaza, like President Biden. And if and when Trump does kill people overseas, he’s more likely to claim they ‘died like a dog’ than perform hand-wringing the way Barack Obama did about how he wanted to save them but ‘the world they were a part of, and the machinery I commanded, more often had me killing them instead.’ After so much presidential windbaggery, Trump’s bracing cynicism is almost refreshing.”


Almost. “But this sort of amoral pragmatism, especially in matters of war, has its limits and dangers. It will inevitably run up against a core belief in America’s identity as a nation, the belief in the moral obligation to strive to conduct and fight wars honorably. It’s a belief I still hold and that millions of Americans do, too… [T]he incoming Trump administration isn’t offering our military a moral purpose. ‘People will not fight for abstractions,’ Vance claimed at the Republican National Convention; they’ll fight only to defend their homeland. It’s a smaller vision, fitting for a country that has lost faith in itself. How a second-term President Trump will lead the military is an open question. His inconstancy and lack of ideological commitment make it impossible to know. But his proposed cabinet appointments give us at least some idea of what he hopes the future will be. And more than any other pick, it is Pete Hegseth, whom Trump has chosen to be the next secretary of defense, who troubles me.”


There’s a swirl of controversies and concerns around Hegseth that make it difficult to focus on what’s important. But most notable to me, because it strikes at the core of the honor of the American military, is his signature achievement as a political advocate: helping persuade Trump to intervene in the cases of three men accused or convicted of war crimes. Afterward, Trump publicly heralded the men as “great warriors” and later invited two of them, including Clint Lorance, onstage at a private fund-raiser.
Here’s how Lorance earned that invitation.
In 2012 he was sent as a new commander without combat experience to lead a platoon of young soldiers deployed to Afghanistan with the largely hopeless mission of defeating the local Taliban and winning over the area’s population. One day he threatened to kill a farmer and his son, a 3- or 4-year-old boy, and a day later ordered his men to shoot within inches of unarmed villagers, including near children. “It’s funny watching” the villagers “dance,” he said. Lorance’s men, combat veterans, eventually balked at his orders and refused his instructions to make a false report about taking fire from the village. The next day he ordered fire on unarmed Afghans over a hundred yards from the platoon, killing them, and radioed a false report claiming the bodies couldn’t be searched.
And here the difference between an idealistic and an amoral vision of America becomes concrete. Because those soldiers, who’d seen combat and watched their friends suffer terrible wounds, turned in Lorance that evening, 14 of them eventually offering testimony against him in the court-martial that found him guilty of second-degree murder.
That testimony meant nothing to the elite media personalities like Sean Hannity and Hegseth who took up Lorance’s cause, though. Trump’s pardon of their former leader was a final betrayal for the troops who served in that platoon.
One of them said that he attempted to kill himself when Lorance became a cause célèbre in right-wing media. Even beforehand, the killings haunted them. “It tainted our entire service,” another explained. Soldiers from other units called them the “murder platoon.” “I thought of the Army as this altruistic thing,” yet another veteran of the unit reflected. “The Lorance stuff just broke my faith.”
Anyone who knows the history of America’s wars knows that such faith has often been betrayed, but that’s not the same as saying that it should be or that it always will be. I choose to believe in an America that might honor that faith, despite the worst my country has done and despite what it might do over the next four years. How else to respond to an age of cynicism than to point out, steadily, without undue histrionics, that Americans have proved capable of more in the past and they can prove capable of more in the future? That our notion of our homeland has always been tied up with grand moral principles.
And this faith I have, despite it all, is tied up in my experience in the Iraq war, the same war that left Vance so embittered. Because, by and large, the men and women I served with really did want to make the world a better, safer and more democratic place. Sure, they wanted college money and adventure, too, but they were less like Lorance than the men of his platoon, decent people who wanted to do something good and be a part of something larger than themselves. Peculiar and crass and funny and filthy and heroic, they expended monumental efforts that reaped little reward, but that’s hardly their fault. And though their aspirations, shared by so many Americans, are an untapped resource in politics, that doesn’t mean they’re not still there, waiting.
Right now, I’d like to speak up for the suckers and the losers. After all, I am one. I was a 21-year-old dupe, taking the oath of office. Twenty years later, I’m still convinced that America can be a force for good in the world and that soldiering is an honorable profession. I still haven’t learned my lesson, nor have I lost my admiration for those who, even when poorly led by men without honesty or honor, tried to serve their country well.
There may be benefits to Trump’s skepticism about major military commitments abroad. But a military with neither moral purpose nor a commitment to moral conduct is a military that fights without honor.

And I still didn't vote for Kamala Harris! Not for D.A., not for Attorney General, not for Senator, VP or President. You know what they say about voting for the lesser evil. Even the way lesser. I only have one vote and I'm not squandering on evil. I wrote in for Roland's name.



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7 Comments


Guest
2 days ago

There is no god.

trump is a consequence of our own stupidity.

the evil that we've done over the lifetime of our republic is a consequence of our own evils and stupidity.


We destroyed native peoples, african slaves, other nations, some for cause, some simply for amusement. Now we destroy ourselves.

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Guest
2 days ago

"And I still didn't vote for Kamala Harris! Not for D.A., not for Attorney General, not for Senator, VP or President. You know what they say about voting for the lesser evil. Even the way lesser. I only have one vote and I'm not squandering on evil."


I find it fascinating how some responders are so agitated about this. Yes, voting is important. I also feel that voting for evil makes ME evil. And I'm not evil.


The only difference between you and me is scale. I know that the entire democrap party is evil. they may talk nice, but they do evil... to the 99% of americans who do not finance their campaigns, so I do not vote for A…


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Guest
2 days ago

I'm glad that someone is bringing up the war crimes pardons in a high-profile forum.

The focus in the media so far had been on Hesgeth's inexperience running a large organization and his MeToo issues, and if anything those are points in his favor among the 53 GOP members of the world's greatest deliberative body. But the idea that someone who advocated for not one but three war criminals might be put in charge of the military might be too much for at least a few of them. Is Susan Collins concerned yet?

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Guest
2 days ago
Replying to

wouldn't it be nice if your corrupt pussies brought this up during his confirmation?

they won't. because you don't vote for morals or courage. you vote for the lesser, but still colossal, evil.

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Guest
2 days ago

Voting is not a joke nor to be scoffed at. I wouldn’t advertise about voting for Roland. Not amusing.

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Guest
2 days ago

Yeah it pisses me off you did not vote for Kamala, in part because California is a blue state regardless of your vote. To me you dissed the importance of voting, sacrosanct in a democracy. Voting is a serious matter., a moral obligation. Imagine if Kamala had won. We’d be sooooo much better off. Light years better off.

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Guest
2 days ago
Replying to

we'd be a little better off... for now. because kamala and your corrupt pussies still wouldn't be doing anything about the nazis. you think kamala's AG would put trump in prison... when there may be future elections where his palpable evil would help your lesser evil corrupt pussies win? NFW!!

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