President Trump's painfully deluded train-wreck HBO interview proved he hasn't just lost control of the coronavirus – he's lost control of reality
By Piers Morgan
Daily Mail
August 4, 2020
In every great American crisis, there is a moment where the whole world can see the true character of a President.
For
George W. Bush it came when he was photographed staring down from the
luxurious comfort of Air Force One on the wreckage wrought by Hurricane
Katrina, after his government's woefully inadequate federal response.
The picture made him look detached and uncaring, and worst of all, a
weak and ineffectual leader. He never recovered from it.
For
Bill Clinton, it came with his infamous 'I did not have sexual
relations with that woman, Ms Lewinsky' declaration. When it turned out
he had indeed had multiple sexual relations with that woman, his
reputation was badly damaged.
Conversely, for John F. Kennedy, you could
point to his rousing 1962 speech challenging America to go to the moon,
instilling in Americans a spirit of unlimited optimism, as the moment
when he sparked a deep abiding popularity that lasts to this day.
Similarly,
for Ronald Reagan, his audacious 'Mr Gorbachev, tear down this wall!'
command at Berlin's Brandenburg Gate to the leader of the Soviet Union,
cemented his place in history.
For
President Donald J. Trump, there have been many grim moments during his
catastrophic handling of the coronavirus pandemic that may end up
defining his presidency.
But last night, during an extraordinary,
toe-curling HBO interview with AXIOS's Jonathan Swan, he exposed just
why the US has become a horrifyingly bad template for how NOT to combat
Covid-19.
In an attempt to defend his
indefensible record, and specifically why the US has one of the worst
death rates in the world, Trump suddenly produced a collection of
graphics.
'Look at some of these
charts,' he said. 'This one, right here, the United States is lowest…in
numerous categories…lower than the world.'
'In what?' said an incredulous Swan.
'Take a look,' said Trump, handing the chart over.
Swan, a very good and well-prepared journalist, studied the chart quickly and forensically.
'Oh, you're doing death as a proportion of cases,' he replied. 'I'm talking about death as a proportion of population.'
'Well… well…' Trump stammered.
'That's where the US is really bad,' persisted Swan, 'much worse than South Korea, Germany etc.'
'You can't do that!' exclaimed Trump.
'Why can't I do that?' asked Swan, looking understandably confused.
'You have to go by the cases,' said Trump. 'We're last, meaning we're first!'
It was a stunning exchange.
Here was the President of the United
States telling a journalist that he couldn't mention America's shocking
coronavirus death toll because all that matters is not how many people
have died, but how many people have been tested.
'You know there are those that say you can test too much,' Trump blathered. 'You do know that?'
Swan didn't know that, because nobody other than Trump has said that.
'Who says that?' Swan asked.
'Oh, just read the manuals,' Trump retorted. 'Read the books.'
'Manuals?' Swan pressed. 'What manuals?'
'Read the books, read the books,' Trump repeated.
Of course, there are no manuals, or books, that say you can do too much coronavirus testing.
Obviously,
as any scientist will attest, you can never do enough testing. It's the
only way to get on top of this virus until there's a vaccine.
What
Trump actually means is that he wishes America did less testing so they
didn't have so many cases because it makes HIM look bad.
That's why he doesn't want to talk about America's appalling death toll because, again, it makes HIM look bad.
'A thousand people are dying a day,' Swan told him.
'They are dying,' replied Trump. 'It's true. It is what it is.'
Wow.
'It
is what it is' - that was the President's staggering response to the
ongoing horrific slaughter of Americans by a deadly virus.
No empathy, no apology, no expression of sorrow.
Just a heartless, dismissive shrug.
The problem for Trump in this crisis is that the stats don't lie like he does.
When
Swan pointed out that South Korea has a population of 51 million people
but has only suffered 300 coronavirus deaths, Trump inferred, with zero
evidence, that the statistics were fake news.
It's
his default response to any facts he doesn't like, but now he is being
exposed by the cold, hard reality of data-backed truth.
The
World Health Organisation reports today there have been 18,100,204
confirmed cases of coronavirus in the world, and 690,257 deaths.
Of
these, America has had 4,629,459 cases, which is 25% of the global
total, and 154,226 deaths which is 22% of the global total.
Yet it has just 4.2% of the world's population.
So whichever way you look at the numbers, the United States is doing catastrophically badly.
Trump knows it, everyone knows it.
But he also knows if he admits it, it may cost him the election in November.
So,
he's now reduced to lying, obfuscating, deflecting, and anything else
he can think of to avoid being held accountable for what has happened on
his watch.
Last night, Americans saw their President deny the incontrovertible.
They saw him pretend he's got coronavirus under control when he's completely lost control.
And they saw him challenged relentlessly on all this bullshit by a top-class journalist determined not to let him off the hook.
It
made for electrifying but very unedifying viewing, combining the
detached uncaring conduct of George W. Bush during the Katrina crisis
with Bill Clinton's cynical lying about Monica Lewinsky.
There
were many other awful moments during the interview, including Trump
once again offering weirdly uncritical support to accused child sex
trafficker Ghislaine Maxwell, refusing to call the late civil rights
campaigning legend, Congressman John Lewis, 'impressive' because Lewis
hadn't gone to his inauguration, and stoking self-serving fears of
election night mail voting fraud.
But it was his meandering disingenuous nonsense about coronavirus that swiftly went viral around the world.
Some
people on social media even assumed it must be a comedy sketch given
how preposterous it appeared and the fact it was appearing on a network
famed for shows like Veep and Succession.
This, sadly, was very real.
I didn't laugh.
Instead, I cringed, I despaired, and then I felt angry.
America
is being overrun by coronavirus because its narcissistic President has
put his personal ego before doing his job – from spewing his dangerous
'cure' theories to trashing his top medical experts if they dare to
speak the truth and boasting inanely about his covid news conference TV
ratings.
Trump's made the crisis all about him, not the American people.
As a result, the American people are dying in massive numbers all over the country.
Jonathan
Swan's constantly bemused face last night perfectly summed up what we
were all thinking as the President brandished his meaningless
self-serving charts and spouted his nonsensical self-justifying drivel:
what the fuck is he talking about?
EDITOR'S NOTE: Trump said that Joe Biden has 'been in the basement for a long time.' For this disastrous interview with Jonathan Swan, Trump would have been better off had he stayed in the basement of the White House.
EDITOR'S NOTE: Trump said that Joe Biden has 'been in the basement for a long time.' For this disastrous interview with Jonathan Swan, Trump would have been better off had he stayed in the basement of the White House.
1 comment:
I wish everyone was perfect like the talking head Piers Morgan or his ever present Editors Note writer.
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