FLATTERY, FOOLS AND THE FECKLESS
In the fairy tale “The Emperor’s New Clothes”, a small child pointed out that a vain leader was riding naked in a procession meant to show off what he had been conned into believing was the most magnificent wardrobe ever created.
Only then did the public dare to admit to themselves what the king’s courtiers were too timorous to tell him.
Today’s equivalent of the small child is a couple of clicks of a computer mouse that can summon up the wisdom of the ages, fact-check public statements and expose obfuscation.
But no one seems willing to heed it, or to follow the advice of Sir Winston Churchill , a leader described as having “uncompromising confidence,” and “ a steel hardened will”: “ Criticism may not be agreeable, but it is necessary. It fulfils the same function as pain in the human body. It calls attention to an unhealthy state of things.”
Instead, the rule for doing business of any kind with the U.S. would-be king is essentially: Flatter excessively. Don’t expect promises to be kept or policies to be consistent. Repay the non-courtesy with more flattery.
Not that it’s likely to happen, but those who play the game better hope he never comes across the wisdom of the ancient Greek philosopher Aristotle: ” People generally despise where they flatter.”
But just in case, why not try other ways of getting stuff done (and undone) by appealing to (read: manipulating) vanity?
For starters, convince he who puts his name in capital letters on planes, golf courses, resorts and the ever-multiplying lines of merchandise he sees money in hawking, that anything with US on it, is actually his brand.
It might necessitate including TRUMP in the logo on USAID boxes, but at least the world’s most vital governmental aid agency would be back in business, and the hungry and suffering are unlikely to reject it as fake news.
Make the point that that friends have to be won, so the more of them you have the more of a winner you are.
Then trade deals, alliances and diplomacy might have a fighting chance at success, as opposed to floundering in uncertainty verging on chaos.
FOOLS
The term “fool” dates to the early 13th century, when it meant a “silly, stupid, or ignorant person.”
The example of Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu would seem to be proof positive that bothering with anything but flattery to get whatever you want, makes you one.
Netanyahu’s brazenly insincere gift to Trump of a letter nominating him for the Nobel Peace Prize was the equivalent of suggesting giving the Israeli Air Force a Good Housekeeping Award for its efforts in Gaza and Beirut.
He has also lauded Trump as having a “brilliant vision” for Gaza.
Well, yes, if you don’t understand or even acknowledge terms like “ethnic cleansing”, and don’t consider Palestinians as people, with both a right and historical roots to be in Gaza.
Maybe that’s why the Israeli government thinks (unfortunately so far, correctly) that it can get away with killing seventeen people, most of them children, waiting outside a clinic, with a high fragmentation munition designed for use against clusters of enemy troops on a battlefield, to kill one “Hamas operative”, with the unctuous statement: “The IDF regrets any harm to uninvolved individuals …”
They’re gambling — and not without evidence — that they can take everyone who might oppose such perfidy as fools. And the evidence is on their side.
THE FECKLESS
How many Texas-scale floods, record-breaking hurricanes, rampant wildfires, searing heat and drought, melting icecaps and glaciers will it take before the reality manages to penetrate the fog of willful ignorance, greed and “gimme now and never mind later” mentality that delineates the ethos of Trump’s cabinet, and MAGA?
The level of inchoate nonsense they will accept from their “king” seems boundless.
This week’s prime example was when a New York Times reporter tried to follow up on an assertion by Trump that he wasn’t sure who had ordered a halt on weapons supplies to Ukraine.
REPORTER: “What does it say that such a big decision can be made inside your government without you knowing?”
TRUMP: “I would know if a decision was made. I will know. I’ll be the first to know. In fact, most likely, I’d give the order, but I haven’t done that yet,”
A day or so later, the Washington Post’s editorial board trumpeted that “Americans deserve an unflinching investigation into Biden’s health” especially his mental fitness, during his tenure as president.If it prompted moves for closer and more public scrutiny of the decline or otherwise of sitting presidents, that would be useful.
Certainly we who have no say over but are broadly affected by the cognitive powers of whoever is in the White House would welcome it.
But we won’t hold our collective breath in hope or expectation that Washington Post owner Jeff Bezos — or any of his fellow billionaires — will forsake a position of courtier to assume the role of the small child who called out the naked king.
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3 thoughts on “FLATTERY, FOOLS AND THE FECKLESS”
Trump was most gleeful at receiving the letter nominating him for the Nobel peace Prize. He’ll probably frame it until it gets replaced by the genuine article next year. But, as always Trump wouldn’t know the deadline for the next prize was Jan. 31, 2025.
Shame on you Israel ..
It is beyond belief that a man in his position is as stupid as he seems. Senile perhaps, a narcissist definitely, but blissfully unaware of reality? Surely he can’t be. On the Nobel Peace Prize — I met the chair of the committee in Oslo a few years ago, & his integrity, as well as the multiple stories he told of attempted persuasion to have totally inappropriate people awarded the prize over the years, leaves me confident that this performative fuckery of Trump and Netanyahu will get Trump no closer to any prize.