Mona Charen
As deep as the hole that Democrats have dug is, the Republicans have bested them with a full-on suicide that not even a novelist would have imagined. A mob of self-styled "conservative" activists, jumped-up talk radio and TV hosts and Republican Party apparatchiks (oh, does that word have new relevance), and a plurality of primary voters and spineless elected officials across the fruited plain have signed on with a repellent demagogue who will destroy the party at its moment of maximum opportunity.
Now that it's too late, the rats are asking to be rescued from the sinking ship they helped launch. Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich hailed Trump's convention speech a "revolutionary moment" and reinforced Trump's reckless suggestion that NATO might not come to the aid of countries like Estonia in the event of a Russian invasion -- among countless other lickspittle bits of analysis. But since Trump's terrible post-convention week Gingrich has discovered that candidate Trump is "unacceptable." He and other lackeys like former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani and Republican National Committee Chairman Reince Priebus are reportedly planning an intervention to get Trump to stop being Trump. Ha. Why now? Trump's ignorance, malevolence and instability have been on spectacular display for more than a year. Yet, men and women of honor and sanity boarded his cliff-destined train and buckled up.
In the Claremont Review of Books, Martha Bayles reminds us of the adage of two barrels, one containing sewage and the other wine: "Add a cup of wine to the sewage, and it is still sewage. But add a cup of sewage to the wine, and it is no longer wine but sewage."
Trump is a pathogen, a man who heedlessly promotes conspiracy theories (vaccines cause autism, Obama was born in Kenya, Bush lied us into war in Iraq, Rafael Cruz was caught up in the JFK assassination). He is either not fully sane or at least indifferent to the demoralizing effect that such lies have on our social cohesion. A man whose confidence is so shaky that he must attest to his own intelligence, malign even the most insignificant critic, scapegoat minorities and threaten the free press is to be pitied -- maybe -- but not trusted with power. He is very, very comfortable stoking mobs and threatening violence. His warning that there would be riots in Cleveland if he failed to get the Republican nomination -- to cite just one of the thousands of ways he has transgressed basic norms this year -- ought to have been enough to activate the antibodies of a healthy electorate.
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