PARIS – If Donald Trump were to become President, the United States would have a problem with many dimensions. So would the world.
To begin with, the problem would be his unfathomable vulgarity. America has seen many things, but not a potential president discussing the size of his penis during a televised debate.
The problem would also be his pathological hatred of women. In a 1992 conversation with architect Philip Johnson, reported in New York magazine, he said, “You have to treat ’em like shit.” He still views them as disgusting creatures, with – as he said of Fox News journalist Megyn Kelly – “blood coming out of [their] wherever.”
The problem would also be his unabashed racism. This is a man who, according to his first wife, long kept a collection of Hitler’s speeches on his bedside table, and who blithely calls blacks “lazy,” derides Mexicans as “rapists,” and judges Muslims collectively guilty for Islamist terrorism.
The problem would be his anti-Semitism, too, lurking in table talk about not wanting his money counted by anyone other than “little short guys that wear yarmulkes,” or in tweets emphasizing the comedian Jon Stewart’s Jewishness, or in his angry remark last December to the Republican Jewish Coalition. “You’re not going to support me,” he said, “because I don’t want your money!”
The problem would be his gross lack of knowledge, not just of the world, but also of his own country. A few days before the referendum on Britain’s continued membership in the European Union, he didn’t know the meaning of the word “Brexit.” This month, he showed that he doesn’t know how many articles the US Constitution contains.
But, most seriously and worryingly, the problem would be that the leader of the world’s leading power would have a catalogue of simplistic ideas in the place of a geopolitical vision. And it is a catalogue that, despite Trump’s promise to “Make America Great Again,” would undermine US prosperity and security.
Consider his idea, floated in early March and probably inspired by his private bankruptcies, of renegotiating the US national debt. The idea was idiotic (the American government, which holds a monopoly on issuing the world’s leading reserve currency, has nothing to “renegotiate”). But had Trump been in power when he proposed it, the consequences would have been devastating: an immediate hike in interest rates; a tanking dollar; and a breach of confidence between the US (now seen as behaving like Argentina or Greece) and everyone else.
Or consider his statement, during his nomination acceptance speech in Cleveland, that, if elected, he would revise NATO’s policy of automatic support for threatened members of the Alliance. In the world according to Trump, Russia would then be able to follow through on its threat to reexamine the legality of the process that led to the Baltic states’ independence. It would be free to adjust its border with one neighbor or come to the rescue of a Russian-speaking minority “held hostage” by another. It could invade Poland or, of course, Ukraine. And why would Russia stop with NATO and its neighbors? It could pick a fight with Japan or any other Western allies in the Asia-Pacific region.
And then of course there is Russian President Vladimir Putin himself, whose praises Trump never misses an occasion to sing. As he once told CNN’s Larry King (while promoting his bestseller Think Big and Kick Ass), Putin is a great leader who did a “great job ... rebuilding Russia.” In September 2013, he described as a “masterpiece” a commentary signed by Putin in the New York Times that criticized US policy in Syria. In September 2015, after almost two years of a Cold War-like standoff over Ukraine, he told Fox News that Putin deserved an “A” for leadership.
The truth is that Trump’s personal ties with Russia are old and close. They date from the time in the early 2000s, when Trump, having been blacklisted by US banks, turned to Russian investors to finance projects in Toronto, SoHo, and Panama.
And reports are beginning to surface of a galaxy of influences and interests that formed around him at that time for his benefit: a firmament of Gazprom directors, former lobbyists for Ukrainian dictator Viktor Yanukovych (including Paul Manafort, now Trump’s campaign manager), and prominent organized-crime figures.
Some observers, like Franklin Foer, regard Trump as “Putin’s puppet.” Others, like George Stephanopoulos, a former adviser to President Bill Clinton, speculate about possible organic links between Trump’s campaign and the Russian regime.
And now the Russians appear to be behind the leak, two days before the Democratic National Convention in Philadelphia, of 19,252 email messages detailing how Democratic Party leaders favored Hillary Clinton over her rival, Bernie Sanders. Worse, Trump then suborned cyberespionage by a foreign power against his opponent: “Russia, if you’re listening,” he told a press conference, “I hope you’re able to find 30,000 emails that are missing.”
The implications of Trump’s election would be truly terrifying. The problem would not only be his vulgarity, sexism, racism, and defiant ignorance. It would be his possible infidelity to America itself. The party of Eisenhower and Reagan has been commandeered by a corrupt demagogue who betrays not only his country’s ideals, but also its fundamental national interest.
American vertigo. Global disaster.
Comments
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Comment Commented Peter Schaeffer
This is really sort of amazing. The hero of
Bataclan
Charlie Hebdo
Banlieues
Tournantes
Cologne
Molenbeek
Rosengård
Nice
Munich
Ansbach
Reutlingen
Bavaria
Saint-Etienne-du-Rouvray
is complaining about "sexism", "racism", and anti-semitism?
Really? Perhaps BHL should try to convince the parents of the kids at the Ozar Hatorah Jewish day school that Trump is really the problem. Read more
Comment Commented dan baur
Hateful socialist. Question is why is Bill Gates (owner of this site) encouraging this kind of hate here? Read more
Comment Commented Steve Hurst
To have light you have to have darkness Read more
Comment Commented Peter Schaeffer
The endless attacks on Putin here are absurd. Putin may not be a nice guy. However, Europe and the USA must work with Putin (and not against him) to end the war in Syria. In another era, we worked with the far more evil Stalin. Trump is bringing an element of sanity to these discussions. The same can not be said for the Cold War retreads. Read more
Comment Commented Steve Hurst
The thing that reins Putin in is the need to sell gas Read more
Comment Commented Peter Schaeffer
Has anyone noticed the joke here? We have been told (roughly a zillion times) that Hillary didn't have any national security related Emails on her server. Now having the Russians see them would be some sort of disaster.
Sorry, you can't have it both ways. Read more
Comment Commented Peter Schaeffer
Like it or not, Trump offers hope to the American people. Hope that our borders will be protected and Americans will get jobs. Hope that wages and working conditions might actually get better, rather than worse. Hope that foreign trade might make ordinary Americans better off, rather than pad corporate bonuses and Hillary’s campaign contributions. Hope that our government might actually care about the American people rather pandering to every radical identity politics faction.
What does BHL have to offer? We already know. The hell on earth called “enlightened Europe”. For better or worse, the EU has degenerated into an abomination. The Euro has become a WMD (Weapon of Economic Mass Destruction). Open Borders have turned Europe into the graveyard of nations with Bataclan, Charlie Hebdo, banlieues, tournantes, Cologne, Molenbeek, Rosengård, Nice, Munich, Ansbach, Reutlingen, Bavaria, Saint-Etienne-du-Rouvray, etc. as the “bright and shining future”. Europe both denies each nation the right to control its borders while utterly failing to stop the ongoing invasion. Worse, the dominant power of the EUSSR (Germany) scoffs at Europe’s rules while inviting mass invasion and then demands “European solidarity” to deal with the disaster.
The bottom line is simple. Trump offers hope. BHL offers tournantes.
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Comment Commented Peter Schaeffer
KVP, I get that Europe has a "protected class" that thinks that they live in the best of all possible worlds and can't imagine why anyone might disagree. I get that the Cosmopolitan Elite and the SJW types (along with the Goldman Sachs crowd) think they have found paradise.
If you live in a gated community, Europe probably seems like a perfect world. However, not everyone thinks that tournantes and banlieues are a vision of paradise on earth. Sadly, these folks get to vote (at least for now) and they don't want "more Europe".
The people of the UK were given a chance to leave and they took it. The people of Sweden were allowed to vote on the Euro. They voted no. The people of France and Denmark were allowed to vote on the EU Constitution. They voted no but were ignored.
Europe is a failing system. The Euro is a failed currency. The Bourbon's and Romanov's thought they lived in a perfect world. It wasn't.
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Comment Commented koen van peteghem
@Peter
Europe , hell on earth?
Euro, WMD?
Shangen, graveyard of nations?
you sure you are alright? you ok? should we worry? Read more
Comment Commented M M
Peter, you and I have very rarely agreed on PS, this time however, I have to agree with you. Read more
Comment Commented Andrew Green
I can understand Levy's concern about Trump's vulgarity - that is, of course, a mortal sin in France - but sexism? What about Levi-Strausss? Racism? Anti-semitism? Really! France is one of the most anti-semitic, anti-islamic countries in Europe and look where this has got them. As to NATO, the French would not join, having a grandiose vision of their own.
It is quite clear that Europe has relied on the USA for far too long in matters of defence and security, and is now paying the price. the idea of a European army to combat this is a joke. People in glass houses....... Read more
Comment Commented koen van peteghem
@andrew... i fully agree that europe has been quit cowardly when it comes to protecting itself and intervening in blatant cases to do so. The yougoslave wars being our eternal shame.. this said, there is a time and a place for everything... will it be easy ? certainly not... but that is not a reason why it won't happen... Read more
Comment Commented Andrew Thorby
Mr. trump is a deeply flawed man whose candidacy is based on fear mongering and demagoguery. That said, I do not question his fundamental loyalty to the United States. I shudder at the thought of a Trump Presidency but not because I think he has divided loyalties but rather because he is fundamentally unfit to hold the office. Read more
Comment Commented Peter Schaeffer
Bernard-Henri Lévy has devoted his life to policies that have devastated France and Europe. The list of failures is long. Open Borders, mass immigration, the Euro cancer, neoliberalism, etc.
Any remorse? None. Any recognition of personal failure on a continental scale? None.
But Trump is a bad guy... Compared to you... Read more
Comment Commented slightly optimistic
Many countries are having to deal with the question of whether they should pivot away from the US. Regardless of who becomes president there, the EU's High Representative grasped the nettle in the past weeks and drew up a 'Global Strategy' for the Union. She has decided that the best approach is to follow the money and ally with China. Global finance is king, not old politics.
But the sought after prize of being the most competitive nation promises a race to the bottom. Can this be avoided?
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Comment Commented PUNDALIK Kamath
Mr. Levy has written enough about Trump. That is good. But. he has forgotten to mention that Trump's German grandfather owned few brothels in Seattle and in Canada during gold-rush era in end of 19th century. So genes run deep in Trump's family. Read more
Comment Commented Steve Hurst
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pEc-sreM-Sg
Someone's take on Trump Read more
Comment Commented Petey Bee
Just a moment of reality here, if you'll all forgive me.
Trump has been accused of vulgarity, misogyny, racism, anti-semitism, ignorance of policy, and the author left out fascism and bad hair, to complete the list.
If these didn't do the trick, Is accusing Trump of sympathizing with Putin really going to shake things up?
Inconvenient truth: US Presidents from both parties have maintained positive relationships with far nastier world leaders, and changed some of those relationships abruptly in both directions.
If the Democrats don't start playing to win soon, which means finding something positive to offer voters, we'll find Bernard-Henri writing beautiful hopeful prose in defense of the new Republican administration come January. Read more
Comment Commented stephan Edwards
I don't like him, I won't vote for him. But I know plenty of people who will, if only to send and unmistakable message to our so called elites. A lot of people will vote for someone anyone to shake the status quo. Business as usual which is the other option is at best dysfunctional for most of us. If You so called elites get Trump it is your own fault. You write "Free Trade" agreements that benefit you and your fellow cosmopolitans across the table more then the people you are supposed to be representing. You bail out banks that are "To big to Fail" but not only is no one ever charged with wrongdoing but the bankers involved get paid bonus'. The working classes who have been completely and utterly abandoned by the wealthy and the political classes would vote for Robespierre, Adolph Hitler or Pol pot if they promised change from the business as usual which benefits the very few at the expense of the rest of us. You folks have created a large and growing underclass that has been reduced to poverty to benefit a small percentage of the population and we the abandoned of your wonderful globalization hate you and everything you stand for. I won't vote for Trump, But I won't vote for Billary either. 1) She's another 4 years of getting screwed to benefit the donor class and Wallstreet at the expense of the rest of us. 2) Being president shouldn't be a family business, isn't their anyone else they could have run? Is this the middle ages when families rule for their own benefit. You and your fellow "Elites" may not like it if Trump becomes president, But I think you earned it! Read more
Comment Commented Steve Hurst
@Stephan
The difference this time is the large and growing underclass has many highly educated and informed people in it and the internet provides immediate information to them Read more
Comment Commented Michael Public
This could easily have been a speech about the peasant leader in France in 1788 - the year before the revolution. The voters are angry. They WANT someone to lead who will vent their anger. Trump seems to fit the bill perfectly. Read more
Comment Commented Steve Hurst
Doubt is to certainty as neurosis is to psychosis. The neurotic is in doubt and has fears about persons and things; the psychotic has convictions and makes claims about them. In short, the neurotic has problems, the psychotic has solutions. Thomas Szasz Psychiatrist
Ronald Kessler, Professor of Health Care at Harvard and expert in large scale mental illness surveys, estimates that the prevalence of mental illness might range from 25 to 30 percent of American adults. A 2011 report published by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention pegs the number at 25 percent.
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