What do you think about a president holding the highest office in the land, who purposefully and with malice incites people to violence? What do you think about the ‘leader’ of a nation of 330 million people, who curses and denigrates more than half of that population?
I have seen twelve presidents (not counting Trump, who I refuse to call a ‘president’) come and go in my lifetime. Some I’ve liked better than others, some I respected more than others, but not a single one have I literally despised. I cannot say the same for Donald F. Trump.
President Harry S. Truman had a sign on his desk …
“The buck stops here” … ultimately, the responsibility falls on the shoulders of the man at the top. Too bad we don’t have a ‘man’ at the top today, but rather a self-aggrandizing lout whose motto is …
A number of quotes are attributed to President John F. Kennedy, one of which is …

But Trump claims …

Or another comparison between Kennedy and Trump …
And Trump’s predecessor, who he seems to have an unrelenting and unreasonable hatred for …
Vs Trump …
And I could cite example after example of how much more intelligent, more compassionate, more humanitarian every one of his predecessors were, but you get the picture, right? This week, though, came what should be, but likely won’t be, the final straw, the most ignominious thing he has done to date, and believe me, there’s quite a bucketful of them.
On Friday Trump spewed forth a series of tweets in response to the news that groups were forming in some states to protest the shuttering of most businesses in their states, and the guidelines encouraging people to stay home, out of public venues, as much as possible. They want businesses open and ‘business as usual’ to resume.

Close your eyes and try to imagine President Kennedy or President Obama calling for a group of people to overthrow the government … the image just doesn’t work, does it?
Trump speaks and his base rally to the cause, never understanding that they are putting lives in jeopardy, that they are issuing a proverbial slap-in-the-face to all the doctors, nurses and other essential workers who are on the frontlines in the battle against this pandemic. And never, apparently, stopping to think that … whether all businesses open tomorrow or six months from now, it will not be “business as usual”. Not for a very long time, if ever.
Trump’s call for liberation from current shut-down rules followed protests around the country as protesters — many wearing red “Make America Great Again” hats — congregated in packed groups around state capitols to demand that restrictions be immediately lifted and to demonize both Democratic and Republican governors.
In Michigan, protesters waved banners in support of Trump and protested Governor Gretchen Whitmer by chanting, “Lock her up.” Sound familiar? In St. Paul, Minnesota, a group calling itself “Liberate Minnesota” rallied against stay-at-home orders in front of the home of Governor Tim Walz, demanding he “end this lockdown!” In Columbus, Ohio, protesters crowded closely together as they pressed up against the doors of the state’s Capitol. I am told that even in the more progressive state of California, hundreds gathered in Huntington Beach calling the stay-at-home ‘orders’ tyrannical.
I was particularly incandescent when I read that Stephen Moore, a conservative economist and a member the White House council to reopen the country, said of the protestors …
“I call these people the modern-day Rosa Parks — they are protesting against injustice and a loss of liberties.”
BULLSHIT.
In Michigan, one of the hardest-hit states with more than 30,000 confirmed coronavirus cases and over 2,200 deaths, Michigan Conservative Coalition member Matthew Seely said …
“I feel terrible about the lives lost, but at some point, we have to say ‘Mission accomplished’ and come up with the next phase of this that doesn’t have us continuously locked inside our homes.”
Rather like saying, “Gee, too bad thousands of people have died, but … oh well. 🤷♂️“
Denny Tubbs, a local leader of Ohio Stands United, a gun rights group, attended a protest rally in the state capital of Columbus against business closures ordered by Mike DeWine, a Republican governor.
“I’m not saying it doesn’t have to be dealt with but shutting down and crushing the economy is not the way to do it. Our civil rights have been stomped on.”
Tubbs is a gunmaker, by the way.
A competent president would be urging calm, but instead Trump is egging the protestors on, urging them to basically overthrow their state governments! What sort of a leader does this? What’s next? Do the protestors come drag people out of their homes and force them to open businesses and congregate?
It is unthinkable to have a president who urges citizens to resort to violence against their own government. As much as I miss our Saturday outings to dinner and a trip to the bookstore, I am not comfortable with businesses re-opening yet, for most medical experts have cautioned that to re-open too early would almost certainly lead to a second wave of mass fatalities and ultimately yet another shut-down. And yet, the republicans in this nation are more than willing to risk that … for what? I’ve said more than once that common sense must prevail, that we cannot cower under our beds in fear. But, what the protestors, egged on by Trump as well as conservative groups, are urging is dangerous, foolhardy, and selfish, caring more for their own profit than our lives.
In normal times, a crisis such as this pandemic would have pulled people together in this nation. We’ve seen it before many times. But these are not normal times, and we have the single most divisive person at the helm of this ship. It is insane for this person, who is responsible for some 330 million lives, to be inciting what amounts to civil war in this nation. Thus far, to the best of my knowledge, nobody has been injured in these protests, but it is only a matter of time, especially with gun shops open and gun sales at an all-time high. Will Congress and the Courts stop the madness emanating from the Oval Office? Doubtful. Will we stop him in November? That’s up to us, isn’t it?