In Front of Our Noses: An Unprofessional and Unserious President
Calling a governor names during a crisis.

“To see what is in front of one’s nose needs a constant struggle.”-George Orwell.
For previous entries, click here.
I am still digesting the ongoing events in California, but want to draw attention to a small yet telling moment from President Trump’s Truth Social post aimed at Governor Newsom of California. Indeed, this is the kind of thing this series of posts is really aimed at: getting us to look at specific transgressions against normal governance and behavior that we have gotten inured to.

Ok, so here we have an escalating set of confrontations between protestors and law enforcement in one of America’s most populated counties, and the President of the United States thinks this is a good time to call names and to hurl insults.
While this is normal for Trump, as he has behaved this way before, this is not normal in the context of American history, nor should it be the kind of behavior we should expect from adults in positions of power and authority. It should not be ignored or dismissed as “Trump being Trump” or the like.
But beyond the juvenility of it all, I will again remind everyone of the subtitle of Jason Stanley’s book, How Fascism Works, which is “The Politics of Us and Them.”
Trump constantly practices the politics of us versus them. Quite obviously, he does so with immigrants, and we are seeing this play out in Compton and Paramount and across the country. But it is worth noting that he does it, as he is with Newsom and Bass, with politicians outside his party (or anyone who doesn’t behave the way he wants), even when he is supposed to be acting as the head of the national government. Instead, he always acts as the head of his own political movement.
Here’s a follow-up post, which is chock-full of lies and half-truths (for example, the Guard has just been mobilized and has a limited support role, so what “great job” could they have done? And the assertion of paid troublemakers is baseless). There is also the irony of declaring masks at protests verboten. How about banning them for ICE agents conducting snatch and grabs?
And, of course, more insulting of the people he should be working with.

None of this shows a man interested in governing. But it does show a man interested in deepening us-versus-them divisions in American political life as well as one who thinks that force makes right.
Trump has no authority to say that, and does it include the cops and ICE agents?
Kingdaddy quoted Orwell in the Open Forum,
Quite clearly the object of force in this case is force, an opening wedge to using force in future. “Right”, in the moral sense, has nothing to do with it.
Steven,
Expecting Trump to be civil towards anyone who differs from him is like trying to get a cat to do what you want it to do and you should know about cats*. I seem to recall you have two.
Actually your cats are more likely to be responsive than Trump. The USA is a sad state of affairs today.
*- There’s a saying. Dogs have owners, cats have staff.
@Bill Jempty: I expect nothing save what we are getting.
That does not excuse it. And it definitely does not excuse anyone who continues to support this administration.
I wonder how much Katie Miller has to do with this since this whole thing is a display of super-machismo on the part of Stephen Miller.
@Bill Jempty: The US has been a sad state of affairs with only brief flashes of sanity and good government for a looooooong time.
ETA: Thinking back to Michael Bailey’s post sometime last week, I feel sorry for his student for whom what you and I are seeing as a sad state of affairs is merely “normal.”
The view from abroad:
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2025-06-09/donald-trump-elon-musk-australia-defence-security-alliance/105391190
@Raoul: Miller has been a raging psycho ever since he joined Trump’s inner circle. Some of his media appearances have seen him almost literally frothing at the mouth as he screams hysterical insults at the left for daring to oppose the MAGA movement.