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Month: January 2020

We’re doomed by @BloggersRUs

We’re doomed
by Tom Sullivan

So what if 2001 arrived 20 years late? Take a stress pill.

Techie Re-Animators are reviving dead musical acts via hologram. “Part concert, part technology-driven spectacle,” reports Mark Binelli for New York Times Magazine.

Peter Shapiro, 47, owns the Capitol Theater in Port Chester, N.Y., an hour north of Manhattan. He produced the five concerts of the Grateful Dead’s 50th-anniversary “Fare Thee Well” tour. The show grossed over $50 million in 2015. Last April, the start-up Eyellusion brought a holographic Frank Zappa show to Shapiro’s venue. Zappa died in 1993:

“But here’s the headline,” Shapiro went on. “Look at who’s gone, just in the last couple of years: Bowie, Prince, Petty. Now look who’s still going but who’s not going to be here in 10 years, probably, at least not touring: the Stones, the Who, the Eagles, Aerosmith, Billy Joel, Elton John, McCartney, Springsteen. That is the base not just of classic rock but of the live-music touring business. Yes, there’s Taylor Swift, there’s Ariana Grande. But the base is these guys.”

The Zappa-rition itself had a kind of Weekend at Bernie’s aspect, Binelli writes, “making me hyperaware of the sunglasses covering the lifeless eyes of the corpse propped up between living people (in this case, a hot backing band composed predominantly of musicians who had toured with Zappa over the years).” The projection was a shade brighter and less substantial than the live musicians, “like a ghost struggling to fully materialize.”

Farther west this morning, the FAA still has not answered who or what is in control of swarms of drones spotted flying night formations over Colorado and Nebraska since late December.

The Denver Post reports:

A newly formed task force is on the hunt for a “command vehicle” that might be controlling the mysterious clusters of drones that witnesses say have been flying grid patterns in northeast Colorado and western Nebraska most nights for several weeks.

The command vehicle could be a “closed box trailer with antennas or a large van,” the Phillips County Sheriff’s Office said in a statement Monday, hours after about 75 people from a variety of state, local and federal agencies met in Brush to discuss the ongoing situation.

[…]

Representatives from the Federal Aviation Administration, the FBI, the U.S. Air Force Office of Special Investigations, the U.S. Army, the Colorado Division of Homeland Security and Emergency Management, and a wide variety of local law enforcement agencies stretching from Nebraska to Colorado Springs attended Monday’s meeting, Yowell said.

Estimated to have 6-foot wingspans, the drones are spooking not just local residents. Authorities in attendance at the meeting spilled out into the hallway.

An assortment of private and federal agencies denies the drones are theirs. Then again, governments lie in times of war, except, perhaps, when it comes to assassinating foreigners remotely via computer.

If these stories echo 2001: A Space Odyssey, it is not as if humans had not already handed control of our ship of state to a soulless, homicidal animatronic. Before that, they’d handed their personal information to soulless computers in private hands. They’d allowed governments to track their movements with cute phone apps and identify them on the streets with ubiquitous cameras and facial recognition software.

Perhaps not even swarms of voters under 45 can save us now and this is just “A Taste of Armageddon.”

Trump properties in the crosshairs

Trump properties in the crosshairs


I’ve been saying since at least 2016 that we had a big problem with buildings all over the world being emblazoned with the president’s last name and not just because they are fetid corrupt swamps. They are also perfect terrorist targets against the man who talks like a cheap thug in public and constantly begs for retaliation.

One month after Trump was inaugurated I wrote about conflicts of interest and foreign targets and said this:

Politics are dirty, we know that. And we know that all the politicians are corrupt on one level or another because of it. But this is something else, people. It’s not normal. And those who are insisting that some of us are being hysterical because Obama-Clinton-Kerry etc are just as bad are simply refusing to see what’s in front of their faces. This is next level and it’s extremely dangerous.

Let’s see what happens when one of Trump’s properties gets attacked. He’s already convinced of “l’etat c’est moi.”

This has been an obvious problem from the beginning. Are Americans on the hook for protecting his properties?  Looks like it:

President Trump’s real-estate company owns or manages buildings bearing the Trump name in Canada, Dubai, India, Indonesia, Ireland, the Philippines, Scotland, South Korea, St. Martin, Turkey and Uruguay. Those properties are all listed on the company’s website.

“[Iran] will look for the most opportune chance to strike back in a way that hurts President Trump personally,” Iran scholar Suzanne Maloney of the Brookings Institution said on a recent Lawfare podcast. “I will assume security around any Trump property is enhanced.”

On Jan. 5, an Iranian official who advises the country’s president hinted that Iran is, in fact, tracking Trump properties. Hesameddin Ashena, who runs the Iranian president’s research outfit, posted a tweet, without comment, linking to a Forbes web page on Trump’s personal wealth that lists 19 Trump properties, mostly in the United States. The Trump Organization owns those properties. Most of the firm’s international properties are owned by others, with the Trump Organization branding and managing them.

“We have ZERO problems with the American people,” Ashena wrote, in English, in a separate tweet. “Our sole problem is Trump. In the event of war, it is he who will bear full responsibility.”

This is yet another reason why it is  completely daft to allow a president to continue to be in business in the US and around the world while he is president, particularly when he puts his name in huge letters on everything.  And to do it when that president insults every foreigner and half of his own constituents in the crudest terms and has no respect for anyone who doesn’t lick his boots is just begging for trouble.

I couldn’t care less about any financial losses Trump and his spawn may suffer. But the people who live and work in any of his buildings don’t deserve to be targets. And the US shouldn’t have to use its resources to protect the president’s personal financial assets all over the world because he refused to divest himself of his businesses like every other modern president before him.

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Trump’s new sycophant doing his bidding

Trump’s new sycophant doing his bidding


According to Bloomberg news, Trump’s new national security adviser, Rbert C. O’Brien, a man who was corporate lawyer in California before he was called up to the majors a couple of months ago, is a nice yes man who has Trump’s confidence. Why? Well he tells him what he wants to hear, never argues and:

Trump also regarded O’Brien as a handsome, clean-cut Mormon in nice suits, looking the part of a savvy foreign-policy hand.

Honestly, I don’t think trump hated Bolton because he argued with him half as much as he hated the mustache.  He really hates mustaches.

He is Trump’s new companion pony, so important that Trump wanted him by his side every moment during the decision-making process at Mar-a-lago. He’s not a good influence:

Rather than trying to restrain Trump from riskier decisions, O’Brien has instead enabled big swings — like the president’s decision in October to abruptly withdraw U.S. troops from Kurdish-held territory in Syria, the military raid that killed Islamic State leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi and the Soleimani killing. In meetings on all three situations, O’Brien offered pros and cons, but ultimately agreed with the courses of action and didn’t dissent, according to two people familiar with the discussions.

The new national security adviser is close to Pompeo, unlike Bolton. O’Brien is also friends with Bolton, though the two haven’t spoken since O’Brien assumed his current job, according to people familiar with the matter.

O’Brien’s counsel has proven to be a balm for Trump, who aides say has been cheered by their conversations on some of his gloomiest days. But some aides are concerned that the president may not be well served by O’Brien’s accommodating approach. Those concerns have been amplified as Trump has replaced other top advisers with loyalists seen as unlikely to challenge his thinking.

Yeah:

Lindsey Graham told Trump he needs to put “points on the board.” O’Brien talk is even more Trumpian terms:

Trump’s critics say O’Brien is helping cement a transactional foreign policy in which quick U.S. “wins” are the priority, regardless of long-term strategy and positioning. O’Brien has difficulty keeping to his schedule and at times — perhaps to keep the president mollified — has asked seemingly misplaced questions at briefings, according to two people familiar with the matter. O’Brien told aides on Monday that he wants to stack up more “wins,” and that his staff should look for ways to achieve decisive action for the U.S.

His allies say, “he’s learning on the job, and argue that the president deserves a top foreign policy adviser who shares his worldview and approach.”

Great. Apparently he was a hostage negotiator who advised Romney and Ted Cruz on foreign policy so he isn’t a total novice. But this is a very, very big job in a chaotic administration. And he is a bootlicker which means Trump will be enabled to do his worst. I think we’ve already seen how that’s going down.

Oh, and O’Brien is also “working” on Venezuela. Maybe we really will end up with WWIII — or, at least, two hot wars on two different continents. What could go wrong?

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“Don’t worry, I’ll just figure it out”

“Don’t worry, I’ll just figure it out”

Everyone seems to be wondering what Trump’s “plan” for Iran is.  Well, I’m sure the pentagon has plenty of war plans. And one assumes the State department has protocols for diplomacy in situations like this.

But Trump? He doesn’t need no stinking plans, he’s made that quite clear. He makes impulsive decisions based upon his feeling of the moment. And then, when it goes wrong, this is what he does:

“And you know what you do? My whole life, you know what I say? ‘Don’t worry about it, I’ll just figure it out. Does that make sense? I’ll figure it out.”

So it’s all good. No need to worry. He’s a very stable genius.

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What she said

What she said

A visibly pregnant Michelle Williams put reproductive freedom on the agenda in the best way possible:

“When you put this in someone’s hands you’re acknowledging the choices they make as an actor. Moment by moment, scene by scene, day by day. But you’re also acknowledging the choices they make as a person. The education they pursued, the training they sought, the hours they put in. I’m grateful for the acknowledgement of the choices I’ve made and I’m also grateful to have lived in a moment in our society where choice exists, because as women and as girls, things can happen to our bodies that are not our choice.” 

“I’ve tried my very best to live a life of my own making, and not just a series of events that happened to me. But one that I could stand back and look at and recognize my handwriting all over. Sometimes messy and scrawling, sometimes careful and precise. But one that I had carved with my own hand. And I wouldn’t have been able to do this without employing a woman’s right to choose.”

“To choose when to have my children and with whom, when I felt supported and able to balance our lives as all mothers know that the scales must and will tip towards our children. Now I know my choices might look different than yours, but thank God or whoever you pray to that we live in a country founded on the principles that I am free to live by my faith and you are free to live by yours. So, women 18 to 118, when it is time to vote please do so in your self-interest. It’s what men have been doing for years, which is why the world looks so much like them but don’t forget we are the largest voting body in this country. Let’s make it look more like us.”

Read Amanda Marcotte’s great piece on this today.

I cheered at home all by myself.

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His feral survival instinct has taken over

His feral survival instinct has taken over

For all the talk about Donald Trump wanting to end the “forever wars,” I think we knew what he was really talking about, don’t we? He wanted to end the “Bush-Obama” wars because his only real foreign policy has been to reverse anything his predecessors did. That includes all of them going back to at least Franklin D. Roosevelt, and maybe Abe Lincoln.

It’s been clear from the beginning that Trump had no real understanding of world affairs or history, beyond a vague notion that America has become weak and feckless due to our foolish adherence to silly legal and moral restraints on our behavior. Despite our economic and military dominance in every corner of the globe, he feels the U.S. has been humiliated by strongmen who think we’re soft. It is the worldview of a spoiled child.

It was inevitable that he would one day decide to demonstrate military strength to prove his mettle, and entirely predictable that he would do it impulsively at a moment of extreme political danger. His anger and frustration over the impeachment process have been palpable. He’s been way in over his head from the start, and the stress of trying to do a job he is so clearly unqualified to do has undoubtedly frayed his nerves. He was going to lash out — it was only a question of when and where.

Trump has been alienating allies and kissing up to adversaries since he took office, so there’s nothing unusual in that. But his behavior in terms of national security has been increasingly erratic for the last few months. Obviously, there was the bizarre Ukraine scheme that got him impeached. Last summer he abruptly aborted a retaliatory bombing strike against Iran after it was already, in his words, “cocked and loaded,” for stated reasons that made little sense. The only explanation that anyone came up with was that he’d been talking to Fox News’ Tucker Carlson (who occupies the Middle East contrarian position at Fox News) who told him that the Trump base was tired of war.

Shortly after that Trump pulled another abrupt move, this time in Syria when he announced he was pulling American troops out of northern Syria and had given a green light to Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan to fulfill his long-held wish to invade and displace hundreds of thousands of Kurds, whose fighters had been working alongside Americans in the war against ISIS. Again, Trump gave the excuse that he was fulfilling his campaign promise to end the war, but it was clear he’d just made the decision impulsively without any thought to the consequences. Someone apparently convinced him that he should keep troops in the region to “guard the oil,” which made him happy, and that was that. The Kurds are still paying the price.

Then there was that weird plan to invite Taliban leaders to Camp David to sign a peace deal that didn’t exist and the pardoning and palling around with accused war criminals over the past few weeks. All these stops and starts happened quite publicly on Trump’s ungovernable Twitter feed and without any of the normal consultations with Congress or even his own advisers. Each time, it gets leaked that administration officials have been taken by surprise, and there seems to be little understanding of Trump’s rationale.

This latest decision was different. Iraq has been heating up with protests for many weeks. The shelling that killed an American contractor, as well as the protests at the U.S. embassy in Baghdad, were obviously occupying the attention of the Pentagon and the administration’s national security advisers. Trump is reportedly terrified of a Benghazi situation on his watch, so the embassy protests got his attention. He was still smarting after being called weak by Iran hawks after calling off the bombing last summer. So he was ready for some action.

According to the New York Times, Pentagon officials offered the assassination of Iranian Maj. Gen. Qassem Soleimani as an extreme option, under the assumption that Trump, like presidents before him, would choose a more prudent course. Why they would have thought that, considering who he is and how he’s been acting for the past few months, doesn’t say much for the judgment of Defense Secretary Mark Esper or his aides, particularly since Trump is already at the most precarious moment of his presidency.

Until now, each time Trump was tempted to take forceful military action he either hedged or backed off. This time he went with the most extreme option, reportedly under the influence of the most hawkish members of his administration, including Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and Vice President Mike Pence. He ignored protocol once again and failed to notify Congress or key U.S. allies (even as he blabbed to his wealthy customers at Mar-a-Lago that they could expect something “big” to happen.) He has doubled down on this whole thing every day since the assassination, tweeting threats to commit war crimes against Iran and demanding that the Iraqi government pay for the costs of the American invasion and occupation, or face crippling sanctions if they now insist that U.S. troops leave the country.

Aside from the twisted psychology that drives all of Trump’s decisions, why has he gone so completely off the rails now?

The most obvious reason, of course, is that he’s being impeached and he decided to “wag the dog” to distract the attention from that high-stakes political battle. Throughout the holiday season, one damaging Ukraine story after another came tumbling out of various FOIA requests and reports in major newspapers, which have made the president’s unwillingness to release documents and allow witnesses to testify in the Senate trial look worse and worse. There are even a few cracks appearing in the solid Republican wall, with some senators starting to say they were open to witnesses, while Democrats have not broken ranks in either house of Congress. Trump was clearly worried that the whole thing was hurtling out of control.

He is also clearly spooked by the rift among conservative evangelicals. He even felt the need to hold a rally in a Florida church last Friday to shore up the faithful, where he spoke about his decision to order Soleimani’s assassination. Nothing will make the religious right happier than the prospect of a Middle East conflagration, which at least some evangelicals believe will lead to the End of Days and the Rapture. It wouldn’t be entirely surprising if one of his more cunning advisers, such as Pence, whispered in his ear that his hardcore Christian supporters would appreciate a display of muscle in that region.

Finally, Trump has been bragging about his shiny, expensive, massive military build-up for at least the past two years. He portrays it as his single greatest achievement. Did you think a man like him wouldn’t ever want to show off his brand new toys? Of course he would. He was just saving it for a moment when (in his mind) it would do him the most good.

Trump may be unbalanced but he’s always self-serving. And he has a feral survival instinct that he always relies on when the walls start to close in. Will it save him one more time or has his luck — and ours — finally run out?

My column republished by permission from Salon.

Quotes o’ the day

Quotes o’ the day

This man is an American foreign affairs expert in DC who runs the National Iranian American Counsel:

I don’t know if these are real but it tracks with other reporting also that says people within the government are freaking out. People I trust believe he’s credible.

Maybe it’s time for people to go on the record?

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Resisting the toxic bait by @BloggersRUs

Resisting the toxic bait
by Tom Sullivan

Sowing chaos is one of the acting president’s go-to moves. Donald Trump has spent time at his Florida golf resort issuing assassination orders, threatening to commit war crimes, issuing notices to Congress via social media, demanding Iraq pay for the U.S. invasion (or else U.S. troops will not leave), and spilling who-knows-what official secrets to dinner guests/spies. What his allies describe as the acts of a brilliant tactician are simply an expression of Trump’s feral instinct for getting the best of others by keeping them off balance. The more desperate he becomes, the more cornered he feels, the more chaos he will sow.

When Trump is not sowing chaos, he is inflaming racial, social and ideological divisions within the country both to keep his base unified and his adversaries unorganized. Fear of the Other he keeps on his utility belt.

E.J. Dionne writes that if polarization helps Trump’s base, it hurts progressives. They need coalitions, not only among African Americans, Latinos and city dwellers, but also “blue-collar and non-college-educated whites” from swing states:

Moreover, the left and center-left believe that public action is a positive good, that social solidarity is a realistic possibility and that a society thrives when it shares benefits and burdens equitably. When we live in our bunkers of hatred, none of these dispositions has a chance.

Dionne cites Sen. Sherrod Brown’s (D-Ohio) 2018 reelection in Ohio “by seven points in a state Trump carried by eight.” Brown writes in “Desk 88” about where he failed:

“We lost medium-sized industrial city after medium-sized industrial city, small town after small town, rural community after rural community. Pretty much all of them.”

“Rural and small town voters don’t think either party is going to do anything for them, but they vote Republican because they think Democrats will do something to them: take their guns or raise their taxes, or enact an environmental law that will put them out of work,” he writes.

[…]

“I will never be one,” he writes, “who says that people in rural and small-town America vote against their own interest; who am I to say what is their self-interest? But we as progressives have work to do.”

Trump and his allies rely on discouraging everyone from seeing citizenship as a project broader than bunkered self-interest. Democrats of a different era warned against falling into the kind of trap Trump has set. Brown quotes Sen. Robert F. Kennedy from the day after the assassination of Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.:

“When you teach a man to hate and fear his brother, when you teach that he is a lesser man because of his color or his beliefs or the policies he pursues, when you teach that those who differ from you threaten your freedom or your job or your family, then you also learn to confront others not as fellow citizens but as enemies – to be met not with cooperation but with conquest, to be subjugated and mastered.”

Trump and his allies in Congress may view the world that way, but the country cannot afford its citizens to view each other that way, as tempting as that is and as many who do.

Dionne’s invocation of public action as a positive good recalls a favorite quote about elections. Country Living last November posted 25 quotes about voting, most of them anodyne. My favorite (not included) is from former Colorado Senate Majority Leader Ken Gordon (D-Denver):

“We think that voting actually is not just a private vote for the person who gets the vote, but a public good, and that the more people who vote, the more legitimate the elected officials are, and that they represent the actual values of the electorate.”

Many fellow citizens have bought into the false notion that self-interest and individual achievement is what made America great. In fact, cooperation did. Alvin York did not win WWI. Audie Murphy did not win WWII. Dwight Eisenhower did not build Liberty ships nor the interstates. Neil Armstrong did not get to the moon on his own.

What progressives need to rekindle is the spirit that made those achievements possible. That will require not simply resisting the toxic bait Trump will throw out and social media will splash in front of our eyes in 2020. It will take actively countering it. And it will take encouraging younger voters to take collective action this year to get the country out of the ditch into which the #okboomer generations see their elders have driven the world.

I keep showing people the 2018 chart at the top (and did again in a statewide webinar Sunday). It displays North Carolina population by age from 18 to 99 (in blue). Below that in orange is voter registration from November 2018. At the bottom in green is early voting voter turnout by age from 18 to 99. (I don’t have the final vote numbers. Don’t ask.) Assume the green turnout curve would be taller with final totals but the shape wouldn’t change. Trust me, other states look the same.

Notice in the blue on the left side which age cohort has the raw power in population to run this country (but doesn’t) and to the right the shrinking age group (mine) that dominates American politics because more of them vote (the hump at the bottom right). If we hope to get this country out of the ditch, encouraging people under 45 to use the power that’s already theirs is how that happens. This is your challenge in 2020. It is something we have to do together.

Update: Fixed a name typo and another.

Photos from the fire down below. Links to how to help. @spockosbrain

Photos from the fire down below. Links to how to help.

By Spocko

“My last day of the decade felt like the apocalypse.” Matt Abbott

Photo by Matthew Abbott, @mattabbottphoto

“My last day of the decade felt like the apocalypse. Been covering the Australian bushfires for the last 6 weeks, but haven’t seen anything like yesterdays fire that decimated the town of Conjola, NSW. #bushfirecrisis #AustralianBushfires #NSWisburning work for @nytimes
Photo by Matthew Abbott, Instagram link

That’s an amazing photo that instantly puts you in a place.  When I was learning to be a photographer the teacher at the Nikon School of Photography said, “No guts, no glory.  If your photos are weak, you are probably too far away.”  For me that meant stepping into the middle of a 4th of July parade to take a photo of Shriners walking toward me.  I wonder how long he had to wait in that fire zone to get that kangaroo in the shot? These photographers have some real guts.

Now that you have an idea of where the fire is, here’s a graphic for how big it is. I found this on Reddit where they like to compare the size of things by saying “Banana for scale.” In this case


United States for scale

Fighting the fire from the sky

Photo (c) Nick Moir. Chief Photographer for The Sydney Morning Herald since 1993 Oculi.com.au specialising in stormchasing , severe weather, bushfires. @nampix
Fighting the fire on the ground
Photo (c) Nick Moir.  Orangeville in far SW Sydney Green Wattle Creek fire #bushfires @nswrfs https://www.instagram.com/p/B5sHTEFAW7N/

Humans for scale

Burnt livestock 

Burnt livestock on the Tumut to Batlow road just outside the Snowy Mountains town of Batlow, after severe fire went through the town on Saturday. Picture: Rohan Kelly Source:News Corp Australia

Smoke from Australian fires

Photo by hankb555 

The Gospers Mountain Monster Fire

 Photo (c) Nick Moir. The Gospers Mountain Monster in full rage. 5pm Bilpin #bushfires


The red dot is the Gospers Mountain. Link



The Gospers Mountain Fire

 Photography Dean Sewell/Oculi for the Sydney Morning Herald

The Gospers Mountain Fire

Photography Dean Sewell/Oculi for the Sydney Morning Herald



Aluminum melts at 1,221 degrees Fahrenheit

Photo by Matt Abbott, a photographer based in Sydney. Represented by @panospictures  Conjola, New South Wales, Australia


Millions of embers fill the air in the Green Wattle Fire 



Photo (c) Nick Moir. “I did a re-edit and found a slightly better version of the previous published image as millions of embers fill the air as the Green Wattle Fire erupted out of the bush in Orangeville. Respect to the #nswfb #bushfires”


How to help

Bushfire relief: How you can help those in need

The Lucknow Memorial hall outside of Bairnsdale is full of donated clothes, food and toys from the community for victims of the Gippsland bushfires. Picture: David CroslingSource:News Corp Australia

From News.com.au 
The scale of the crisis is hard to comprehend. The wildfires have so far burned more than 12 million acres, they have killed at least 24 people, and nearly 2000 homes have been destroyed.
In New South Wales alone, the fires have killed nearly 500 million birds, reptiles and mammals.

They have a great list who you can help ranging from firefighters to wildlife. (Links to how to help.

An Unhinged President by tristero

An Unhinged President

by tristero

Leave it to Donald Trump, with his innate reckless stupidity to manage the stupendous feat of turning Qasem Sulaimani, one of the more ruthless human beings on the planet, into an international martyr.

The only beneficiary of Trump’s mad decision will be George W. Bush who, until last week, had created the single worst foreign policy blunder the US ever engaged in (the unnecessary invasion of Iraq). Trump has now perpetrated something that is even worse for the United States (and the rest of the world).

The NY Times:

General Milley and Mr. Esper traveled on Sunday to Mar-a-Lago, Mr. Trump’s Palm Beach resort, a day after officials presented the president with an initial list of options for how to deal with escalating violence against American targets in Iraq. 

The options included strikes on Iranian ships or missile facilities or against Iranian-backed militia groups in Iraq. The Pentagon also tacked on the choice of targeting General Suleimani, mainly to make other options seem reasonable….

There is a toxic version of normalizing Trump. There simply are no words to describe how idiotic such a decision-making strategy is when dealing with someone as impulsive and volatile as Donald Trump. And the consequences of their stupidity will be staggering.