‘A failed state’: Columnist slams Trump’s ‘dysfunctional’ administration for being ‘too corrupt or stupid to head off mass suffering’

AlterNet logoSome of the best political reporting and analysis looks at the big picture, which is what journalist George Packer does in a think piece for The Atlantic that slams President Donald Trump’s response to the coronavirus pandemic. Packer is hardly the only person who is critical of Trump’s COVID-19 response, but Packer’s article goes way beyond being simply anti-Trump — coronavirus, as Packer sees it, is simply underscoring dysfunction in the federal government that was already there to begin with.

Before the pandemic, Packer asserts, the U.S. was already plagued by “a corrupt political class, a sclerotic bureaucracy, a heartless economy, a divided and distracted public.” Those problems, according to Packer, “had gone untreated for years. We had learned to live, uncomfortably, with the symptoms. It took the scale and intimacy of a pandemic to expose their severity — to shock Americans with the recognition that we are in the high-risk category.”

The Trump Administration, Packer laments, responded to the coronavirus pandemic like a developing country “with shoddy infrastructure and a dys­func­tional government whose leaders were too corrupt or stupid to head off mass suffering.” And he believes that Americans are living in a failed state. Continue reading.

Trump dysfunction follows family from the campaign to the White House

The following article by James Hohmann with Breanne Deppisch and Joanie Greve was posted on the Washington Post website July 12, 2017:

The Trumps are congenitally unable to take personal responsibility.

“In retrospect, I probably would have done things a little differently,” Donald Trump Jr. told Sean Hannity on Fox News last night.

But don’t mistake that for a mea culpa. Because it wasn’t. The president’s namesake dismissed his sitdown last summer with someone he believed to be an agent of the Russian government as “a nothing.”

“Someone sent me an email,” the First Son said. “I can’t help what someone sends me. I read it. I responded accordingly. And if there was something interesting there, I think that’s pretty common. … I wouldn’t have even remembered it until you started scouring through this stuff. It was literally just a wasted 20 minutes, which was a shame.”

See the exchange on Hannity here: Continue reading “Trump dysfunction follows family from the campaign to the White House”