- cross-posted to:
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- cross-posted to:
- [email protected]
I think there’s an answer. But it’s not age — or, at least, it’s not just age.
You’ve probably seen the clip by now. Donald Trump is holding a town hall. It’s Monday, Oct. 14, in Pennsylvania. He was being asked softball questions by Kristi Noem, the Republican governor of South Dakota, and there is a medical emergency in the crowd. The rally stops for a while. They play “Ave Maria” while the medics respond. Then Trump and Noem begin again. Then someone else in the crowd needs medical help. The rally stops again, begins again. Noem is settling back in when Trump announces he’s had enough.
Donald Trump: Let’s not do any more questions. Let’s just listen to music. Let’s make it into a music. [Cheers.] Who the hell wants to hear questions, right? [Laughter.]
What comes next is something I’ve never seen before. Trump, swaying dreamily to his playlist, in front of a rally full of people, for nearly 40 minutes. It was like he was D.J.’ing his own bar mitzvah.
. . .
We’ve never had good language for talking about Donald Trump. We’ve never had good language for talking about the way he thinks and the way in which it is different from how other people think and talk and act. And so we circle it. We imply it. I don’t think this is bias so much as it’s confusion. In order to talk about something, you need the words for it. But for me, something clicked watching him up there, swaying to that music.
You need to remember that Trump is just a human being and is capable of human activities. Another thing is, there are 2 trumps here. There is real-life trump, and then there is the charactature the media portrays him as. The media does this to everyone, intentionally or not.
It’s both… don’t kid yourself. it is a worrying thing when one can not recognize his own bias. It’s especially worrying here because the bias is so blatantly obvious. Hint: context