The USA pulled food and medical aid from starving people. They are dying right now."How can people be so heartlessHow can people be so cruel
Easy to be proud, easy to say no
Easy to be cold, easy to say no"
"Easy to be Hard," from the rock musical "Hair," 1967. A hit by Three Dog Night, 1969
Trump was sending a message. His would be a can-do presidency. He would cut waste, especially in programs beloved by the 'do-gooder" types. America first.
This week's The New Yorker ran a story about the consequences of the abrupt end of USAID's programs. The article reported that 600,000 people have died so far this year. The article links to a dashboard counter. That is 88 people per hour.
The New Yorker article comes during a week with a strange confluence of events.
-- Supplemental Nutrition Aid to Americans is suspended. Two-thirds of SNAP benefits go to households with children, and 39 percent of SNAP benefits go to children.
-- The U.S. government is in shutdown. Democrats are holding out for restoration of the subsidies to health insurance for the working poor.
Meanwhile:
-- President Trump held a Great Gatsby-themed party at Mar-a-Lago. F. Scott Fitzgerald's book described the flamboyant, careless behavior of the wealthy and fashionable set during the last years of "Roaring Twenties" prosperity. It is good to be rich.
The party was intentional. Trump understands the optics. There is no need to apologize for being rich, really rich. Or to be really rich among people who are poor.
We are watching a famine and have capacity to reverse some of the suffering, but we are not. This puts us in the company of 20th Century mass murderers: with Mao Zedong, with his Great Leap Forward; with Joseph Stalin's starvation of Ukrainians; and with Adolph Hitler's Holocaust.
Donald Trump has an understanding of the world that serves as ideology: The world is a place of constant struggle. The push and pulls of transactions -- deals -- reflect the power of each participant. It is a dog-eat-dog world. The powerful take what they can. "Honor" is a sham that holds one back from maximizing a deal. If you can stiff vendors, do so. Only saps leave money on the table.
In this worldview, there are rules in place because powerful people put them there. Laws and norms are a reflection of power, not virtue or wisdom. That power was transitory and situational, and may reflect a power equilibrium no longer in place. Trump willfully breaks laws and moral codes to test them. If they give way, then those boundaries were out of date and didn't reflect Trump's current power.
And what about the people trampled in this winner-take-all struggle? What about the sick, the hungry, the naked, the poor? What about those people Jesus talked about?
They are losers. Empathy is weakness. You don't owe anybody anything. Take what you can and enjoy it guiltlessly. American Christians felt aggrieved because they were no longer considered special, the favored and default group. Trump is working to put them back in their rightful place, on top.
Life is struggle, and Trump is on the side of Christians, and that is what counts.
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