Categories
At Large Opinion

Gettysburg, Wow

“Gettysburg, what an unbelievable battle that was. It was so much and so interesting and so vicious and horrible and so beautiful in so many different ways, it represented such a big portion of the success of this country. Gettysburg, wow. I go to Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, to look and to watch. And, uh, the statement of Robert E. Lee, who’s no longer in favor, did you ever notice that? He’s no longer in favor. ‘Never fight uphill, me boys, never fight uphill.’ They were fighting uphill. He said, ‘Wow, that was a big mistake.’ He lost his great general. And they were fighting. ‘Never fight uphill, me boys!’ But it was too late.”

You may or may not be familiar with the preceding paragraph. It depends to some extent upon how much of a political junkie (or masochist) you are. But even if you’re not familiar with it, you can probably guess the source. And if you guessed, Donald J. Trump, you win.

The presumptive GOP presidential nominee scatted the forgoing brain jazz at a speech in Schnecksville, Pennsylvania, on Saturday. It was just one discursive, rambling aside in an oration that consisted of more than 75 minutes of discursive, rambling asides. Some highlights:

“China is sending illegals here to start a little army in our country.”

“I will not give one penny to any school that has a vaccine mandate.”

“I love women more than I love anything. I looove women.”

“Last night we had 20 people come to our country from the Congo. Welcome to our country. Where do you live in the Congo? We live in prison. They’re bringing them in from Africa!”

“The 2020 election was rigged, pure and simple. It was a disgrace and we can never let it happen again.”

“I’m perhaps the most honest guy in the world.”

Perhaps. And if you believe that, well, you’re an idiot. We’re past the point of pretending any of this is remotely normal, but here’s the worrisome thing: It actually is normal in one sense. It’s “normal” because it happens every day that Trump says something in public. After nine years of listening to this guy, Americans have become inured to it; our politics have literally transformed. Trump has normalized things that would have destroyed the career of any politician before he came along.

Gary Hart was the front-runner for the 1988 Democratic presidential nomination when revelations of an extramarital affair emerged and he was finished. In 2004, presidential candidate Howard Dean was deemed unelectable because he screamed “Yeah!” at a rally in Iowa. See ya, Howard. You’re not “presidential” enough.

And Jimmy Carter was so concerned about a possible conflict of interest that he put his little Georgia peanut farm in a blind trust during his presidency, so as not to appear to be in the pocket of Big Peanut.

In contrast, Trump and his family made millions from his businesses while in office, including from a hotel in Washington, D.C., where foreign diplomats and lobbyists stayed in order to curry favor with the American president.

And just imagine the merde-storm that would engulf the mass media if Joe Biden bumbled his way through anything remotely similar to Trump’s lie-filled Schnecksville speech. Think of the outrage from the Confederate-loving MAGA types if Biden invented a Robert E. Lee quote that made the general sound like a surfer-pirate.

Argh, dude.

As this presidential campaign stumbles into summer, and as Trump’s trial in New York takes center stage, it is becoming more and more obvious that the GOP presidential candidate has some real issues with, well, reality. Trump is quite literally making things up — creating stories, statistics, and personal anecdotes out of whole cloth. This is not an opinion; it’s a verifiable fact: He’s a full-service gaffe station.

The question becomes: Is he doing it knowingly — just running a hustle to get elected again — or is he truly losing sentience, unable to tell fact from fiction? Does he truly believe all vaccines are bad, and that he is the most honest person in the world, and Robert E. Lee said “wow.” If it’s the latter, well, that is so interesting and so vicious and horrible and so beautiful in so many different ways. And we are so in trouble.

Categories
Letter From The Editor Opinion

Letter From the Editor: Dude, Pot is Sooo Legal

The Denver Post this week announced that they’re looking for a marijuana editor for their website. They have one. They’re just looking for him.”

That was Saturday Night Live‘s take on the news last week that The Denver Post had hired a marijuana editor. The announcement made the newspaper an instant target for comedic one-liners, but this is no Cheech & Chong movie. This is a serious move being made by one of the country’s premier papers. The Post has won a Pulitzer Prize in each of the past four years.

The reason for the hire is that on January 1, 2014, Colorado will become one of two states to legalize recreational marijuana use. The repercussions will be enormous. These are uncharted legal waters for a U.S. state. The New York Times quoted Post editor Gregory L. Moore: “It’s going to affect politics, culture, crime, food. … The world is going to be watching us and we really want to do a great job on this story.”

Moore is right. The world, or at least other states, will definitely be watching. Legislators around the country will be monitoring the problems that may arise — as they did with casino gaming — and analyzing legal pot’s potential economic impact on cash-strapped state budgets.

Legal marijuana, like gay marriage — and legal gaming before that — is a societal sea change that is coming, probably sooner than we imagine. The first step — legalizing medical marijuana — has already happened in 20 states and in the District of Columbia. And to say the definition of “medical” has been stretched in those states is to put it mildly. Pot dispensaries are as ubiquitous as Walgreens in urban areas where medical pot is legal. “Prescriptions” are available for almost any ailment you can come up with. Feeling a little stressed? Go get yourself a jar of Sweet Vanilla Kush.

Legal medical pot is taxed and is creating significant revenue streams — and jobs. Newspapers are making big bucks on page after page of ads for dispensaries. And pot is everywhere. When I was last in San Francisco, I saw people medicating themselves while walking around Fisherman’s Wharf, much like tourists wandering Beale Street suck down Big-Ass Beers.

Think it won’t happen around here? Wrong. Two separate medical marijuana initiative campaigns are now under way in Arkansas, aimed at the November 2014 ballot. In 2012, a similar campaign was barely defeated, with 48.5 percent of the voters favoring legal medical pot. The Natural State, indeed.

Here’s hoping the good ol’ boys in Nashville are taking notice. If Arkansas legalizes medical pot, you can bet a Tennessee ballot initiative won’t be long in coming. In which case, the Flyer may also be in the market for a marijuana editor, dude.

Bruce VanWyngarden

brucev@memphisflyer.com