Opinion
The War on Truth Reaches Its Climax
Trump is telling two big lies, and a third will come
soon.
Paul
Krugman
By Paul
Krugman
Opinion
Columnist
Nov. 2,
2020
I began
writing a column for The Times way back in 2000. My beat was supposed to be
economics and business. But I couldn’t help noticing that one of that year’s
contenders for the presidency was systematically making false claims about his
policy proposals. George W. Bush kept insisting that his one-percent-friendly
tax cuts were targeted on the middle class, and his plan to privatize Social
Security just wished away the system’s obligations to older Americans.
At the
time, however, my editors told me that it wasn’t acceptable to use the word
“lie” when writing about presidential candidates.
By now,
though, most informed observers have, I think, finally decided that it’s OK to
report the fact that Donald Trump lies constantly.
Many of the
lies are trivial, often bizarrely so, like Trump’s repeated claims to have
received an award that doesn’t even exist. But the president has closed out
this year’s campaign with two huge, dangerous lies — and there’s every reason
to fear that this week he will roll out a third big lie, perhaps even more
dangerous than the first two.
The first
big lie is the claim that America is being menaced by hordes of “rioters,
looters, arsonists, gun-grabbers, flag-burners, Marxists.”
Anyone who
walks around the “anarchist jurisdictions” of New York or Seattle can see with
their own eyes that nothing like this is happening. And the data bear out the
obvious. One systematic study found that the summer’s Black Lives Matter
protests were overwhelmingly peaceful, and that “most of the violence that did
take place was, in fact, directed against the B.L.M. protesters.”
Oh, and
Trump keeps claiming that Joe Biden won’t condemn the small amount of violence
that has actually happened — when Biden has, in fact, done exactly that.
So Trump
wants Americans to be terrified of a menace that exists only in his
imagination. At the same time, he wants us to ignore the very real menace of
Covid-19.
Over the
past few months Trump has effectively abandoned any effort to limit the spread
of the coronavirus. In fact, he has been actively promoting that spread. One
credible Stanford study estimated that Trump rallies, which involve large
numbers of shouting people packed closely together, most unmasked, have caused
around 30,000 infections and 700 deaths.
But Trump
wants Americans to believe that the pandemic — which killed more Americans last
month than are murdered in a typical year — is fake news. We’re “rounding the
corner,” he insists, even as infections and hospitalizations are rising at a
terrifying rate. The news media is going on about “Covid, Covid, Covid” only
because it’s out to get him. Doctors are inflating the reported death toll
because they want to make more money.
These big
lies are immensely destructive, and not just because they lead to bad policies.
Like it or not, presidential rhetoric affects how millions of Americans behave.
Trump’s
lies about an anarchist threat have given encouragement to white supremacists,
including domestic terrorists. His dismissal of the pandemic threat, his
mocking of precautionary measures like mask-wearing, have done a lot to help the
coronavirus spread.
But the
worst may be yet to come.
It’s
possible — barely — that Trump will legitimately win re-election, although this
would require that the polls be much further off than they were in 2016. If
that doesn’t happen, however, it’s a near-certainty that he will refuse to
accept defeat quietly.
Unless he
loses in an overwhelming landslide, he has indicated he will try to steal the
election by blocking the counting of Biden votes, with the aid of partisan
judges. I don’t think he’ll succeed, but I wish I was sure of that.
What if he
doesn’t manage to hang on to office? We all know what’s likely to come next:
claims that he was robbed. He’ll claim that millions of people voted illegally
— after all, he did that following the 2016 election, denying that he lost the
popular vote. He’ll probably claim that millions of Trump votes were somehow
discarded — after all, he has already made the false claim that ballots are
being “dumped in rivers.”
Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário