Donald Trump didn't invent wingnut Putinphilia. He's channeling it.
by digby
Despite the fact that this past weekend featured a Democratic Party presidential deb ate, the news continues to be Donald Trump and the GOP race. One assumes the press was not interested in the debate simply because the three candidates are professional, intelligent, well-informed and serious. In other words they are not a circus act. Luckily we still have Trump to entertain them, and heâs doing a bang up job.
For instance, when âFox and Friendsâ ran a clip on Sunday of Clinton criticizing him in the debate the night before, Trump, on the phone, responded, âcould you imagine that as president? Iâm just watching and to see that as president just doesnât work.â That got a big smile from one of the hosts, Tucker Carlson, who is known for a famous quip about Clinton which he repeated often in the last election:
âShe scares me. I cross my legs every time she talksâ¦every time, involuntarily. It is like those pictures you see of the soccer goalie when theyâre about to get the free kick. Thatâs me when she talks. I canât help it.â
But Trumpâs comment about Clinton was a throwaway line. What the Sabbath Gasbags were most interested in were his comments about Vladimir Putin. Trump has been saying for some time that he and Putin would get along great. Months ago he told Anderson Cooper, âI think the biggest thing we have is that we were on â60 Minutesâ together and we had fantastic ratings. One of your best-rated shows in a long time. So that was good, right? So we were stable mates.â They werenât actually on â60 Minutesâ together, there were simply stories about each of them on the same program, but thatâs Trump. They made ratings together so that makes them blood brothers.
In fact, theyâve never met.
Nonetheless, on that and on numerous other occasions, Trump has said that he believed he and Putin would âprobably work together much more so than right now.â And last week, Putin returned the compliment. In an end of year press conference he called Trump âa very bright and talented man,â and an âabsolute leader.â
Trump nearly swooned at the compliment saying, âit is always a great honor to be so nicely complimented by a man so highly respected within his own country and beyond.â It didnât matter in the least that the media was gobsmacked, he was thrilled, telling Joe Scarborough âwhen people call you brilliant, itâs always good, especially when the person heads up Russia.â He even went out of his way to defend him against the charges that Putin had been responsible for the deaths of opposition journalists, saying âour country does plenty of killing.â
On ABCâs âThis Weekâ on Sunday he went to the mat for him:
âThey are allegations. Yeah sure there are allegations. Iâve read those allegations over the years. But nobodyâs proven that heâs killed anybody, as far as Iâm concerned. He hasnât killed reporters thatâs been proven.â
He said it would be terrible if true, but âthis isnât like somebody that stood with the gun and taken the blame or admitted that heâs killed. Heâs always denied it. Heâs never been proven that heâs killed anybody. Youâre supposed to be innocent until proven guilty, at least in our country.â
This is the same man who calls for the summary execution of Sergeant Bowe Bergdahl in every stump speech, usually followed by a nostalgic comment about how we used to do such things âwhen we were strong.â Itâs also the same man who routinely points to the press in the back of the hall at his rallies and calls reporters disgusting and âscum,â sometimes even naming names.
The GOP establishment is clutching their pearls over all this under the assumption that saying you admire Vladimir Putin surely will be the ultimate put-away shot. After all, we just had a debate in which the candidates were variously vowing to âpunch Russia in the noseâ and to shoot Russian planes out of the sky. Perhaps the most bellicose was Chris Christie who has long criticized President Obama for being soft, saying a few months back, âI donât believe, given who I am, that [Putin] would make the same judgment. Letâs leave it at that.â Evidently, âwho he isâ is so macho that Putin will roll himself into a ball and have a good old fashioned cry if Christie looks at him sideways.
Mitt Romney tweeted furiously about Trumpâs coziness with Putin and his former advisers were all up in arms throughout the week-end calling him a âseriously damaged individual.â Trump responded by saying, âtheyâre jealous as hell because heâs not mentioningâ them.
Trump doesnât care one whit about any of this carping. His reasoning is clear in this one comment:
âHeâs running his country, and at least heâs a leader, you know, unlike what we have in this country.â
Later he said, âI think that my words represent toughness and strength.â
Trump understands the base of the GOP a lot better than Mitt Romney and the Sunday talking heads. These GOP base voters like Putin. Like so much else, Trump is just channeling an existing right wing phenomenon.
Marin Cogan at National Journal wrote about the right wing Putin cult two years ago:
PutinÂphilÂia is not, of course, the preÂdomÂinÂant poÂsÂiÂtion of the conÂserÂvatÂive moveÂment. But in cerÂtain corners of the InÂterÂnet, adÂorÂaÂtion for the leadÂer of AmerÂicaâs No. 1 frenemy is unÂexÂcepÂtionÂal. They are not his counÂtryÂmen, RusÂsiÂan exÂpats, or any of the othÂer reÂgionÂal alÂlies you might exÂpect to find alÂlied with the RusÂsiÂan leadÂer. Some, like Young and his readÂers, are earnÂest outÂdoorsy types who like Putinâs Rough Rider sensÂibÂilÂity. OthÂers more cheekily adÂmire Putinâs cult of masÂculinÂity and claim reÂlÂatÂive inÂdifÂferÂence to the politÂicÂal stances â the anti-AmerÂicÂanÂism, the supÂport for leadÂers like Bashar al-AsÂsad, the opÂpresÂsion of minorÂitÂies, gays, journÂalÂists, disÂsidÂents, inÂdeÂpendÂent-minded olÂigÂarchs â that drive most AmerÂicÂans mad. A few even arÂrive at their Putin adÂmirÂaÂtion through a strange brew of anÂtiÂpathy to everything they think PresÂidÂent Obama stands for, a reÂflexÂive disÂtrust of what the govÂernÂment and meÂdia tells them, and politÂicÂal beÂliefs that go unÂrepÂresÂenÂted by either of the main AmerÂicÂan politÂicÂal partiesâ¦
[T]he Obamaâs-so-bad-Putin-alÂmost-looks-good senÂtiÂment can be found on plenty of conÂserÂvatÂive mesÂsage boards. EarliÂer this year, when Putin supÂposedly caught â and kissed â a 46-pound pike fish, posters on Free ReÂpubÂlic, a maÂjor grassÂroots mesÂsage board for the Right, were overÂwhelmÂingly pro-Putin:
âI wonÂder what photoup [sic] of his vaÂcaÂtion will the UsurpÂer show us? Maybe clipÂping his finÂgerÂnails I supÂpose or maybe hanging some curÂtains. Yep manly. I canât beÂlieve Iâm sidÂing with Putin,â one wrote. âI have PresÂidÂent envy,â anÂothÂer said. âBetÂter than our metÂroÂsexuÂal presÂidÂent,â said a third. One riffed that a Putin-Sarah PalÂin tickÂet would lead to a more morÂal United States.
Is it any wonder that Trump is saying heâs âhonoredâ that Putin thinks highly of him?
But the pearl clutching about all this Putin love from the other presidential candidates is seriously hypocritical. They may not be tapping into the macho Putin cult as directly as Trump, but they are very much on Putinâs authoritarian wavelength. Just like Putin they are very upset at the idea gay people might have equal rights and they are prepared to use government power to discriminate against them:
Ted Cruz, Marco Rubio, Ben Carson, Carly Fiorina, Rick Santorum, and Mike Huckabee vowed to push for the passage of the First Amendment Defense Act (FADA), legislation that would prohibit the federal government from stopping discrimination by people or businesses that believe âmarriage is or should be recognized as the union of one man and one womanâ or that âsexual relations are properly reserved to such a marriage.â
The pledge is supported by three conservative groups: the American Principles Project, Heritage Action for America, and Family Research Council Action.
Apparently, Bush, Graham, Paul and Trump, have also publicly expressed support for FADA. In the name of freedom, of course, just as the old Soviets would have done. These liberty lovers may shake their fists and pretend they are in opposition to Putinâs tyrannical ways, but when you get down to it theyâre all on the same page.
And the rest of us should probably stop laughing and start paying attention according to a warning from someone who knows what sheâs talking about, Maria Alekhina, aka Masha of Pussy Riot:
âWhen Putin came to his first term or second term, nobody [in Russia] actually thought that this is serious. Everybody was joking about it. And nobody could imagine that after five, six years, we would have a war in Ukraine, annexation of Crimea, and these problems in Syria,â in which Russia has become involved.
âEverybody [is] joking about Donald Trump now, but itâs a very short way from joke to sad reality when you have a really crazy president speaking about breaking every moral and logic norm. So I hope that he will not be president. Thatâs very simple.â
Strongman cults of the likes of Putin and Trump are often dismissed as silly and unserious at first. And then, all at once, itâs too late.
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