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The Screaming Moderate

The title match of the campaign

6/26/2024

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Whatcha doin’ tomorrow night?

Unless you’re on a streaming service only, about all you’ll find on TV is two older guys going at each other in what will be either a cage match suitable for WWE OR MMA or two older guys who have two very different views of what the United States is all about.

That main event will be the first of two scheduled debates between former President Donald J. Trump and President Joe Biden.

What should you look for? Trust me, no one can answer that question but many are trying. Heck, I’ll even take a shot:

Former President Donald J. Trump is teasing that he will have one of two strategies: Be nice, or be an attacking ass. OK, those weren’t his exact words but close.

Honestly, I have never witnessed Trump having the discipline to be nice for 90 minutes – especially if he’s on stage with an opponent. Need proof?  Re-watch any debate he’s been in since 2016, whether in a primary or in a general election.

Do you expect him to just lay back and be the charming Trump that whose who’ve been in his private company say he can be? I just can’t imagine.

Fact is, it’s his nature, when he sees someone who wants to beat him at anything, to attack. Then he attacks more. “Little Marco.” “Crooked Hillary.” “Crooked Joe.” OK, sometimes he’s repeats himself (OK, he often repeats himself) but if it worked once, he figures it’ll work again. Reruns are fine. Him winning is all that matters.

All attacks are fair -- immature or not.

But, he does need to attract new voters from four years ago if he wants to win in November. His core base is there, no matter what. They have proven they are his ride or die. And they love seeing the out-of-control Trump. Absolutely love it.

They will cheer every false allegation he makes, every remark he utters that makes fun of President Joe Biden, every swear word he can sneak in.

Will we hear the word “bullshit?” Who knows? Stay tuned!

There won’t be an audience so you won’t see its reaction in real time.  So Trump will be missing that energy he feeds off so well.

And even though he has slightly led in most polls through the year, everyone agrees this will be a close race.

Truth is, what happens tomorrow night likely won’t be the deciding factor because there is so much time between then and the real voting. Wars, disease, natural crises, gaffes in the campaign, a candidate health event – all that can happen so what’s a debate in June really mean?

Well, it can set a tone for the campaign. Biden needs to get through it without making what can be made into an “elderly mistake” or show signs of being tired at 9:30 Eastern Time (like many of us his junior). He’s a decades-old politician, though, and that makes him dangerous. He lives for political moments.

Trump needs something to add to his votes, something he’s been unable to do so far.

He won’t do this, but what if, for example, he announced, in the middle of the debate, who his vice-presidential running mate will be? That definitely could be the news of the night – and at a forum millions are watching. He’d only do that if his choice will bring in new Trump voters, or at least he thinks it will.

For example, if in Trump’s calculations he thinks South Carolina Sen. Tim Scott, an African-American, can help him suck more black voters from Biden, he could name him.

Or if New York Cong. Elise Stefanik, in his mind, can suck some suburban women his way. But, as was pointed out in a New York Times discussion among its columnists the other day, Stefanik is not exactly Trump's vision of the perfect female running mate. Gov. Kristi Nome may have been but she shot herself in her dog.

Trump, as you may have noticed, goes for the dramatic and for the cameras. So, he may try that tactic.

Or, he may be more focused on trying to maneuver Biden into a reaction that will give viewers the reinforcement they need to decide Biden’s just too old for the job.

Then again, there’s always the economy. Biden’s economy is perceived as (and is, in some cases) not good for the working person. They see no reductions in their costs of living, including food, gas and inflation. Biden has a decent story to tell on those counts but not one accepted by the average working person. So the guess is he won't go down that road precisely.

And, if you read memes being put on social media by Trump supporters you will see even higher inflation and costs being touted because they are not being honest (when the honest story would be enough to make their point).

The morning of the debate alone new numbers will be announced for initial jobless claims, GDP’s second revision, durable goods orders and pending home sales. If any one, or more, of those numbers is bad for the Biden Administration, Trump likely will raise them as up-to=date evidence of a “reeling economy.”

Biden, on the other hand, will be looking for opportunities to bring out the Mad Man in Trump. Something to get under his skin that will cause him to react in a way detrimental to attracting swing voters who will probably decide this election.

Biden will be attacking on things like abortion rights, where Trump gets the credit for appointing the U.S. Supreme Court justices who killed Roe v. Wade. Trump will argue that decision to provide that right belongs with the states as the upheaval of Roe determined -- but it still is a removal of a 50-year old right American women had.

We know where each candidate stands, pretty much, on the issues. What we don't know is what strategy they'll use Thursday night.

One thing for sure, if you care about politics and and country,  it won’t be boring.

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As the Beatles sang, 'When I'm 64, uh, 74'

6/7/2024

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Ever watch TV and a story comes on that says, for example, Neil Sedaka is 85 this year and you go, man, is he getting old?!

Then, a second later it hits you: I’m 74, he’s not much older than I am (and never was).

Did you notice, by the way, that Paul McCartney will be 81 in a few days? I mean, well, you know. "When I'm 84" wouldn't have been such a good song for Baby Boomers. Back then, anyway. Today, it probably would work. 

Sports heroes of my youth are dying: UCLA/NBA star and weird but lovable Bill Walton; Mr. Oakland Raider Jim Otto; golfer/announcer Peter Oosterhuis; quarterback Roman Gabriel. I mean, what the heck? Today, I couldn’t tell you who the L. A, Rams quarterback is, Gabriel I knew. 

The majority of baby boomers, we never knew our great-grandparents. Hell, we didn’t even know the names of our ancestors going back maybe one or two generations.

Today, the average age of great-grandparents is 75.  I became a great-grandfather for the second time before I was 73. OK 0K, that’s a function of, as with many in my generation, an early marriage resulting in having kids when I was young, and my kids having kids when they were even younger. Plus, medical research is helping us all live longer. Not that I'm old (before you say it).

But, give me this one, I’m the father of a grandmother? WT-. A beautiful and young looking grandmother, of course (she sometimes reads these posts. Kidding, she is beautiful and young).

Anyway, that’s all distraction and deflection to hide the fact that, today:

I turn 74 years old.

Not a milestone milestone like 70 or 80 but a milestone for me because it’s the oldest I’ve ever been. Well, until tomorrow when I’ll achieve a new milestone.

I have the similar issues of other folks my vintage:
  • Driving after dark is nigh impossible;
  • Using words like “nigh” is more frequent;
  • Driving two hours each way to visit family or friend now is, minimum, an overnight stay, maybe two;
  • Staying awake past 9:30 is akin to pulling all-nighters when I was in college;
  • Using outdated words like akin is more common.

My childhood punishments, as a great philosopher once said, are now my adult goals:
  • Not leaving my house
  • Not going to a party
  • Going to bed early

Plus, now, when I look around for the adult in the room because we need his or her wisdom, I’m the adult in the room! (I fake it, which they probably did, too.)

Oh, and I’m suffering from lower back pain as we speak. I tell everyone, I mean everyone, from friends to medical professionals, that it happened this spring because I started playing golf again and my powerful golf back-swing caused a muscle strain. And, to a person, they laugh (a benefit: old folks are funny even if they aren't trying to be, I'm learning).

As another anonymous philosopher once said, “I don’t do alcohol anymore, I get the same effect just standing up fast.”

But, I’ll end the pity party. Truth is, I have little to complain about compared to others who are my age or any age, in fact. I’m a very happy camper. Life is good. Health is better than it probably should be.

And, as Steven Wright once said:

“I intend to live forever,

So far, so good.”


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Trump's a convicted felon. Now what?

6/3/2024

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As much as many who oppose former President Donald Trump would like to see him behind bars, he should not be sent to prison in the hush money trial.

His crimes aren’t violent, he is old, much as he doesn’t like to admit it (who does?) and most who commit the crime he did, don’t go to jail.

Notwithstanding that two who were charged associated with his crimes did and are doing time – Michael Cohen and Allen Weisselberg, the Trump Organization’s CFO.

And, much as Trump also does not want to go to prison – despite his bravado saying he would go – it likely only solidifies more (if that’s possible) the love his core supporters have for him.

That’s the legal and political analysis.

Well, most of it,

First, it’s way too early to know what’s going to happen on November 5. There are wars going on, our borders leak, there are debates to be held and there are weeks of ups and downs coming for both Trump and President Joe Biden.

There’s Biden’s son’s trial, but that should have no impact on the election. It’s Hunter on trial, not his dad.

And, whatever the outcome in that trial, whatever the jury says goes – just as it was in Trump’s trial. That’s our system. And it’s worked far more than it’s failed in our history.

Should Trump have been charged in this case? Well, others were, so I guess he should have been too. You can call it flimsy, call it shaky, but he was charged, tried and found guilty by a jury of his peers.

It wasn’t politics, no matter what some want to believe.

But, with Trump, everything is politics – even his claims that the Supreme Court should step in and overturn his conviction. And the Speaker of the House, a lawyer, said the same thing. But, the U.S. Supreme Court only takes up state cases when a person’s constitutional rights have been put in question.

And that ain’t gonna happen.

If it does, wrap our country up in a bow and just hand it to Putin. The party literally would be over.

We are in a polarized point in our history. The polls matter, for the day they were taken and that’s about it.

The polls, so far, show that among that slim ribbon of voters who likely will make the difference in November, the view is Trump broke the law, the jury found him guilty and he should give up his campaign.

The United States just should not have a convicted felon in the White House. And, likelihood is, if Trump did withdraw, the Republicans would be favored to win the election, bigly.

So, what is the GOP doing?

It makes no sense other than the GOP leadership – the Republican National Committee (now taken over by Trump) and elected officials from Congress to many in the state and local levels – have sold out to a wannabe dictator rather than do what they are supposed to do – win elections for members of the party.

At least, I thought that was their job.
 


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    B. Jay Cooper

    B. Jay is a former deputy White House press secretary to Presidents Reagan and George H.W. Bush. He also headed the communications offices at the Republican National Committee, U.S. Department of Commerce, and Yale University. He is a former reporter and is the retired deputy managing director of APCO Worldwide's Washington, D.C., office.
    He is the father of three daughters and grandfather of five boys and one girl. He lives in Marion, Mass.

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