When the World Is Led by a Child
When the
World Is Led by a Child
David Brooks
Taken from: The New York Times
At certain times
Donald Trump has seemed like a budding authoritarian, a corrupt Nixon, a
rabble-rousing populist or a big business corporatist.
But as Trump has
settled into his White House role, he has given a series of long interviews,
and when you study the transcripts it becomes clear that fundamentally he is
none of these things.
At base, Trump is
an infantalist. There are three tasks that most mature adults have sort of
figured out by the time they hit 25. Trump has mastered none of them.
Immaturity is becoming the dominant note of his presidency, lack of
self-control his leitmotif.
First, most adults
have learned to sit still. But mentally, Trump is still a 7-year-old boy who is
bouncing around the classroom. Trump’s answers in these interviews are not very
long — 200 words at the high end — but he will typically flit through four or
five topics before ending up with how unfair the press is to him.
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His inability to
focus his attention makes it hard for him to learn and master facts. He is ill
informed about his own policies and tramples his own talking points. It makes
it hard to control his mouth. On an impulse, he will promise a tax reform when
his staff has done little of the actual work.
Second, most
people of drinking age have achieved some accurate sense of themselves, some
internal criteria to measure their own merits and demerits. But Trump seems to
need perpetual outside approval to stabilize his sense of self, so he is
perpetually desperate for approval, telling heroic fabulist tales about
himself.
“In a short period
of time I understood everything there was to know about health care,” he told
Time. “A lot of the people have said that, some people said it was the single
best speech ever made in that chamber,” he told The Associated Press, referring
to his joint session speech.
By Trump’s own
account, he knows more about aircraft carrier technology than the Navy.
According to his interview with The Economist, he invented the phrase “priming
the pump” (even though it was famous by 1933). Trump is not only trying to
deceive others. His falsehoods are attempts to build a world in which he can
feel good for an instant and comfortably deceive himself.
He is thus the
all-time record-holder of the Dunning-Kruger effect, the phenomenon in which
the incompetent person is too incompetent to understand his own incompetence.
Trump thought he’d be celebrated for firing James Comey. He thought his press
coverage would grow wildly positive once he won the nomination. He is
perpetually surprised because reality does not comport with his fantasies.
Third, by
adulthood most people can perceive how others are thinking. For example, they
learn subtle arts such as false modesty so they won’t be perceived as
obnoxious.
But Trump seems to
have not yet developed a theory of mind. Other people are black boxes that
supply either affirmation or disapproval. As a result, he is weirdly
transparent. He wants people to love him, so he is constantly telling
interviewers that he is widely loved. In Trump’s telling, every meeting was
scheduled for 15 minutes but his guests stayed two hours because they liked him
so much.
Which brings us to
the reports that Trump betrayed an intelligence source and leaked secrets to
his Russian visitors. From all we know so far, Trump didn’t do it because he is
a Russian agent, or for any malevolent intent. He did it because he is sloppy,
because he lacks all impulse control, and above all because he is a 7-year-old
boy desperate for the approval of those he admires.
The Russian leak story
reveals one other thing, the dangerousness of a hollow man.
Our institutions
depend on people who have enough engraved character traits to fulfill their
assigned duties. But there is perpetually less to Trump than it appears. When
we analyze a president’s utterances we tend to assume that there is some
substantive process behind the words, that it’s part of some strategic intent.
But Trump’s
statements don’t necessarily come from anywhere, lead anywhere or have a
permanent reality beyond his wish to be liked at any given instant.
We’ve got this
perverse situation in which the vast analytic powers of the entire world are
being spent trying to understand a guy whose thoughts are often just six
fireflies beeping randomly in a jar.
“We badly want to
understand Trump, to grasp him,” David Roberts writes in Vox. “It might give us
some sense of control, or at least an ability to predict what he will do next.
But what if there’s nothing to understand? What if there is no there there?”
And out of that
void comes a carelessness that quite possibly betrayed an intelligence source,
and endangered a country.
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