In a bizarre display of hypocrisy, President Trump has been using the same bombastic rhetoric to condemn protesters in Iran as he does those in Minneapolis, highlighting the desperation and declining legitimacy of his administration. In one tweet, he called for "KEEP PROTESTING – TAKE OVER YOUR INSTITUTIONS!!" in support of protesters in Tehran, while just 63 minutes later he denounced the protests in Minnesota as part of an alleged fraud scandal, labeling their participants as "anarchists and professional agitators."
This apparent disconnect speaks to a larger issue: Trump's administration has abandoned all pretense of coherence or consistency on issues related to social justice and human rights. The president doesn't care about anyone but himself and his own survival, viewing the world through the lens of his damaged ego and perceived grievances against the establishment.
The contrast between Trump's tone towards protesters in Iran and those in Minneapolis is stark. In the case of Tehran, he expressed "solidarity" with demonstrators, decried the killing of protesters, and vowed that those responsible would pay a price – language that would be eerily familiar to those who followed his rhetoric during the 2016 campaign. However, when confronted with similar protests in Minneapolis, where police brutality has been a recurring issue, Trump's message was unmistakably different.
Trump's Iran policy is as much of a mess as his predecessor's, and it largely consists of social media posturing mixed with wishful thinking. His advisors are pushing for a lightning strike to decapitate the Iranian regime, but they're not reckless enough to risk an overseas war that could destroy their entire agenda.
For Trump's die-hard supporters, however, this hypocrisy is hardly a problem. They've grown accustomed to the president's contradictions and negative information being baked into their worldview. In their universe, reality is whatever the leader says it is – Monday's lies can become Tuesday's sacred truths.
But for those in the streets protesting against paramilitary rule and ethnic cleansing in Minneapolis, there's no parallel universe where they're still considered "real Americans." By opposing Trump's regime, they're exposed to the blatant anti-American cynicism of his entire project and are now facing excommunication from the imagined community that his supporters have worked hard to create.
It's also striking that Trump is so desperate to equate the protests in Tehran with those in Minneapolis – a move that ignores the obvious conclusion that his regime has far more in common with the theocrats in Tehran than with any strand of Iranian popular resistance. This is a convoluted and threadbare extension of the MAGA narrative that's completely untethered from reality, and one that Trump's supporters can't afford to inspect too closely.
As the situation continues to deteriorate, it's clear that Trump holds effectively full power over the United States government for at least another year. The danger is very real: he has declared a piecemeal civil war against major cities in his own country and is on the cusp of declaring war on a NATO ally.
While there's still a glimmer of hope that heightened media scrutiny, mounting public opposition, and Trump's animal instinct for self-preservation will stave off another catastrophe, we can't underestimate the risks. We can only hope that Vladimir Putin gives Trump a friendly call with undertones of come-to-Jesus, or that Trump's dream of building a new American empire on the cheap – his foreign policy in a nutshell – crumbles when faced with the true price of such monumental folly.
This apparent disconnect speaks to a larger issue: Trump's administration has abandoned all pretense of coherence or consistency on issues related to social justice and human rights. The president doesn't care about anyone but himself and his own survival, viewing the world through the lens of his damaged ego and perceived grievances against the establishment.
The contrast between Trump's tone towards protesters in Iran and those in Minneapolis is stark. In the case of Tehran, he expressed "solidarity" with demonstrators, decried the killing of protesters, and vowed that those responsible would pay a price – language that would be eerily familiar to those who followed his rhetoric during the 2016 campaign. However, when confronted with similar protests in Minneapolis, where police brutality has been a recurring issue, Trump's message was unmistakably different.
Trump's Iran policy is as much of a mess as his predecessor's, and it largely consists of social media posturing mixed with wishful thinking. His advisors are pushing for a lightning strike to decapitate the Iranian regime, but they're not reckless enough to risk an overseas war that could destroy their entire agenda.
For Trump's die-hard supporters, however, this hypocrisy is hardly a problem. They've grown accustomed to the president's contradictions and negative information being baked into their worldview. In their universe, reality is whatever the leader says it is – Monday's lies can become Tuesday's sacred truths.
But for those in the streets protesting against paramilitary rule and ethnic cleansing in Minneapolis, there's no parallel universe where they're still considered "real Americans." By opposing Trump's regime, they're exposed to the blatant anti-American cynicism of his entire project and are now facing excommunication from the imagined community that his supporters have worked hard to create.
It's also striking that Trump is so desperate to equate the protests in Tehran with those in Minneapolis – a move that ignores the obvious conclusion that his regime has far more in common with the theocrats in Tehran than with any strand of Iranian popular resistance. This is a convoluted and threadbare extension of the MAGA narrative that's completely untethered from reality, and one that Trump's supporters can't afford to inspect too closely.
As the situation continues to deteriorate, it's clear that Trump holds effectively full power over the United States government for at least another year. The danger is very real: he has declared a piecemeal civil war against major cities in his own country and is on the cusp of declaring war on a NATO ally.
While there's still a glimmer of hope that heightened media scrutiny, mounting public opposition, and Trump's animal instinct for self-preservation will stave off another catastrophe, we can't underestimate the risks. We can only hope that Vladimir Putin gives Trump a friendly call with undertones of come-to-Jesus, or that Trump's dream of building a new American empire on the cheap – his foreign policy in a nutshell – crumbles when faced with the true price of such monumental folly.