
by Gordon C. Morse
Loved the headline over an opinion in The Washington Post last Sunday morning: โThe beginning of the end of the Trump era.โ
Well, that was easy. What a relief! And I was beginning to worry.
The argument contained within the Post piece, such as it is, seems to recognize that something fundamental has occurred, that the writer thought (along with his friends and colleagues, he says) that it was a sea-change of sorts. Trump รผber alles, but then, no, he realized he was wrong. It was just a passing Trump moment, a phase of sorts, now already hung on its depraved techniques and implausible assertions.
The Post ran this piece, in all likelihood, because it yearns for it to be true. Likely the paper put the headline on the thing, not the writer. Thus people open the paper and see that the storm has passed and a new, better day beckons. It was all just a bad dream.
The single best advice that any Democrat can receive these days? Come to grips with the world on your own. Do your own homework. Think for yourself. And, for the sake of all thatโs holy, put aside most anything you find in The Washington Post or The New York Times these days.
If you want to contemplate something, consider a tipping point that could knock the Trump administration back. At that moment, public attention will turn to the Democrats in the hope that they will offer a reasonable alternative. Should that hope be frustrated by the Democrats dancing about, doing all the things they were doing prior to November, with little amendment, American political frustration will become acute.
Itโs not easy to diagnose events as they occur and understand what they may mean down the road. In 1988, I was in Oxford, England, rummaging about the odds and ends of a basement church sale and spotted a post card that Iโve kept on an office bookshelf ever since.














