The Weekly List

Week 40 - Two Truths, Two Sets of Data


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What strikes me most this week is not the number of broken norms, but the nature of what Trump is getting away with. This week he assumed control of the nation’s capital; ordered a mid-decade census amid mid-decade gerrymandering; shook up the way the federal government collects job data; and unilaterally imposed an export tax on two U.S. chip companies that amounted to extortion. Even the conservative Wall Street Journal Editorial Board noted that Trump was “expanding the long arm of the state into more of the private economy,” and mused, “Will any Republican object? Alas, probably not.”

Exactly. That is what stands out this week: that in the first and now second regimes, Trump kept and keeps pushing boundaries, again and again, until he met or meets pushback or resistance. Problem is, he is now not facing either.

Instead we are increasingly confronted with two sets of truths. Not only in Trump’s efforts to rewrite history, like the altered Smithsonian exhibit on impeachment in Week 39 (this week it was switched back…kinda), but also two sets of data. This is a hallmark of authoritarians throughout history as well: when the numbers don’t go your way, change the numbers to make them match your version of the truth.

Trump completely invented data in his power grab of the nation’s capital, taking control of the Metropolitan Police Department and mobilizing 800 National Guard troops, over a supposed emergency. Data from both the FBI and Metropolitan Police showed the exact opposite of what Trump claimed: that crime is actually falling and at a 30-year low. Why now? This shiny coin feeds the base and allows Trump to drive the narrative of what the media covers.

And that’s the point to much of what he does. You will notice what we are discussing a lot less this week: the Epstein files. This is an issue that united Americans across party line, release the files! In Trump’s manufactured chaos we’re also not talking about his low approval ratings on handling key issues like the economy, immigration, and foreign policy. Instead, he has once again regained control of the narrative with his manufactured chaos, and is increasingly acting more like a king than an elected official.

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The Weekly ListBy Amy Siskind

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