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TomCADem

(17,390 posts)
Mon Aug 7, 2017, 10:48 AM Aug 2017

NY Times - Many Politicians Lie. But Trump Has Elevated the Art of Fabrication.

My take is that Trump is simply taking advantage of the media bubble created by the corporate right wing media. For years, the corporate advertisers had fueled a right wing media bubble that was able to operate independent of the truth for the pure purpose of pushing propaganda. This allowed Republicans to push memes like "death panels" with relative impunity, though most still shied away from the daily, easily disapprovable lies that Trump traffics in. However, by the time Trump arrived, he realized that with this media apparatus, he could totally gaslight the Republican base by overtly pushing lies that appeal to their resentment and hatred.

The only way that Trump and Republicans will be defeated is if Trump's white male base wakes up to the fact that Trump is manipulating them and using racism not to grant them more privilege, but to oppress them by taking away their benefits and offering scapegoats in return.

http://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/many-politicians-lie-but-trump-has-elevated-the-art-of-fabrication/ar-AApBjQc?li=AA5a8k&ocid=spartandhp

Fabrications have long been a part of American politics. Politicians lie to puff themselves up, to burnish their résumés and to cover up misdeeds, including sexual affairs. (See: Bill Clinton.) Sometimes they cite false information for what they believe are justifiable policy reasons. (See: Lyndon Johnson and Vietnam.)

But President Trump, historians and consultants in both political parties agree, appears to have taken what the writer Hannah Arendt once called “the conflict between truth and politics” to an entirely new level.

From his days peddling the false notion that former President Barack Obama was born in Kenya, to his inflated claims about how many people attended his inaugural, to his description just last week of receiving two phone calls — one from the president of Mexico and another from the head of the Boy Scouts — that never happened, Mr. Trump is trafficking in hyperbole, distortion and fabrication on practically a daily basis.

In part, this represents yet another way that Mr. Trump is operating on his own terms, but it also reflects a broader decline in standards of truth for political discourse. A look at politicians over the past half-century makes it clear that lying in office did not begin with Donald J. Trump. Still, the scope of Mr. Trump’s falsehoods raises questions about whether the brakes on straying from the truth and the consequences for politicians’ being caught saying things that just are not true have diminished over time.
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