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01/16/26 01:52 PM #18807    

 

Jack Mallory

I don't begin to know what the response of "the military" would be, Joanie. Most would salute, say yessir, and follow orders. But I think there would be a small but significant number who would refuse, and that number could grow, especially if he were to send troops into even more states. This is how resistance to the Vietnam war and associated morale and discipline problems evolved, from non-existent to noticeable to truly mission-threatening. The end of the draft was associated with it. 
 

While I'm prognosticating . . . The weather forecast here in Minnesota is for about five days of weather with wind chill temps around zero and significantly lower all day, every day. If I were looking to implement the Insurrection Act and send the U.S. military in to occupy Minnesota, this is when I'd do it. There will be less immediate resistance in the streets under these conditions. But spring will come, Donny.

 


01/16/26 02:47 PM #18808    

 

Joanie Bender (Grosfeld)

Wow, that's cold alright.  It's sad that we have a President who cares nothing about the American people or humanity in general.  He builds his ritzy ballrooms, and deposes Maduro to get oil while simultaneously cutting child care programs including food assistance to hungry children in blue states.  The same ruthless group are governing Venezuala with some feeling the VP is even worse then Maduro. Probably the leader of the opposition movement, who was the real winner of the elections in Venezuela, giving her Nobel peace prize to Trump won't get her reinstated.  As long as the Venezuelan VP allows Trump to get oil,  he is good to go. Love, Joanie❤️


01/16/26 04:32 PM #18809    

 

Joanie Bender (Grosfeld)

There is new evidence that the officer who killed Renee Nicole Good in cold blood was also the one who shouted after he did that, "fucking bitch.." He doesn't fit the profile of someone fearing for his life...the videos all show that he was never in danger of being run over. Renee was driving to the right to drive away from him...We all remember too her smile saying, "Dude, I'm not mad at you." Its really heartbreaking that she lost her life. Love, Joanie

 

 

 


01/17/26 06:45 PM #18810    

 

Jack Mallory


01/18/26 07:56 AM #18811    

 

Jack Mallory

Letter from the esteemed philosopher Bertrand Russell to the notorious British fascist, Oswald Mosely in response to a challenge to debate. Certainly far more eloquent, far more restrained than I could ever manage. If challenged to debate, for example, or even speak to, Donald Trump.


Eff off you fascist scumbag!

Yours sincerely,

Jack Mallory

 

One of the many reasons I'll never be referred to as "the esteemed philosopher."


01/18/26 02:22 PM #18812    

 

Stephen Hatchett

Bertrand Russel's letter is a great find (and post), Jack.  As is the cartoon. 

We've been following the monks' (and dog's) walk for peace.  Although the newspapers do not seem to have made much of it, people along the way certainly have.  Instagram has worked to get the word out, with some very eloquent posts.  

No, Trump et al will not get it -- I think they simply cannot.  But they can get that there is an outpouring of support for the monks' journey from vast numbers of Americans.

Something feels like it is about to break.


01/18/26 02:59 PM #18813    

 

Joanie Bender (Grosfeld)

Jack thank you sooo much for that note from Bertran Russell to Oswald Mosely. It really is terrific and relates to what's going on here with Trump and cohorts as they are fascists.

Stephen, thanks for talking about the Monks walk for peace.

 I have to say my communication skills pail greatly to Russell's. I debate sometimes with this really great nutritional med doctor who I found out is a hard core MAGA guy when I wriote him "so glad Biden won," regarding the last election. He said "it's all relative." Mistakenly I thought he would see the light after the killing of Renee Good and ICE raids but he watches Fox News and Newsmax and believes their poisonous hateful views. I thought I could break the ice with sending him a song by Joan Baez, called Love is just a 4 letter word   He likes folk music but he ignored it. . Bottom line I see that there is nothing that would change his mind. Anyway, on a positive note, I adore Joan Baez and her beautiful voice which is for me unlike any other. Her singing just touches my heart.    Love, Joanie❤️❤️❤️


 

 


01/18/26 07:10 PM #18814    

 

Joan Ruggles (Young)

Hey classmates, in case you missed it, here's what the felon says about Greenland. So an invasion is on the table. How do all feel about going to war with Denmark?? Nori????? Smeby?????

Thank you for your attention to this matter!

Avatar

Donald J. Trump

 

 

@realDonaldTrump

 

We have subsidized Denmark, and all of the Countries of the European Union, and others, for many years by not charging them Tariffs, or any other forms of remuneration. Now, after Centuries, it is time for Denmark to give back — World Peace is at stake! China and Russia want Greenland, and there is not a thing that Denmark can do about it. They currently have two dogsleds as protection, one added recently. Only the United States of America, under PRESIDENT DONALD J. TRUMP, can play in this game, and very successfully, at that! Nobody will touch this sacred piece of Land, especially since the National Security of the United States, and the World at large, is at stake. On top of everything else, Denmark, Norway, Sweden, France, Germany, The United Kingdom, The Netherlands, and Finland have journeyed to Greenland, for purposes unknown. This is a very dangerous situation for the Safety, Security, and Survival of our Planet. These Countries, who are playing this very dangerous game, have put a level of risk in play that is not tenable or sustainable. Therefore, it is imperative that, in order to protect Global Peace and Security, strong measures be taken so that this potentially perilous situation end quickly, and without question. Starting on February 1st, 2026, all of the above mentioned Countries (Denmark, Norway, Sweden, France, Germany, The United Kingdom, The Netherlands, and Finland), will be charged a 10% Tariff on any and all goods sent to the United States of America. On June 1st, 2026, the Tariff will be increased to 25%. This Tariff will be due and payable until such time as a Deal is reached for the Complete and Total purchase of Greenland. The United States has been trying to do this transaction for over 150 years. Many Presidents have tried, and for good reason, but Denmark has always refused. Now, because of The Golden Dome, and Modern Day Weapons Systems, both Offensive and Defensive, the need to ACQUIRE is especially important. Hundreds of Billions of Dollars are currently being spent on Security Programs having to do with “The Dome,” including for the possible protection of Canada, and this very brilliant, but highly complex system can only work at its maximum potential and efficiency, because of angles, metes, and bounds, if this Land is included in it. The United States of America is immediately open to negotiation with Denmark and/or any of these Countries that have put so much at risk, despite all that we have done for them, including maximum protection, over so many decades. Thank you for your attention to this matter!

DONALD J. TRUMP
PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA


01/18/26 07:41 PM #18815    

 

Joanie Bender (Grosfeld)

Trump is certifiable. Joan thank you for that post. Its very alarming but typical for Trump. He is not entitled to Greenland. They are a soverign nation. To think he has no understanding at all that this move would end NATO and our mutual protection to defend one another. I really wish he would decide that there are massive rare minerals in Ruissia that he could get his hands on but only if he moved there. Love to all, Joanie


01/19/26 07:49 AM #18816    

 

Jack Mallory

In Minneapolis we’re wondering if we're a stepping stone on the way to Greenland. Even the 11th "Arctic Airborne" Division, based in Alaska, might find it challenging here. 


 

Talking yesterday to my old grad student days friend Carolyn, an American ex-pat who has lived in London for years, and her husband David, a Brit. They and their friends think that Trump's threats to seize land from our NATO allies are sheer lunacy.
 

HCR speaks in her usual clear and intelligent voice this Martin Luther King Day: 

"You hear sometimes, now that we know the sordid details of the lives of some of our leading figures, that America has no heroes left.

"When I was writing a book about the Wounded Knee Massacre, where heroism was pretty thin on the ground, I gave that a lot of thought. And I came to believe that heroism is neither being perfect, nor doing something spectacular. In fact, it’s just the opposite: it’s regular, flawed human beings choosing to put others before themselves, even at great cost, even if no one will ever know, even as they realize the walls might be closing in around them.

"It means sitting down the night before D-Day and writing a letter praising the troops and taking all the blame for the next day’s failure upon yourself in case things went wrong, as General Dwight D. Eisenhower did.

"It means writing in your diary that you 'still believe that people are really good at heart,' even while you are hiding in an attic from the men who are soon going to kill you, as Anne Frank did.

"It means signing your name to the bottom of the Declaration of Independence in bold script, even though you know you are signing your own death warrant should the British capture you, as John Hancock did.

"It means defending your people’s right to practice a religion you don’t share, even though you know you are becoming a dangerously visible target, as Sitting Bull did.

"Sometimes it just means sitting down, even when you are told to stand up, as Rosa Parks did. None of those people woke up one morning and said to themselves that they were about to do something heroic. It’s just that when they had to, they did what was right.

"On April 3, 1968, the night before the Reverend Doctor Martin Luther King Jr. was assassinated by a white supremacist, he gave a speech in support of sanitation workers in Memphis, Tennessee. Since 1966, King had tried to broaden the civil rights movement for racial equality into a larger movement for economic justice. He joined the sanitation workers in Memphis, who were on strike after years of bad pay and such dangerous conditions that two men had been crushed to death in garbage compactors.

"After his friend Ralph Abernathy introduced him to the crowd, King had something to say about heroes: 'As I listened to Ralph Abernathy and his eloquent and generous introduction and then thought about myself, I wondered who he was talking about.'

"Dr. King told the audience that if God had let him choose any era in which to live, he would have chosen the one in which he had landed. 'Now, that’s a strange statement to make,' King went on, 'because the world is all messed up. The nation is sick. Trouble is in the land; confusion all around…. But I know, somehow, that only when it is dark enough, can you see the stars.' Dr. King said that he felt blessed to live in an era when people had finally woken up and were working together for freedom and economic justice.

"He knew he was in danger as he worked for a racially and economically just America. 'I don’t know what will happen now. We’ve got some difficult days ahead. But it doesn’t matter…because I’ve been to the mountaintop…. Like anybody, I would like to live a long life…. But I’m not concerned about that now. I just want to do God’s will. And He’s allowed me to go up to the mountain. And I’ve looked over. And I’ve seen the promised land. I may not get there with you. But I want you to know tonight, that we, as a people, will get to the promised land!'

"People are wrong to say that we have no heroes left.
Just as they have always been, they are all around us, choosing to do the right thing, no matter what.

"Wishing us all a day of peace for Martin Luther King Jr. Day 2026."

Notes:
Dr. King’s final speech:
https://abcnews.go.com/Politics/martin-luther-kings-final-speech-ive-mountaintop-full/story?id=18872817

 

Do Trump's supporters ever wake up in the morning and ask themselves where King would be today--with Trump or against him? 

 

And my old friend Jackson, Vietnam vet chaplain and Methodist (I think-I can't keep the ecumenical flavors straight) posts this to FB:


01/19/26 09:04 AM #18817    

 

Joanie Bender (Grosfeld)

Terrific post Jack...thank you...It made me sad but appreciative to read again about Martin Luther King, Anne Frank, Rosa Parks and so many others who where heros. I will never forget Martin Luther King or his  "I have a dream speech." Love, Joanie


01/19/26 02:44 PM #18818    

 

Joan Ruggles (Young)

Hey guys, it gets even better!!  It's always about HIM and it's always about retribution!

"In an extraordinary text message sent on Sunday to the Norwegian prime minister, Jonas Gahr Støre, the US president wrote that after being snubbed for the prize, he no longer felt the need to think “purely of peace”.

“Considering your Country decided not to give me the Nobel Peace Prize for having stopped 8 Wars PLUS, I no longer feel an obligation to think purely of Peace,” he wrote, adding that the US needed “complete and total control” of Greenland."

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2026/jan/19/donald-trump-greenland-threats-nobel-prize-snub-letter?utm_source=substack&utm_medium=email


01/19/26 03:25 PM #18819    

 

Joanie Bender (Grosfeld)

It's always about him re whether he got the Nobel Peace Prize. Meanwhile people are starving and dying because he and Miller and Voight etc cut USAID and other programs that save thousands of lives.  He deserves the top Destructer and Cruelty award.  Love, Joanie


01/19/26 07:08 PM #18820    

 

Jack Mallory

It would be ludicrous if it weren't the potential end to an 80 year alliance between European democracies and ourselves. A potential end created not by those democracies but by a loosely hinged neo-fascist who looks to want to drop the neo; in a snit because the Nobel Prize Committee wouldn't give the peace prize to a man who was repeatedly murdering civilians in small boats. 

Trump has repeatedly threatened to seize Greenland from Denmark. I seriously doubt that Bone Spurs has any idea how many of our Danish allies died fighting on our side in Afghanistan and Iraq, pursuant to their treaty obligations as part of NATO. I actually doubt that he even knows that they did fight on our side. I doubt that most Americans know--we're not a nation that knows its history, even its very recent history. 

I like to think that the silence of Trump's usual cheer squad here is due to their belated realization of his madness, which they can't bring themselves to publically admit. And I suspect that they don't know how many Danes died in the "Global War on Terror." I hope I'm wrong.


 


01/19/26 07:22 PM #18821    

 

Jack Mallory

Which of the following is satire?

 

 

Which of the preceding is potential 25th Amendment evidence?


01/20/26 10:43 AM #18822    

 

Joanie Bender (Grosfeld)

Jack, that plan sounds perfect of dropping of the antipsychotic meds.

 
MAKE SURE YOU READ THIS🤣🤣🤣 

Two children are having a conversation. One child says to the other, "If another country kidnapped our President, what would we do?" The other child replies, "say thank you."  Love, Joanie

 

 

 

 


01/20/26 06:45 PM #18823    

 

Jack Mallory

https://www.npr.org/2026/01/20/g-s1-106549/chagos-uk-trump-diego-garcia-mauritius-greenland

 

NOW I UNDERSTAND! Not only did Sweden cheat the First Felon out of his Nobel Prize, but the U.K. returned the Chagos Islands to Mauritius! No wonder WE HAVE TO SEIZE GREENLAND FROM DENMARK! Irrefutable logic! (Maybe I need antipsychotic meds?)


01/21/26 11:03 AM #18824    

 

Joanie Bender (Grosfeld)

To think, NATO now considers us an enemy to plan how to deal with due to the extreme destruction Trump does and plans to do. Poor Trump didn't get the Nobel Peace prize so now he is working hard to get the biggest UnNobel War Monger prize.  Its really scary how authoritarian he is...how undemocratic he is. The one hope though lies in the reaction of all of us people who are rising up in protest. We also have for the most part the lower courts ruling against Trump and I pray the Supreme Court will rule against Trump regarding the international tarrifs. Love to all, Joanie


01/21/26 06:43 PM #18825    

 

Joan Ruggles (Young)

First, regarding the felon's reaction to the UK returning Diego Garcia to Mauritius. I guess he forgot that last May he "expressed his support for this monumental achievement." I understand. He's old and forgetful. 

Meanwhile, I went through the felon's speech in Davos so that the rest of you don't have to. As is my habit, I just like to repeat what he says, which you can interpret as you wish. Italics are his words. 

WHAT WAS SAID

“After the war, we gave Greenland back to Denmark. How stupid were we to do that? But we did it. But we gave it back. But how ungrateful are they now?

FACT: The felon was most likely referring to a World War II-era defense pact between the United States and Denmark. But that agreement did not give the United States sovereignty or control over Greenland.

“Until I came along, NATO was only supposed to pay 2 percent of G.D.P., but they weren’t paying them. Most of the countries weren’t paying anything. The United States was paying for virtually 100 percent of NATO." 

FACTS: The United States had paid about 22 percent of the alliance’s central budget, but the amount dropped to 16 percent in 2019 and to 15 percent this month. . NATO members agreed last year to increase military spending to 5 percent of national income by 2035. Meanwhile, the US pays only 3.5% on our defence.

So what we have gotten out of NATO is nothing, except to protect Europe from the Soviet Union and now Russia.

FACT:  The NATO alliance invoked its mutual defense clause only once in its history: after the Sept. 11 attacks.

China makes almost all of the windmills, and yet I haven’t been able to find any wind farms in China. Did you ever think of that? It’s a good way of looking at it. They’re smart. China is very smart. They killed the birds. They ruined your landscapes. By the way. Stupid people buy them.

FACT: China uses more wind power and wind farms than any country in the world. 10% of US energy comes from wind power

They’re not there for us on Iceland, that I can tell you. I mean, our stock market took the first dip yesterday because of Iceland. So Iceland’s already costs a lot of money.

Well, like I said, he's getting old and confused. 

More about Iceland:

I’m helping Europe, I’m helping NATO, and until the last few days, when I told them about Iceland, they loved me. They called me daddy right last time. Very smart man said he’s our daddy. He’s running it. I was like running it. I went from running it to being a terrible human being.

So who's calling him Daddy besides Barron and Melania??? Okay not Melania.

Can you believe that? Somalia. They turned out to be higher IQ than we thought. I always say these are low IQ people. How do they go into Minnesota and steal all that money?

Well, this is just outright racism. 

The price of gasoline is now below $2.50 a gallon in many states, $2.30 a gallon in most states. Then we’ll soon be averaging less than $2 a gallon in many places, it’s already down even lower – $1.95 a gallon. Numerous states are at $1.99

FACT: current price of gas is $2.8833 according to AAA    https://gasprices.aaa.com/

There was a rambling part of the speech about Emmanuel Macron “So when I called up Emmanuel Macron – I watched him yesterday with his beautiful sunglasses. What the hell happened? ” (He had a burst blood vessel in his eye). He went on and on for 4 paragraphs about a conversation he supposedly had with Macron about drug prices in the US being higher than Europe. ‘No, no, no, he said. Here’s the story, Emmanuel. The answer is you’re going to do it. You’re going to do it fast. And if you don’t, I’m putting a 25 per cent tariff on everything that you sell into the United States.

He wanted Macron to raise the prices of drugs in France. Wha?

FACT: It’s unlikely the conversation ever happened because the felon doesn’t understand that drug prices in France are controlled by the Social Security administration, not the president. And they are not a fascist country, so Macron has no power to change drug prices. And by the way, drugs ARE very cheap in France!

OTHER CLAIMS

The felon also made a host of other inaccurate claims that The New York Times has previously fact-checked

  • He wrongly claimed to have ushered in $18 trillion in investments. (This figure is double that of his own White House’s tally, and relies on broad pledges.)
  • He claimed that the Republican tax and domestic policy bill he signed into law last summer included “no tax on Social Security.” (The law reduced taxes on Social Security income but did not eliminate them altogether.)
  • He claimed that his predecessor gave Ukraine $350 billion. (Official and independent estimates are about half of that figure.)
  • He claimed to have “settled eight wars.” (His role is disputed in some cases, and the fighting has not stopped in others.)
  • He falsely claimed that grocery prices were “coming down.” (Prices are still increasing.)
  • He claimed, impossibly, that the cost of prescription drugs had declined by “5, 6, 7, 800 percent,” or even “2,000 percent.” (Official and independent estimates show a rise in drug prices.)  Again, he doesn't understand basic math. Are you now being paid back 2000 times what your drugs used to cost???
  • He misleadingly claimed that the Biden administration allowed “11,888 murderers” into the United States. (The figure included migrants who had entered the country over the previous 40 years.)
  • He claimed, with no evidence, that his military strikes on vessels decreased maritime drug trafficking by 97.2 percent. (That is unlikely, according to data and experts.

I probably don't need to add that his words were not well-received in Davos. Not surprising considering he insulted or demeaned nearly everyone and every country present. 

she just rubbed me the wrong way, I’ll be honest with you. About Karin Keller-Sutter, president of the Swiss Confederation.

They’re only good because of us,” The felon said of Switzerland.

Canada lives because of the United States  It's okay, the Canadians already hate us thanks to the felon.

Because certain places in Europe are not even recognizable, frankly, anymore. They’re not recognizable and we can argue about it, but there’s no argument. Friends come back from different places — I don’t want to insult anybody – and say ‘I don’t recognize it,’ and that’s not in a positive way. That’s in a very negative way.


01/21/26 07:23 PM #18826    

 

Jay Shackford

Greenland or Iceland? 

Trump keeps mixing up Greenland with Iceland -- a true sign of cognitive decline.  Invade a NATO partner.  Come on!  You've gotta be kidding.  It's time to dust off the 25th Amendment.  Otherwise, we are stuck with this narcissistic madman for another three years.  


01/21/26 07:35 PM #18827    

 

Jay Shackford

 

 

Here's a little bit of Japanese Wisdom that Trump might want to think about:

-- If it's not yours, don't take it.

--If it's not right, don't do it.

--If it's not true, don't say it. 

-- If you don't know, be quiet. 

Good post Joan.  


01/22/26 07:56 AM #18828    

 

Jack Mallory

Dogs got us up to take them out at 4:30 this morning. Dog poop bag had a hole in it.  -7 degrees. Temperatures will be going down into -30s by tomorrow. Trump's still President. What else could go wrong?

The man who has his finger on America’s nuclear button frequently gets his countries confused. The entire world should be terrified. 


01/22/26 11:10 AM #18829    

 

Joanie Bender (Grosfeld)

Maybe this was already mentioned but one of the biggest whoppers (lies) Trump told is that he has been the best of all to NATO of any other country....OMG...he is really coo coo and its scary that he is the head of our Government...Yes, its been time for the 25th Amendment for a long time. Then we get terrible Vance but what can you do...Just waiting for the midterms to help things a bit...Love, Joanie


01/23/26 07:21 AM #18830    

 

Jack Mallory

Minnesotans have seized on the loon as an image of state resistance to ICE and other federal abuse of citizens and the Constitution. As a loyal New Hampshirite, I have to claim equal rights to our shared bird. 
 




01/23/26 10:39 AM #18831    

 

Jay Shackford

It’s Time to Talk About Donald Trump’s Logorrhea

How many polite ways are there to ask whether the President of the United States is losing it?

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By Susan B. Glasser/The New Yorker

January 22, 2026

 

Donald Trump is an editor’s nightmare and a psychiatrist’s dream. Amid all the coverage marking the first anniversary of his return to the White House, one story—which did not get the attention it deserved—stood out for me: a Times analysis of how much more the President has been talking and talking and talking. The findings? One million nine hundred and seventy-seven thousand six hundred and nine words in the Presidential appearances, as of January 20th—an increase of two hundred and forty-five per cent compared with the first year of Trump’s first term in office, back in 2017.

There are many conclusions to be drawn from this astonishing statistic, including the obvious one, that our leader loves the sound of his own voice, and the slightly less obvious corollary that he has no one around him willing or able to tell him to shut up. It’s also true that, in rambling on so much, Trump reveals just about everything one could ever want to know about him—his lack of discipline, his ignorance, his vanity, insecurity, and crudeness, and a mean streak that knows no limits. “It is remarkable how a man cannot summarize his thoughts in even the most general sort of way without betraying himself completely,” Thomas Mann wrote a century ago, in his novel “The Magic Mountain,” set in a sanitarium perched above the Swiss mountain town of Davos, where Trump spent the better part of this week proving to the stunned attendees of the annual World Economic Forum the continuing relevance of Mann’s observation.

 

 

“Sometimes, you need a dictator,” Trump soliloquized on Wednesday, during a reception for business leaders. A few hours earlier, in an address that lasted a full hour and a half, the President had announced that he would not invade Greenland, despite his recent threats; explained that “stupid people” buy windmills; and admitted that he had decided to raise tariffs on Switzerland, because its Prime Minister, “a woman,” had “rubbed me the wrong way.” The speech, during which Trump four times referred to Iceland when he meant Greenland, was more than twice the combined length of the addresses of the French President, Emmanuel Macron, and the German Chancellor, Friedrich Merz. On Tuesday, speaking to the White House press corps to mark the actual anniversary of his return to office, Trump had discoursed on everything from his mother telling him he could have been a Major League baseball player and explaining to him what a mental asylum was to his hatred for Somalia and its “very low-I.Q. people.” That one lasted a hundred and four minutes.

Trump, of course, was rude, untruthful, and excessively, if not quite so egregiously, long-winded in his first term, too. The difference today, as he presides over a cowed American government, whose checks and balances no longer function as they used to, is that his Administration is far more willing and able to turn his fantastical words into tangible realities. The President, it now seems clear, has the world’s most consequential case of untreated logorrhea. (Dictionary definition of this condition: “Excessive and often incoherent talkativeness.”)

And I’m not just referring to the week’s crisis over Greenland and the future of the nato alliance, a crisis which began and (sort of) ended with many words being uttered by Trump about his “psychological” need to own the vast and strategically located Danish territory. Consider, for example, Trump’s “Board of Peace,” which he débuted before leaving Davos on Thursday morning. In Trump 1.0, perhaps this would have been no more than one of his Twitter controversies, in which he posted some crazy graphic of himself leading a rump group of world powers to overthrow the United Nations as the new permanent chairman of the global board of directors. In Trump 2.0, his alternate reality is not just a social-media post or the subject of an over-my-dead-body fight with his latest panicked national security adviser but an in-person photo op featuring the President, a real-life logo copied from the U.N.’s, and a random assortment of world leaders who were willing to buy a seat on Trump’s committee for a cool billion dollars. (Belarus and Qatar, yes; Britain, France, Germany, and every other major U.S. ally in Europe, no.) I highly recommend watching the fully live-streamed event, a show one might caption “Donald Trump and his pretend League of (Lesser) Superheroes, with himself as a bizarro Superman in charge of the world.”

My favorite moment was when—after bragging about how “everybody wants to be a part of” the board that every other major world leader, with the possible exception of the war-mongering pariah Vladimir Putin, refused to join—he claimed that the group he himself had dreamed up was some distinguished independent organization that had solicited his chairmanship. “I was very honored when they asked me to do it,” he said. For all I know, he believed it.

Perhaps just as revealing, when Trump reached the fulsome self-praise section of his speech, he explained that he was such an incredible peacemaker that he had even managed to end wars in places where he had not known they were happening. Imagine admitting this about yourself. Another quote from “The Magic Mountain” sprang to mind: “I know I am talking nonsense, but I’d rather go rambling on. . . .”

A decade into the Trump era, Americans are more or less used to this manic political performance art, proof, if we still needed it, that millions of our fellow-citizens are all right with having a clearly disturbed leader who cannot control what he says. (Although, to be fair, even some partisan Republicans are starting to worry that they could pay a serious price this fall for what the G.O.P. strategist Karl Rove, no fan of Trump’s, called Trump’s unnerving“rambling appearances” and “downward spiral” in his latest Wall Street Journal column, headlined “Is Trump Trying to Lose the Midterms?”)

But the stunned reaction of so many Europeans to a week living in the full-on Trump talk cycle ought to remind us that there’s something to be said for the plainer interpretation of Trump’s out-of-control behavior, even if years of intensive exposure in the U.S. have inured us to it.

“This is a wake-up call, a bigger one than we’ve ever had,” Christine Lagarde, the head of the European Central Bank, said.

“The time has come to stand up against Trump,” Anders Fogh Rasmussen, a former prime minister of Denmark and secretary-general of nato, said.

It was only a few days before his speech in Davos, on the eve of his visit to Switzerland, that Trump was revealed to have sent a text to the Prime Minister of Norway, complaining that, because Norway had denied him the Nobel Peace Prize, he was under no obligation to proceed peacefully in his desire to take over Greenland. The message, surely a first in diplomatic annals, began: “Dear Jonas, Considering your Country decided not to give me the Nobel Peace Prize for having stopped 8 Wars PLUS, I no longer feel an obligation to think purely of Peace, although it will always be predominant, but can now think about what is good and proper for the United States of America.”

Lars-Christian Brask, a deputy speaker of the Danish parliament, no doubt spoke for many in Europe when he responded to this evidence of Trump’s “mad and erratic behavior” by asking on television whether the President was still capable of running the United States.

What struck me was how calm, reasonable, and puzzled Brask’s tone was as he said it. But it’s going to be a long three more years; there’s almost certainly going to be a lot of shouting before this is all over. How many polite ways, after all, are there to ask whether the President of the United States has lost his mind? 


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