Just moments into Donald Trump’s speech at the United Nations yesterday, he started lying. “In less than two years,” the American president said, “my administration has accomplished more than almost any administration in the history of our country.” The boast was plainly false.
The trouble for Trump is that everyone in the room knew his claim was absurd, and some of them started laughing, catching the president off-guard, and leaving Trump in a position he’s long hoped to avoid: the target of international ridicule.
As the president prepared to leave the U.N., he spoke briefly with reporters, one of whom asked how he felt about the reaction to his remarks. This was his response:
“Oh, it was great. Well that was meant to get some laughter, but it was great.”
Yes, of course, Trump was trying to be funny by repeating a ridiculous boast he routinely tells sycophantic supporters at campaign rallies. When the president responded to the diplomats’ laughter yesterday by saying, “Didn’t expect that reaction, but that’s OK,” we’re now supposed to believe he did expect that reaction because he “meant to get some laughter.”
In the wake of international ridicule, Trump was effectively reduced to saying, “I meant to do that.”
That’s a difficult line to take seriously, made worse by the fact that it wasn’t the only part of the president’s remarks that drew some laughter.









