For many years, various presidents in both parties have issued proclamations recognizing days, weeks, and months in recognition of worthy causes, and for the most part, these proclamations have gone largely overlooked.
But there’s something about Donald Trump that puts some of these presidential declarations in an unfortunate light. For example, it’s now “National Character Counts Week” in the United States. Trump’s proclamation read in part:
“We celebrate National Character Counts Week because few things are more important than cultivating strong character in all our citizens, especially our young people. The grit and integrity of our people, visible throughout our history, defines the soul of our Nation. This week, we reflect on the character of determination, resolve, and honor that makes us proud to be American. […]
“Character is built slowly. Our actions — often done first out of duty — become habits ingrained in the way we treat others and ourselves. As parents, educators, and civic and church leaders, we must always work to cultivate strength of character in our Nation’s youth.”
Reading this, and realizing that it’s intended to be the words of Donald Trump, it’s hard to know whether to laugh or cry. Is this the president who’s seriously going to reflect on how “we treat others”?
Didn’t Trump just yesterday smear his presidential predecessors by lying about their interactions with the families of American soldiers killed in action?
I’m reminded of a recent column from the Washington Post‘s Michael Gerson, a former chief speechwriter for George W. Bush, who wondered whether Trump is “morally equipped to be president.” The piece highlighted Trump’s “vulgarity and smallness, which have been the equivalent of spray-painting graffiti on the Washington Monument.”









