At a news conference Tuesday alongside Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, President Donald Trump mused about the United States’ taking over Gaza, leveling it and creating “an economic development that will supply unlimited numbers of jobs and housing for the people of the area.”
The Jerusalem Post argued that it’s not a “realistic strategy” but merely “an opening bid in a negotiation.” But the real effect of the shocking proposal — which came after Trump called for relocating Gaza’s roughly 2 million human beings to other Arab countries — is moving the Overton Window (the range of ideas generally considered acceptable) to places that were previously unthinkable.
An early summation of Trump’s governing style in his second administration could be: ‘The psychopathy is the point.’
It’s one of the most effective tactics in Trumpism. He and his allies lie with impunity, spew rank bigotry or propose patently illegal “solutions,” then accuse critics of lying about what was said or hysterically overreacting to it. Before you know it, notions that would have previously disqualified someone from office — or from being treated as a serious political commentator — are whitewashed as “outside the box” thinking by an “antiestablishment” iconoclast.
“Take Trump seriously but not literally” is the most comfortable refuge for Trump’s useful apologists. This was always a cowardly position. Now, after Trump has already been in power and attempted to stay in office after losing the 2020 election, it is willfully delusional.
Trump may or may not have been “serious” with his comments about a U.S.-led “takeover” of Gaza (his national security adviser indicated he is serious, while his press secretary insisted no “commitment” has yet been made). It may be all a part of his “madman” style of foreign policy. But that doesn’t matter. We’re now talking about the ethnic cleansing and colonization of Gaza as though it’s a legitimate proposal or a shrewd negotiating tactic — and not something that completely flies in the face of the United States’ supposed commitment to supporting human rights and international law.
During Trump’s first administration, Adam Serwer wrote a seminal essay in The Atlantic titled “The Cruelty Is the Point.” An early summation of Trump’s governing style in his second administration, not even three weeks old, could be: “The psychopathy is the point.”
In an Atlantic essay titled “The Startling Accuracy of Referring to Politicians as ‘Psychopaths,’” published during the 2012 election, author James Silver wrote: “Psychopathy is a psychological condition based on well-established diagnostic criteria, which include lack of remorse and empathy, a sense of grandiosity, superficial charm, conning and manipulative behavior, and refusal to take responsibility for one’s actions, among others.”
There have been plenty of recriminations about the collapse of the left-wing and ex-Republican “Resistance” that characterized so much of the opposition to Trump before November, as well as perceptions of feckless dithering and a lack of direction from Democratic leadership. That’s all fair! But when the president cavalierly suggests the United States will participate in a military intervention whose goals include the displacement of an ethnic group — that’s the time for the resistance to come from Trump’s allies and fellow travelers on the right, if they have any spine at all.








