During last year’s campaign, whenever Hillary Clinton would criticize Donald Trump, it was a near certainty that Trump would then made the identical accusation against Clinton. After a while, this got a little creepy.
Clinton accused Trump of being unstable and reckless, so Trump said Clinton is “unstable” and “reckless.” Clinton said Trump mistreated women, so Trump said Clinton mistreated women. Clinton accused Trump of bigotry, so Trump said Clinton’s a “bigot.” Clinton questioned Trump’s temperament, so Trump said Clinton had a bad “temperament.” Clinton said Trump makes a poor role model for children, so Trump said Clinton sets “a terrible example for my son and the children in this country.”
And, of course, Clinton accused Trump of being a “puppet” for his allies in Moscow, Trump, showing all of the sophistication of a slow toddler, responded, “No puppet. No puppet. You’re the puppet. No, you’re the puppet.”
This pattern of projection, in which Trump assigns some of his worst qualities onto those who criticize him, wasn’t just a campaign tactic. It’s also a staple of his presidency, as White House Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders helped demonstrate during yesterday’s briefing. Asked about the criminal charges against some of Trump’s campaign staff, Sanders deflected in an amazing way:
“The real collusion scandal, as we’ve said several times before, has everything to do with the Clinton campaign, Fusion GPS, and Russia.
“There’s clear evidence of the Clinton campaign colluding with Russian intelligence to spread disinformation and smear the president to influence the election.”
Trump himself said on Friday that Clinton colluded with Russia. A day later, his press secretary added that the evidence of Clinton-Russia collusion is “indisputable.”
There’s nothing to suggest these folks were kidding. Trump and his team apparently expect the public to take this line of attack seriously.
The American public is honestly supposed to believe that Russia attacked the election, stole Democratic documents, and took a series of strategic steps to undermine the Clinton campaign — all while Clinton colluded with Russia.
As proof, the president’s allies point to a dossier compiled by a research firm that investigated ties between Trump and Russia. The research was originally funded by Trump’s Republican critics during the presidential primaries, and Democrats financed the effort during the general election.
Obviously, to see this as evidence of collusion is insulting to Americans’ intelligence. We’ve grown accustomed to some pretty bizarre claims out of this White House, but the idea that Hillary Clinton colluded with the same foreigners who tried to defeat her is plainly dumb.









