Earlier this year, Donald Trump told reporters that “some” of his presidential predecessors had told him they wish they’d built a wall along the United States’ southern border. It was, of course, an impossible claim to take seriously, which was made worse when each of the living former presidents issued statements debunking Trump’s claim.
There was a moral to the story: when Trump describes made-up conversations — something he does with alarming frequency — he needs to avoid references to real people who can expose his nonsense.
As we discussed at the time, the president tends to understand this fairly well, which is why he frequently quotes “anonymous validators“: mysterious unnamed people, whom the president swears exist, who we’re supposed to believe secretly tell Trump how right he is about the major issues of the day. It’s impossible to definitely prove that all of these people are fictional, which creates a rhetorical safe harbor for the Republican.
Occasionally, however, Trump forgets the rule. Take, for example, his comments to Fox News yesterday about NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg.
“Secretary Stoltenberg has been maybe Trump’s biggest fan, to be honest with you. He goes around — he made a speech the other day, he said, ‘Without Donald Trump maybe there would be no NATO.’”
If Trump had said, “A prominent international said the other day, ‘Without Donald Trump maybe there would be no NATO,’” there might at least be some wiggle room. We’d know it was false, but it’d be difficult to prove.
But in this case, NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg actually exists.









