Donald Trump alleged during a U.N. Security Council meeting yesterday that China “has been attempting to interfere in our upcoming 2018 election.” It was a strange claim for a variety of reasons, and a few hours later, reporters pressed the president to back up his claim with some evidence.
In response, Trump meandered for a while before eventually bragging about how much Chinese officials respect him.
“…I like China and I like President Xi a lot. I think he’s a friend of mine, he may not be a friend of mine anymore, but I think he probably respects — from what I hear, if you look at Mr. Pillsbury, the leading authority on China.
“He was on a good show, I won’t mention the name of the show, recently, and he was saying that China has total respect for Donald Trump and for Donald Trump’s very, very large brain.”
Again referring to himself in third person, the president later added that the Chinese “are doing studies on Donald Trump.”
(The reference to “Mr. Pillsbury” was likely pointing to Michael Pillsbury, a conservative author who frequently appears on Fox News.)
Let’s put aside, at least for now, the fact that genuinely bright people generally don’t feel the need to speak publicly about their “very, very large” brains. Instead, let’s note two substantive angles to Trump’s odd rhetoric.









