(CNN)
In his new book, "A Higher
Loyalty," former FBI Director James Comey characterized
President Donald Trump as a Mafia kingpin who has a warped notion of
loyalty and utter disdain for the rule of law, and views the FBI as
his personal investigative service.
"The
boss in complete control. The loyalty oaths. The us-versus-them
worldview. The lying about all things, large and small, in service to
some code of loyalty that put the organization above morality and
above the truth," Comey
wrote.
Demanding
complete loyalty from subordinates, exerting absolute control and
caring only about his own needs and interests, Donald Trump behaves
like a mob boss rather than a democratic leader. Mob bosses are also
a form of cult leadership.
As
a raging
narcissist
and a charismatic leader who claims to know everything and have all
the answers, Donald Trump displays many classic and stereotypical
characteristics of a cult leader. Cults are known for overzealous and
unquestioning commitment to the person in charge. An authoritarian
who has even been compared
to Stalin,
Trump, the self-proclaimed "stable genius," demands
loyalty and effusive praise from
his underlings, as his bizarrely cringeworthy
Cabinet meetings
have demonstrated.
Although
he apparently
has learned little about
governing
in the
past year,
the President has declared he is in charge and knows what he wants,
as he consolidates his power, fires one official after another who
disagrees with him and surrounds himself with loyalists. Indeed
nothing about the Trump White House is normal, yet his minions behave
as if everything is fine, and short of a few Republican outliers
and retiring
lawmakers
critical of Trump and their party, the GOP faithful maintain their
silence.
No
matter what Trump does,
his followers stand by him,
despite his dishonesty and antidemocratic
tendencies,
as he embodies the very swamp he promised he would drain. This moment
in time reminds me of the cartoon
by K.C. Green,
in which a dog sits at the table in a burning house, drinks a cup of
coffee and says, "This is fine."
Amid
glaringly narrow public approval, the current President is flanked by
his base -- the Christian right, the NRA, Fox News and Infowars,
white nationalists, tax cutters and kleptocrats. White evangelicals
defend
Trump,
ignoring the allegations of sexual assault, extramarital affairs and
payoffs to porn stars. Franklin Graham declared Trump
stopped sinning when
he became president, while Jerry
Falwell, Jr. claimed
Jesus "never told Caesar how to run Rome."
His
black supporters notwithstanding,
Trump seems to preside over a white
cult
that feeds off white resentment and alienation after the civil rights
movement, and must undo the legacy of the first black president.
Signs
of this include him supporting punitive policies against people of
color, such as the rollback
of federal civil rights enforcement,
a bogus voter fraud commission that seemed intent on voter
suppression, undoing the Obama legacy to address mass
incarceration,
not being serious about
police brutality,
ICE roundups and the deportation of immigrants.
The
polarizing "us-versus-them"
mentality, and the sinister beliefs associated with cults, are
abundant in Trump. Under the slogans "Make America Great Again,"
Trump has promised to return the country to a mythical heyday for
white America. Presumably that would be a
return to the 1950s
when the economy
was booming and
America dominated the world.
But
that was also before the modern civil rights era, at a time of legal
Jim Crow segregation against black people, blatant sexism and
homophobia, and anti-communist witch hunts.
Restoring
this glorious place has brought on what Trump
seems to view as enemies - whether it's the news media, or kneeling black football players or
Muslims.
Some
of his unrealistic solutions to "Make America Great Again"
include imposing
steel tariffs,
building a wall or bringing back coal mining jobs. His other
disturbing ideas include mass
deportations
and travel bans, separating immigrant parents from their babies,
arming teachers and executing drug dealers.
Trump
leads a cult
of paranoia,
with policy dictated by conspiracy theories of a "deep state"
and "secret societies" and people opposing
critical thinking
and creating their own facts to match their own reality.
Consider
former White House press secretary Sean
Spicer's claim the
Trump inauguration had the largest audience ever, or when press
secretary Sarah Sanders said when Trump called Sen. Elizabeth Warren
"Pocahontas" it was not
a racial slur,
or the report by the Republicans in the House Intelligence Committee
clearing
the Trump campaign of collusion with Russia,
while a vigorous investigation by Robert Mueller continues.
This
administration, like typical cults, lacks
accountability and transparency,
and serves to benefit the leader. A cult of corruption
and ethics deficiency, Trump's devotees emulate their leader, with
HUD Secretary Ben Carson's $31,000
office furniture,
Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke and his doors
that initially cost $139,000,
Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin's million-dollar
military flights
and a
10-day European trip of
former Veterans Affairs Secretary David Shulkin that mixed meetings
with sightseeing. Shulkin's wife accompanied him and her airfare and
meals were paid for by the government.
This,
as 130
appointees,
including the President's daughter and son-in-law, lack permanent
security clearances. And others resigned or were booted from the
premises - sometimes
without their personal belongings - for security issues such as domestic
violence
and "serious
financial crimes."
"This
President in unethical, and untethered to truth and institutional
values. His leadership is transactional, ego driven and about
personal loyalty," wrote
Comey, painting
a picture of Trump as a leader demanding allegiance from Comey as a
condition for keeping his job. It was a pledge Comey was unwilling to
give. "I remember thinking in that moment that the president
doesn't understand the FBI's role in American life," Comey
added.
Trump
also expected the FBI director to serve as the presidential fixer and
prove to the first lady the falsehood of the "pee pee" tape
mentioned in the Steele dossier, the alleged encounter between Trump
and prostitutes in a Moscow hotel. Comey had sworn an oath to support
and defend the US Constitution,
not the President. This is what separates a democracy from an
organized crime syndicate, or better yet, cults.
Trump
is a dangerous cult leader who will destroy democracy if we allow
him. It is incumbent upon us to resist drinking the orange Kool-Aid.
This commentary was originally published by CNN.com
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