THURSDAY, JULY 16, 2026
...they turn to the evasions: We employ the moment to offer a gripe about the weekly Bruni/Stephens colloquy at the New York Times.
This week's colloquy starts as shown. Our gripe concerns the rollicking, tongue-in-cheek, humorous back-and-forth style:
Trump Is at His Wit’s End
Bret Stephens: Hi, Frank. We seem to be sliding back into war with Iran. Do you see any good outcome? Or, at least, a least-bad outcome?
Frank Bruni: Yeesh, Bret, you really know how to perk up a guy’s day, don’t you?
Bret: Would you rather discuss interest-rate policy?
Frank: In honor of “The Odyssey”—Christopher Nolan’s new movie adaptation opens this weekend—I’m going to describe that as a Scylla-and-Charybdis choice.
Bret: Listen, Penelope, your suitor is waiting for his answer.
Frank: Fine. I’ll abandon my loom long enough to give you a response. No, I don’t see any good outcome, because whatever happens over the next weeks or months can’t erase or rewrite the, um, odyssey that brought us to this wretched juncture.
Witty opinion scribes, please!
Do Times readers really need to be humored this way before they'll read an analysis of the claim that the sitting president is somehow "at his wit's end?"
In fairness, no one can blame Bruni for this feature's rollicking style. It came into being during the earlier weekly "Conversations" between Stephens and Gail Collins. The rollicking style was simply held over when Bruni was subbed in.
At any rate, is the president at his wit's end? And what might that whimsical claim even mean?
Once the early joshing (largely) ends, it sounds like things are substantially worse than that! Stephens soon unloads in this straightforward manner:
Bret: ...What isn’t solvable is an erratic president who issues threats he withdraws, signs cease-fire agreements he doesn’t appear to have read, claims he’s indifferent to political and economic considerations until he caves to both, and lacks not only a coherent strategic concept but an elementary understanding of what strategy is.
Oof! Bruni is no less unimpressed with the sitting president—but an intriguing refusal lurks in this presentation:
Frank: ...Never in the past 50 years have we seen anything from an American president like Trump’s determination to undermine voters’ faith in democracy itself, which is fine with him if it’s the only way to hold on to power and get what he wants. It’s a degree of ruthlessness and a magnitude of narcissism that add up to a kind of political sociopathy. I’ve written this before and stand by it: He’ll burn the whole thing down if that’s best for him. He’ll gladly rule over ashes, just as long as he’s the one ruling.
Bruni is deeply unflattering too. Our comment would go like this:
"Narcissism" is a clinical term. So is "sociopathy."
Like Stephens, Bruni's an excellent writer. That said, has it ever occurred to him that this isn't a kind of political sociopathy—that it's straight-up clinical sociopathy, a dangerous "personality disorder" the president's niece attributes to him in her best-selling 2020 book?
These high-end scribes today! They've agreed that they'll never speak directly about any such possibility.
They've agreed that they'll never speak directly. Promises made, promises wittily kept!
Bruni doesn’t generalize the sociopathy past politics because he doesn’t know Trump personally. He is being responsible, not derelict.
ReplyDeleteWho complains about wittiness? Somerby is grasping at criticism.
ReplyDeleteI'm sick of the crap.
ReplyDeleteNow that right wing Republican Bret Stephens has flip flopped again to now be critical of Trump, at least temporarily and to some limited degree, Somerby may follow suit, in some limited fashion.
ReplyDeleteTrump is a loon, is corrupt, and a criminal.
ReplyDeleteThat is news to no one, including Trump's own cronies, supporters, and voters.
Being loony is not that concerning and there's not much that can be done about that.
Being corrupt and criminal is extremely concerning and is also actionable.
Somerby is a poor thinker, and his analyses are weak and inconsequential.
Bob is irrelevant.
ReplyDeleteOdd for Somerby to criticize someone for bringing up Homer, since he’s done it over and over.
ReplyDeletePerhaps he is smirking over the irony.
DeleteHomer was mediocre.
DeleteYou have to admit, Trump's speech tonight will show he's laser-focused on the issue voters care most about: the 2020 election.
ReplyDeleteWell played. Cheeto opened up his diatribe tonite complaining about the inflation that his policies have made worse.
DeleteExcept that Trump is setting the stage for invalidating the upcoming election.
DeleteMy bet as well is that he is setting the stage to outlaw Chinese open source AI which is much less expensive than the closed versions hawked by frontier companies, all in the name of National Security.
DeleteCheeto: Mail in voting is rife with danger except of course when I do it.
ReplyDeleteA large number of republicans approve of Trump’s ruthlessness in pursuit of what they view as the righteous causes of violently deporting all Hispanics and ensuring that the evil democrats never win power again. So saying Trump has personality disorders, while probably true, doesn’t mitigate the support he has. It’s also a likelihood that Trump knows he didn’t win in 2020, since his statements to the contrary are meant to allow him to seize power.
ReplyDeleteSpeaking of deranged idiots: Tuberville: "We probably have four or five senators that didn't legally win. They shouldn't be up here."
ReplyDeleteTrump is the least popular president in history.
ReplyDelete