• Absent Manhood - THE COWARDICE OF DONALD J TRUMP

    From Timothy Jones@21:1/5 to All on Wed Feb 12 20:26:22 2025
    XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, alt.atheism, talk.politics.guns
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    The Cowardice of Donald Trump
    Barry Dym
    Barry Dym
    Barry Dym
    Executive coach and strategy consultant. (Self-employed). Entrepreneur.
    Founder of multiple organizations
    Published Oct 30, 2023
    + Follow

    In 2016, in the middle of the Clinton-Trump campaign, I had grown
    disgusted with Donald Trump�s values, temperament, and violence rants,
    and the power they seemed to exert over a great many working class
    American men. So I wrote an essay about how much he violated the ideas
    of manhood that I and, I believed, most American men of my generation
    took to be virtually sacred.

    Last week, one of my readers commented on the 2016 essay. So, seven
    years after penning it, I reread it. It turned out to be prescient�that
    didn�t take much insight. But I am still left puzzled about why so many
    �red blooded men,� why so many macho men have joined the Trump crusade,
    not ours. So I decided to republish the essay, hoping that some of you
    will decipher this puzzle for me.

    What is it in the Trump grievance, rage, and violence that is so much
    more appealing than the old macho?

    Here's the original essay.

    ---------------------------------------
    The Coward that is Donald Trump

    Guys,

    I�m writing to you as a fellow White guy. I�m getting older but I can
    still remember lacing up my cleats in football and trying hard�and unsuccessfully�to dunk in front of the home crowd in basketball. I had
    to try. I still have my hiking boots, though they are more like a
    memento than something I wear. I�m writing because I�m confused and need
    you to help me understand this Trump love of yours.

    When I played sports, we were taught not to find excuses when we lost or
    when we didn�t play our best. The idea was simple: I�ll do better next
    time. We were taught to respect our opponent, especially if they had
    played a good game. The way Red Sox and Celtic fans cheered for Jeter
    and Magic when they retired and how Yankee fans will cheer Big Papi next
    week.

    We respect quality and effort. We hate people who don�t give it their
    best. We love that Brady works his rear end off. We love the hustle
    guys, like Dustin Pedroia. We hate the guys who trot to first base or
    who give up on plays. We hate guys who focus on their individual
    statistics at the expense of winning for their team. We love team-first players because� because they represent us. At least, they represent the
    best in us, the people we want to be.

    We aren�t the naturals who make it to the big leagues. We have to
    hustle. We have to depend on our teammates. And we love our teammates.
    When we are playing, there is no closer bond. The closeness is visceral.
    Truth be told, that�s one of the only place we can express that closeness without being considered a little less than the men we want to be. At
    least that was true when many of us were growing up.

    We like guys who keep their own counsel and don�t have to be told all the
    time how great they are. What a drag those guys are, with their faces
    always in the TV camera, their insincere smiles begging for praise. And
    when the praise isn�t forthcoming, they do the work themselves. They
    boast and preen. They are braggarts because they are needy. They lack
    inner strength and faith in themselves.

    Most of all, I think we respect courage. The ability to take on
    something that�s hard, where we might fail, where we have to rise to the
    big moment. Watching guys like David Ortiz, bases loaded in the ninth
    inning in the World Series, we kind of know we wouldn�t rise the way he
    did. But we dream of it and we admire it. Guts. That�s what he has.
    That�s what the cops that we love following on TV have. Guys like Frank
    Reagan in Blue Bloods.
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    We respect Frank Reagan not because he would take a bullet for a friend,
    though he would, but because he�ll wrestle with morally complicated
    issues. Should he do the �right� thing or should he favor his son.
    Should he take the easy way out to please the public or risk public
    opprobrium to do what he most believes is right. He struggles, he stays
    awake at night, he consults. He does everything in his power to follow
    his ethical compass. He�s not a poll watcher. That takes courage and we admire him for it.

    We would like to knock bullies on their rear ends. We�ve all known them
    on the playground and at work. Too many colleagues and especially too
    many bosses are bullies. They pay us and they think it gives them the
    right to push us around, yell at us, belittle us. We know that, in
    different circumstances, we could show them a thing or two. We have
    heard like everyone else the line �the bigger they are, the harder they
    fall.� We�d like to help with the fall. We know that bullies are
    cowards. But when do we get to be in places where we can force them to
    show their true colors.

    We despise cheats. Look at those guys who hit hundreds of home runs with
    the help of performance enhancing drugs. Keep those guys out of the Hall
    of Fame. Right? Look at Spy Gate. When Belichick and the Patriots
    stole signals from other teams, it turned the whole country against them.
    Think about the basketball players who flop when you brush them with your pinkie. They get fouls and points that way. They are despicable.
    Right? They�re not our kind of guy.

    These are all forms of lying. Lying is not what men do. We face the
    music. We�d rather not cheat�that�s not what men do, either�but when we
    do and when we�re caught, we face up to it. We like guys who, when they
    are wrong or when they let us down, they say something simple like �my
    bad.� Then we�re done with it. Guys who can�t admit they�ve failed are cowards. They are weak.

    Weak is not losing. It�s losing without trying�for fear of losing. Weak
    is when we can�t admit our own limitations. Weak is when we can�t depend
    on others, just like point guards depend on big guys for rebounds and big
    guys need the guards to get them the ball in good position. I just read
    that Derrick Rose, once one of the premier talents in the National
    Basketball Association, said that his job was now to support Carmello
    Anthony. Rose had carried teams by himself until he began injuring his
    knees. He�s still good but not great anymore. He could demand to be
    treated as the top guy, he could let his ego rule, but he wants his team
    to win. If that means recognizing his limitations and changing his role,
    he�ll do it.

    I can�t speak for combat experience, but I can well imagine that guys who
    have been to war wouldn�t have much time for a person who only values
    himself and his own success, who lies and cheats and bullies, a buy who
    has no guts. This is what puzzles me the most. How could guys with
    these values connect with such a blowhard and a coward as Donald Trump.

    Imagine how people would react to Donald Trump if he were to say that he doesn�t know that much about public policy but he�ll try to learn and
    he�ll surely depend on others to help him.

    Imagine if Trump, upon being thumped by Clinton in the Debate, were to
    say that he lost fair and square and admires her abilities. He could
    even say that debating isn�t leadership but still admit she�s a better
    debater than he is.

    Imagine if Trump said that he exaggerates a great deal, probably because
    he�s afraid that the bare facts won�t pump him up enough.

    Imagine if he said he is, in fact, thin skinned, gets hurt pretty easily,
    and then gets angry when he feels attacked. He�s sensitive guy but he�s
    trying to stop that from ruling him.

    Imagine if Trump were to admit that he�s like lots of other people:
    biased against people of color because he doesn�t trust them. It�s hard,
    after all, to trust people he doesn�t know�really doesn�t know�and who
    look angry when he�s in the room.

    He�d be a different guy and some people might give him a second look.

    But there�s no chance that Donald Trump will fess up to the truth�because
    he is a coward. That�s what�s underneath. He lies, cheats, bullies,
    brags, and preens like an insecure little boy in search of a big blond
    mother to make him whole again. That won�t happen either. He won�t feel
    whole because he is looking outside, not inside, for the sources of his
    anxiety and fear and neediness. That makes him both pathetic and
    dangerous. Dangerous because he will do almost anything to try to
    reclaim his absent manhood.

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