May 12, 2017
What the Media Still Doesn’t Get about Plain-Talking Donald Trump

By Brian C. Joondeph
<http://www.americanthinker.com/author/brian_c_joondeph/>

Donald Trump’s success, as a candidate and now as President, continues to
confuse and befuddle the left. He was unfit as a candidate, a
knuckle-dragging troglodyte, mentally ill, uncouth, clownish and
inarticulate. Such a perception continues to this day, at least according
to the media, their Democratic Party compatriots and high-browed
#NeverTrump Republicans.

Two notables in the latter category include William Kristol and George
Will. Despite their self-described conservative status, then still have no
use for Donald Trump. In particular, they object to Trumps methods and
styles of communication, whether his Twitter account, press conferences,
interviews or speeches.

Bill Kristol, appearing on MSNBC, chastised
<http://www.mediaite.com/tv/kristol-trump-chooses-to-not-take-seriously-the-fact-hes-now-president/>
Trump, “He chooses not to take seriously the fact that he’s now President
of the United States.” He went on, “He thinks he can just do what he did as
a private citizen, as a guest on talk radio, even as a candidate.” Meaning
Trump shouldn’t speak his mind using plain language, rather than the
silver-tongued dribble typically served up by politicians.

George Will, now a commentator at MSNBC, the same network Bill Kristol
complained to, wrote
<https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/trump-has-a-dangerous-disability/2017/05/03/56ca6118-2f6b-11e7-9534-00e4656c22aa_story.html?utm_term=.c2e780f2de44>
in the *Washington Post* about Trump’s communication skills or lack of. “It
is urgent for Americans to think and speak clearly about President Trump’s
inability to do either,” he cleverly told his readers. He described this as
a “disability,” and in scholarly prose went further observing Trump’s
uncouthness as, “not merely the result of intellectual sloth but of an
untrained mind bereft of information and married to stratospheric
self-confidence.”

As a fellow writer, I admire George Will’s golden pen, his command of the
language and excellent writing skills. No surprise. His education from
Oxford and Princeton taught him well. As did Bill Kristol’s Harvard
pedigree. Similarly educated readers will appreciate Will and Kristol’s
intellect and colorful prose. Especially around the Beltway and in
Manhattan, where the *Washington Post* and *New York Times* are local
gospel.

What about in flyover country, those counties on the electoral map shining
bright red, far from big cities and coastal liberal enclaves? How does
George Will’s Ivy League communication skills play at the bowling alley in
Michigan, or the public golf course in Mississippi, or the corner bar in
Texas? I suppose few in flyover country know or care who George Will and
Bill Kristol are, much less read their op-eds in the *Washington Post*
or *Weekly
Standard*.

Instead their preferred method of communication includes short sentences,
clear ideas, saying what you mean and meaning what you say. “Build the
wall.” “Make America great again.” “Bomb the hell out of ISIS.”
Straightforward communication.

Compare and contrast with Trump’s primary candidates such as Jeb Bush who
spent a week trying to explain his brother’s invasion of Iraq, each day
with a different answer, each more confusing than the last.

Perhaps Bill and George would prefer another Ivy League-educated president
such as Barack Obama. Silver-tongued while reading the teleprompter,
but a stuttering
mess
<http://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2016/07/uh-uh-uh-obama-turns-stuttering-mess-talking-trump-north-carolina-video/>
when speaking off the cuff.  So articulate that he pronounced
<http://humanevents.com/2011/07/10/top-10-obama-gaffes/> corpsman as
corpse-man. Or his campaigning in 57 states.

Obama could sound scholarly when he wanted to, music to the ears of Bill
and George. But to many his answers were long-winded
<https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VX5DlWATSdE> and boring. Quickly tuned out
by listeners. Is that effective communication? If so, then for whose
benefit?

Ted Cruz, Trump’s closest competitor in the primaries, was extremely
articulate. A debate champion, he spoke like a pro. How did it serve him?
The smart set that despised Trump’s pedestrian talk, didn’t like Cruz’s
articulateness either. Fellow #NeverTrump travelers from the National
Review criticized
<http://www.nationalreview.com/article/428625/cruzs-slick-lawerly-words-amnesty>
Cruz as “a slick lawyer,” parsing his words. Huh? I thought sounding smart
was a virtue in a president?

The disconnect between George Will’s world and that of the voters is vast.
In his world of fellow journalists and deep thinkers within the Beltway,
Trump is a carnival barker, barely able to utter a coherent thought. But
not to his 65 million voters who heard him plainly and clearly,
understanding exactly what he was saying. No “intellectual sloth” from an
“untrained mind” as George Will thought. Instead a bond forged between
candidate and voters based on a clearly communicated message. Seems that
only the elites, those who only speak Ivy League, had trouble understanding
Trump.

Salena Zito said
<https://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2016/09/trump-makes-his-case-in-pittsburgh/501335/>
it best. “The press takes him (Trump) literally, but not seriously; his
supporters take him seriously, but not literally.”

Trump speaks like the guy next door, or the lady at the diner. Saying what
they mean and meaning what they say. Without high-browed rhetoric and
verbal flourish, leaving the listener scratching her head, wondering what
was actually said. Not the talk of Georgetown dinner parties or Upper West
Side cocktail parties, but the talk of real people, living in the real
world.

Rather than language, perhaps George Will is more upset over the fact that
Donald Trump is a political outsider, not part of the establishment club.
Someone not needing the approval or support of the donor class, the
establishment types that Bill and George pal around with. Trump is more
like the Al Czervik, the nouveau riche Rodney Dangerfield character in *Caddy
Shack*, a plain-spoken outsider far removed from the pomp and circumstance
of the pretentious local country club.

George Will and Bill Kristol may not want to listen to Trump. But tens of
millions of Americans would much rather listen to Trump rather than those
guys pontificating on MSNBC or the Sunday morning gab fests. Understanding
that reality may be the first step for the media in understanding Trump’s
election and continued popularity. Impugning those who hear President Trump
quite clearly further reinforces the irrelevancy of much of what passes for
journalism these days.

http://tinyurl.com/mwecw2d






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