It’s hard to forgive Republicans for ignoring the latest about Trump | Opinion

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Donald Trump’s longest serving chief of staff, Gen. John Kelly, has confirmed reports that the former president said, in Kelly’s words: “...those who defend their country in uniform, or are shot down or seriously wounded in combat, or spend years being tortured as POWs are ‘suckers’ because ‘there’s nothing in it for them.’” (Deep breath.)

Kelly’s words echo 2020 reports in The Atlantic that Trump said he didn’t want to visit the graves of American soldiers buried in the Aisne-Marne Cemetery near Paris. “Why should I go to that cemetery,” he reportedly asked, “it’s filled with losers.” On the same European trip, Trump said the 1,800 Marines killed in the Belleau Wood were “suckers.”

Almost beyond comprehension, he uttered similarly dreadful phrases to Gold Star father Kelly at Arlington National Cemetery on Memorial Day 2017, not far from Kelly’s son’s burial plot, saying, “I don’t get it, what was in it for them?”

Gene Nichol
Gene Nichol

The Atlantic also reported in a profile on Gen. Mark Milley that Trump protested seeing severely wounded Army Captain Luis Avila sing “God Bless America” at a welcome event for the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs. “Why do you bring people like that in here,” Trump berated, “no one wants to see that, the wounded.” This was before Trump said on Sept. 22 that the remarkable Milley had committed acts for which, “in times gone by, the punishment would have been DEATH!”

There is more, of course, including Trump’s famous statements about John McCain and George H.W. Bush. But I’ll stop before you vomit.

I listened to an interview about these outrages last week with Gold Star father Khizr Kahn. He asked, “What do we expect from someone who thinks that service can only be self-service?” Trump has “no concept of living and dying for others.” He knows “nothing of sacrifice.”

Kahn went further: “A person who has never sacrificed is incapable of love. Love of country. Love of purpose. Love of human beings. There is nothing but appetite and ego. He is incapable of leadership. Especially of being commander-in-chief.”

Kelly, who worked intensively at the former president’s side, day by day, month by month, concluded that Trump is “a person that has no idea what America stands for and no idea what America is about. (He) has nothing but contempt for our democratic institutions, our Constitution, and the rule of law.”

Our Republican leaders, in Washington and Raleigh, know that what Kelly and Kahn said is true. I’m guessing most Republican voters know it too, as they prepare to renominate him for president. That is, I’ll concede, hard to grasp. Or forgive.

Trump’s existential, narcissistic, violence-laced threat to the American democracy is, without conceivable doubt, the most important issue faced by this state and this nation. Each of us will be called to account for our actions, in this moment, to, in Richard Rorty’s words, “‘achieve our country.”

Trump’s crusade is no doubt congenial to Proud Boys and White supremacists. But are money Republicans willing to trade all, to surrender everything, for a few thousand, or even a few million dollars? Are evangelical Tar Heels so committed to imposing their religion on everyone else that they will, literally, abandon morality, decency, and the American promise? Are libertarian Republicans, after enjoying their web of subsidies, willing to fly under this vile banner to supposedly assure they are left alone? Are each content that an ensuing totalitarian government will protect their money, their denominations, their estates, and their (already surrendered) dignities? They shouldn’t be.

Contributing columnist Gene Nichol is a professor of law at the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill.