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The Subtle Threat of Democrats’ Sophisticated Crudity
Editor’s note: This is a lightly edited transcript of today’s video from Daily Signal Senior Contributor Victor Davis Hanson. Subscribe to our YouTube channel to see more of his videos.
Hello, this is Victor Davis Hanson for The Daily Signal. It’s been a lot of attention to President Donald Trump’s rallies and his interactions with reporters, political reporters, impromptu press conferences. And the gist of it is that Donald Trump can say things that are cruel. It’s true. He can.
No need to call Rep. Jasmine Crockett a low-IQ person or a reporter dumb or stupid or fatty. And I would call that crass crudity. And it’s something that Trump does and probably should not do, and people have probably reminded him of that.
But there’s another type of crudity, I would call that crudity refined crudity. Crass crudity is openly overt, transparent, and condemned. But it’s also rhetorical. It doesn’t affect policies. It’s the ways one reacts to criticism in Trump’s case. But what is refined crudity? I wanna tell you, give you some examples, very different examples of what I would call refined crudity.
The University of Southern California School of Journalism, the Annenberg center, gives a prize for the top journalist in the nation. This year they gave them to Rachel Maddow and Jon Stewart. That’s refined crudity.
Rachel Maddow said almost every night that she was on the air, Russian collusion, Russian collusion, Russian collusion. And when that was exposed as a fraud, she went right into Russian disinformation, Russian disinformation, Russian disinformation.
Jon Stewart is not a journalist. He may be entertaining, he’s funny, but he blows up and screams and yells about the lockdown.
Does anybody really believe that these are even in the liberal tradition of Walter Cronkite, the eponymous prize for which it’s named, or Edwin R. Murrow? That’s crude.
How did Claudine Gay ever become president of Harvard? That’s the flagship university in the world. Who appointed her? Why would you appoint somebody that had a very thin academic record, almost was denied tenure at Stanford University, came to Harvard, had no notable publications, and the publications that she did were under suspicion, and she was a known plagiarist?
And then she got before the country in very refined tones and basically said that antisemitic acts, which were occurring with increasing frequency under her tenure, would be punished given the context she couldn’t identify.
Can I give you another example of refined crudity? Refined crudity is allowing some 60 to 70 Somali immigrants to embezzle $1 billion from the people of Minnesota, and then have the attorney general, Keith Ellison, who lectures everybody about racism say what’s the big deal, they buy stuff? As if it’s OK to steal money just because you buy consumer products for yourself. Luxury cars, vacations, send money back home.
Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz said in reaction to the—I want more Somali immigrants. Not, we have to look at this community and we have to make sure they’re following the law. And I’m worried that 75% of them are on state, local, or federal assistance.
That’s crude, what they did. That’s an insult to the people of Minnesota and to cloak it with this kind of enlightenment rhetoric or call people racist is even cruder.
Then we get into the lawfare. You know what is really crude? For people like Alvin Bragg and Letitia James and Fani Willis and Jack Smith and E. Jean Carroll to use this law to try to destroy a political candidate.
Doesn’t matter what Trump did, it doesn’t matter whether you like him or hate him, you can’t, in the United States, cook up 91 indictments and try to destroy a person with $500 million of aggregate funds and try them in blue precincts and hope to get juries that are prejudiced against him with judges that we know were biased. And this is in conjunction with raiding his home and going through his wife’s underwear drawer.
And yes, Jamie Dimon, they did debank the Trump family members. They really did. You can say it was just normal, but I think no one believes that.
And then this is in addition to sober and judicious and refined and sophisticated lawyers saying that Donald Trump should not be on the ballot in 25 states. The Supreme Court found that—that is refined crudity.
You know what else is a refined crude thing to do? If you’re Mark Milley and you’re chairman of the Joint Chiefs, it is to diagnose, as if you’re a psychiatrist, your commander in chief as unhinged, to call up your Chinese counterpart and warn him that if you were to get an order from your own commander in chief and you felt, you, Mark Milley, in your, I don’t know, expert opinion as a psychiatrist felt was unhinged, you would first call the Communist Chinese.
If you don’t think that is crude, how about calling in regional commanders and saying that I’m going to break the chain of command in my advisory role, and you’re not to do what the law says and report to the secretary of defense. If you get an order from him that’s transmitted from the commander in chief, you’re gonna go for me and I’m going to either approve it or reject it.
What is that? That’s almost a coup.
And finally, if you’re the chairman of the Joint Chiefs, and as you leave office, do you really want to keep saying again and again that your former president of the United States is a fascist? Had he said that just a few months earlier, when Donald Trump was president, he would’ve been subject to a court-martial under Article 88 of the Uniform Code of Military Justice.
And finally, you know what is crude? For six elected representatives and senators to tell a 1.3 million-person active-duty military that they, in their considered opinion, should question very carefully every order. There’s literally millions of orders that are issued a day. But these people were telling our active military—at great danger to their own careers because that’s a very, very rare phenomenon that anybody objects and refuses to obey an order and is found to be judicious and proved right in that decision, almost never occurs. If it were to occur too frequently, we wouldn’t have a military.
But to say all this under the guise of the Constitution and to have Mark Kelly get out and give these sober and judicious assessments of how lawful and proper all this is, when it was really a rank call for disruption in the military with one professed aim, and that was to attack Donald Trump.
And you know what was even cruder, to finish? When asked, can you please identify one order that Trump or his subordinates have given that you think would qualify anybody in the active military to refuse, what did the “Seditious Six” say? No, I can’t. In other words, it was a cheap political stunt cloaked with elevated and lofty rhetoric about the Constitution, but yet another example of refined crudity.
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