“I can’t believe you actually called the White House,” said Lady.
“Not once but five times,” I told her. “The first two times I got volunteers who told me they were there taking messages for the president. But they were Republican-Lady-Nice—which is always a terrible thing…”
“Republican-Lady-Nice?”
“They are insufferably cheerful and friendly. They refuse to be taunted or tempted into losing their temper. The angrier we get, the harder they smile. Awful people, the Nice Lady Republicans.”
“So it seems,” said Lady. “Anyway, weren’t the ladies at the White House?”
“It took me a while to figure out the scam,” I told Lady. “Google has this bogus number…here, look.”
“That 456-1111 number?” I told her. “That’s the terrible Nice-Lady Republican line. They both refused to tell me where they were located, whom they reported to, and how, precisely, my comments would make it to the orange ear that thirsted for the comments of Marc Newhouse. Undoubtedly, Trump sits at the Resolute Desk each morning…”
“So then what,” said Lady, who knows that it’s always a better thing with me, somehow, to move on.
“So then I demanded to talk to the White House switchboard, since I am an American taxpayer calling my elected president … and getting farmed out to a nice lady in Kansas is frankly a lack of respect. The nice lady rattled that number right off and then said she did SO hope that I would have a good day, and I was just as treacly and wished her—gosh!—just the NICEST afternoon possible. So we flashed daggerous (“knife-ish? Stilettoed?” what would make you happy, computer?) smiles at each other through the telephone lines. Then I called the White House, since I had wasted a good twenty minutes with the Nice Republican Ladies.
“Why were you calling, again?” asked Lady.
It’s not her fault. The last two months have brought an assault on political norms, foreign policy, and the entire government itself. Planes are falling from the sky, or colliding with each other. The entire intelligence community took part in a group chat on an unsecured server, and had a high old time planning the bombing of the Houthis in Yemen. Everybody from the Vice President, the directors of the FBI / CIA / NSA and cabinet members like Department of Defense Pete Hegseth and the Commerce Secretary are yukking it up, like frat boys on Spring Break. The boys shared flight plans, targets, and the sequence of the attack. Indeed, the attack was a great success, as Jeff Goldberg could tell you. He had inadvertently been invited to the chat a week prior to the event, but had dismissed it as a prank, or perhaps a disinformation attempt. Goldberg is the editor-in-chief of the Atlantic, savvy, used to…well, things running as they should. He showed the thread around the office, and everybody thought it was a hoax. And then he sat in a Safeway parking lot and heard news of the bombing unfolding in Yemen. And that’s when he realized that the text thread was indeed real.
But that’s hardly the only four alarm fire, since Trump has pissed off Canada to the extent that they are increasing security at the border. That is crazy, of course. But so is Trump, and isn’t that the point? The United States elected a guy who believed that Haitians were eating dogs and cats in a town in Ohio. Of course it’s crazy that we would invade Canada, but so is taking back the Panama Canal. So is building a five-star luxury resort in Gaza. So is taking over Greenland.
It's like a relapse, or living with someone who has relapsed. Because just as the drunk forgets how bad it was, the people around him or her forget as well. And Naomi Klein got it right when she wrote The Shock Doctrine: the point is to stun us completely, so that we become numb to it all. Of course, every day has six earth-stopping stories. In any other administration, the idea that we are going to “take back” the canal from Panama, or that Canadians might be amassing at the border would be insane.
So Lady is completely right, though her question might better have been…what now?
“Here’s what he’s done,” I told Lady. No need to specify who “he” was, nor did she ask.
“Over two hundred Venezuelans get picked up on a Saturday, the 15th of March. They were shackled and got herded into a military jet. The plane took off, but not before the ACLU got wind of what was happening. So they went up in front of Judge Boasberg, who is old and white and male, so of course I love him.”
“Well, isn’t Trump…?”
I rise above this statement.
“So Boasberg, the judge, tells the attorney for the government not to deport anyone until a hearing is held. Don’t let any more planes take off, and turn around any planes that are in the air. There were planes in the air, apparently, but the government said fuck you to the judge. And if the government didn’t, the president of El Salvador did. He posted the New York Post headline about the judge blocking the deportation with the comment ‘oopsie…too late’”
I didn’t tell her the worst of it, because we didn’t know the worst of it. I knew that there were three or four women being detained: there were, in fact, eight. The prison, whose only advantage is that it’s new, doesn’t hold women. (The men are “housed” 80-100 deep in cells with shelves but no mattresses, pillows, or private toilets and sinks.) So the plane with the deportees (that should have turned around, according to the judge’s orders) landed, and then a group of government officials went around with a waiver form, ordering people to admit they were part of Tren de Arangua, and ceding their right to a hearing. The plane turned around and took the eight women back to the US. According to them, they never got off the plane in El Salvador.
Nor was it just the eight women—there was a man from Nicaragua who ended up with the deportees, but the El Salvador government refused to take him, stating that it would create conflict with a neighboring Central American government.
“Boasberg better not catch wind of it,” I say to Lady. “He might ask—something tells me he might—how it is that they can get the eight ladies and the Nicaraguan back to the US, but not the 200-plus Venezuelans?”
So that was Monday, of last week. I spent 40 minutes waiting for the operator finally to take my call—“Thank you for calling the White House Comment Line. Your call is very important to us. Please hold on the line, and the next available operator will be with you in turn. You are caller number … twenty-nine.”
Finally I got a human voice, and what did I do? Did I thank him for speaking to me? Did I tell him that he must have been having a hell of a Monday, dealing with people like me?
Of course not.
I demanded to speak with the president.
“What!!” said Lady. She had gone away for a bit, but always knows to return when the going gets absurd.
Several hours had passed, and the pain of the refusal was diminishing.
“Of course,” I told her. “Nor is it so completely improbable—apparently the whole presidency is even more ‘flying-by-the-seat-of-our-pants’ than the first one. But Trump didn’t pick up, and I had somehow managed to piss off the operator. He hung up on me.”
“The White House hung up on you?”
“Hard to believe, isn’t it? Anyway, that pissed me off, so I called back and demanded to speak to the Chief of Staff.”
“And?”
“The operator told me that—listen carefully here—‘HE’S not available.’”
I have my phone out, and show her my favorite picture of the president and his chief of staff.
“Susie Wiles,” I tell Lady. “Very much a woman, and with quite an expressive face. Perhaps a bit too much, for this administration. Anyway, I’m busy. I have to do something about Suetonius, who decided to unburden himself only halfway to my Booklet Creator. We have the beginning and the end, but we’re missing the middle of Suetonius.”
“A grave problem,” said Lady, with only partial seriousness.
We decide to look on the bright side, and the news from Russia is great. You can see it below, but let me only say, that Putin is quite a guy. Obama, on his first meeting, walked away feeling up-beat, though he later came to say this.
Putin did, in fact, remind me of the sorts of men who had once run the Chicago machine or Tammany Hall [a New York City political organisation] - tough, street-smart, unsentimental characters who knew what they knew, who never moved outside their narrow experiences, and who viewed patronage, bribery, shakedowns, fraud, and occasional violence as legitimate tools of the trade.
Not just Obama, of course. There was George W. Bush, who said that he had looked into Putin’s eyes and had seen his … soul.
“You snorted that day,” Lady said.
“I did not,” I told her. “Anyway, the only soul he saw in there was the soul of a KGB officer.”
Fortunately, these divisive days are behind us. Trump sent a “special envoy,” Steve Witkoff, over to Russia, and surprise! He was warmly received by Putin, and the envoy—a guy who seems to have no qualifications for the job, though he does know real estate—was initially apprehensive. No worries, though, since they got along like a house on fire. “I like him,” said Witkoff, “he’s a great guy.”
He is, isn’t he?
He told the special envoy that he had heard the news of Trump’s shooting at a campaign event in Butler, Pennsylvania last year. Deeply worried for the well-being of his friend, Putin went off to pray for Trump at his local church. Handily, someone was there to record the event, and take a photo of Putin lighting a candle at the altar for his friend.
We know this, because we have just spent four minutes and some seconds watching Witkoff explain all of this to Tucker Carlson, who cost Fox News 787 million bucks for lying about voting machines. Then he cost the company another 12 million to settle claims of sexual harassment on the work place. Now he has his own streaming company, which allows him to give free reign to Witkoff, who told the rest of the story.
Putin hadn’t just gone to church, apparently. Putin had gone to an artist—“the best artist in the country,” said Witkoff—and had commissioned a work to be sent to Trump.
An important work.
A work that would touch the very soul of President Trump.
A portrait!
A portrait of Trump himself!
Both Trump and Witkoff agree—how foolish it is, to be on bad terms with a guy who has the nuclear codes to the second biggest arsenal in the world! How much safer we feel, having two strong leaders who can talk to each other! The interview is below, and watch it—please. And then you might watch Trump in that famous Oval Office meeting—the meeting that started out by Trump greeting Zelensky as he stepped from the car with the words, “Oh, I see you got dressed up today.”
Zelensky was wearing his modified military uniform, as had a guy called Winston Churchill half a century before.
“It’s too much,” I tell Lady. “Did we have to make it that easy? Khrushchev said “we will take you without firing a single shot,’ in 1956, the year I was born. And they did it, in 2016, when Trump became president. It took them 60 years, but the Russians have time. They can wait.”
“Way too easy,” I am telling Lady. “who knew how easy it was, to end that little experiment with Democracy we’ve been doing these last 250 years. Light a candle and paint a portrait. In fact, we should all do the same! We should all get up every morning and head to the easel, not the office. Everyone in America should be made to get up and produce a portrait of the dear leader every day. Then we could all mail them in, and Trump could lay them all out on the Resolute Desk, or even on the Oval Office floor. That would keep him busy, while Musk cuts most of the government and Vance destroys what’s left. God, we really did make it easy for them….”
I’m shaking my head and muttering, now, and quite by myself. It happens that way—Lady has found a friend and is listening to her recite a poem. Nico is talking to his sister in Strasbourg. Even the rabbit who’s waiting for the coast to get clear before going home—well, the rabbit is sleeping.
Nobody is worrying about the fate of American democracy.
I’m going back to Suetonius.