https://www.newsweek.com/trumps-childish-tactics-wont-fly-flynn-case-opinion-1504671
Heraclitus
famously said that a man's character is his fate. So too with a
presidency. A president's character is inextricably linked to his
administration's fate. And one of this president's most characteristic
personal failings has begun to manifest itself in his administration's
legal arguments.
I refer to President Donald Trump's pathological reliance on "I'm
rubber, you're glue" thinking—psychiatric professionals call it "projection"—to
deflect attacks against him back onto his critics. This president
accuses all his adversaries, real and imagined, of the very malignancies
of which he is guilty. He did it with the presidential debates, quickly
and childishly turning
Secretary Hillary Clinton's accusation that he was a puppet of Russian
President Vladimir Putin back onto her ("No puppet! No puppet! You're the puppet!"). He did it with race, accusing the four Democratic congresswomen who called out his racism of themselves being racist. And he did it with impeachment, railing for the impeachment of, among others, Speaker Nancy Pelosi, Chairman Adam Schiff and Senator Mitt Romney.
Trump and his apologists
are back at it again with Michael Flynn. They're offering the same "I'm
rubber, you're glue" reasoning, this time covered in the thin veneer of
legal argument. They accuse U.S. District Court Judge Emmet G.
Sullivan, who presided over the Flynn trial and is poised to sentence
Flynn for his federal crimes, of violating our constitutional separation
of powers, for doing no more than taking entirely lawful and
well-precedented steps to preserve the operations of the judicial
branch. But in the end, it is Trump and Attorney General William Barr
who are violating the separation of powers by taking lawless and
unprecedented steps to undermine the judicial process.
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