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LETTER – Rothenburger afflicted with Trump Derangement Syndrome

(Image: Official White House photo by Joyce N. Boghosian)

Re: EDITORIAL – The man who thinks he’s a god is our biggest worry for 2024

Mel Rothenburger’s Jan. 17 column states that if Donald Trump gets elected in 2024, it will be the worst of all our worries for the future.

This sort of nonsense is becoming typical of sensationalistic journalism, where every global event is shocking, catastrophic, extreme, and a crisis. And since both sides of the political spectrum promote use of these terms, it does nothing but divide the electorate further into two distinct factions. The right are church-going Nazis led by Hitler, and the left are socialists led by dictators following Marxist monolithic philosophy. A critical observer will conclude that neither of these is true.

Mel seems to have become afflicted with TDS (Trump Derangement Syndrome). TDS is a spreading virus resulting from overly sensationalized media coverage. Non-critical thinkers absorb this extreme journalism as if it is truth, and political parties use this to their advantage. Society responds more strongly to fear than other emotions, so what better way to swing votes than by inducing fear. Both sides state “it will be the end of democracy if (insert leader here) gets elected.” How ridiculous.

There is one particular theme that is forming that is of utmost concern. That is, if you lean to the left of the political spectrum, you cannot “believe” that anyone would vote for the representative on the right. No matter who that representative is, they will be viewed by the left as unworthy of leading the nation.

In essence, the left perceives half of the population of society as unbelievable idiots. Trump does serve himself up to the media for ridicule by his laughable statements; however, many voters seem able see beyond the frivolous social media posts to what positives he might be able to offer. And many prefer him as the option. Who are we to hold them in contempt for that decision? This is how democracy works.

I understand that there is some merit in having Mel’s points of view placed into the media in order to be thought provoking. But his views are perhaps overly subjective in their opinion, and the fear is that readers will view his opinion as facts. And without an opposing opinion voiced alongside, there is no alternative position.

Where is the opinion piece that provides evidence that Trump will actually do more good for America than the Democrat alternative? In general, all the media outlets echo what Mel wrote in his anti-Trump opinions — yet half of America would vote for him. Where is the opinion piece that reflects their views?

Where is the article that summarizes why the Trucker Convoy was well-founded in its effort to protect Canadian freedoms from forced measures imposed by the Trudeau government? Why, when the highest court in Canada concludes that imposing the War Measures Act was overly heavy-handed, would an experienced columnist continue to imply that the truckers were so out of hand that the army had to be brought in?

It has been shown that everything that Mel summarizes as bad behavior by the truckers was done by a few individuals, with the main body of the protest either cleaning up messes or, in the case of swastika flags, removing bad people from the protest.

If one is to use Mel’s generalizations of what a bad protest looks like, then War Measures should be used in all protests, since all protests will make some people uncomfortable, and they will contain a number of individuals who are just there to do bad things.

The level of tolerance just depends whether or not you agree with the focus of the protest. In the case of the truckers, many would say that they were correct in protesting how the Trudeau government was heavy-handed in imposing restrictions that made it difficult to freely make a living. And more would say that, from what is now known about the virus, those restrictions did nothing to reduce the pandemic.

PERRY GRUNENBERG

Mel Rothenburger's avatar
About Mel Rothenburger (11671 Articles)
ArmchairMayor.ca is a forum about Kamloops and the world. It has more than one million views. Mel Rothenburger is the former Editor of The Daily News in Kamloops, B.C. (retiring in 2012), and past mayor of Kamloops (1999-2005). At ArmchairMayor.ca he is the publisher, editor, news editor, city editor, reporter, webmaster, and just about anything else you can think of. He is grateful for the contributions of several local columnists. This blog doesn't require a subscription but gratefully accepts donations to help defray costs.

6 Comments on LETTER – Rothenburger afflicted with Trump Derangement Syndrome

  1. Unknown's avatar Armchair Defense Force // January 27, 2024 at 3:58 PM // Reply

    If the best the free world can offer is a man with one foot in the grave and is prone to falling asleep vs one who is a convicted sexual assaulter and has the disposition of an angry toddler, we deserve the leaders we get.

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  2. Mr. Grunenberg:

    There are people who certainly think critically and reasonably objectively that can understand that what Trump says and does is unacceptable for any politician.

    He still does not accept the results of the election after numerous courts concluded there was no widespread election fraud.

    He does not accept the outcome or authority of any court ruling that is not in his favour.

    He bullies, harasses, and defames people incessantly.

    This is a conclusion I reach from my own observations of his behaviours in court, and broadcast publicly at rallies and reported as direct quotes. I need no further reporting or analysis by media to draw these conclusions. I’m not on the left, nor the right and I can think critically.

    My conclusion is that Trump is a despicable human who cares not for rule of law, nor for any person who disagrees with him. His behaviour is indicative of authoritarianism and is unacceptable for a politician or anyone in a leadership position.

    What positives could this person possibly offer to society?

    I also observe that many of your opinions lack the required evidence to back up your claims. For example, you use: “It has been shown” and “Many would say” but you have not provided sources for your claims.

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    • Yes, Trump has all of those despicable traits, which may make him perfect as a US president, since the US itself “does not accept the outcome or authority” of any UN vote “that is not in its favour,” and “bullies, harasses, and defames” other nations it doesn’t like or that won’t hand its resources over to US interests. His ethos seems to be an accurate reflection of “the ugly American” and maybe that’s why he’s so popular with half the voters there.

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  3. I would agree to a degree that the Trudeau government was heavy-handed in imposing restrictions that made it difficult to freely make a living.
    And sure enough what is now known about the virus, those restrictions did nothing to reduce the pandemic. However we can’t live in the future without first living in the now. Same say the government did what seemed the right thing to do at the time.
    Also it seems to me that an opinion piece in its very nature is not necessarily about providing “evidence”. A scientific piece is the place for that.
    In conclusion, Mr. PG provided an op-piece contrarian to what Mr. MR wrote. And both made it into the public realm.
    It can’t get better than that.

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    • Well, yes it can get better. Anyone wanting an opinion to be accepted should provide evidence for assertions, especially fact based assertions. His opinion lacks credibility as a result.

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  4. Read and considered.

    Two points:

    – Specific to the convoy in question. There is a huge population of people in Ottawa that had to live, work and sleep in earshot of it (including my daughter who lost sleep to the noise and was actually afraid to go out alone) that were quite happy that it was brought to an end, as the action of the convoy clearly, clearly infringed on their own constitutional rights.

    Regardless of the legal points that had the judge decide the case as he did (which he probably did correctly, given the law he was trying to adjudicate), the local reality was that it needed to end, and existing Canadian law left no way to do what had to be done.

    Perhaps that is the question to be focused on moving forward.

    – And two – it was clearly labelled as an opinion column (an Editorial is by definition an opinion), so ya … Mel’s views ARE ‘overly subjective in their opinion’. Any fear that readers will ‘view his opinion as facts’ is an interesting viewpoint. Anyone who falls into that, has possibly been programmed by todays TV news network partisanship rhetorical form of ‘news’ which now means opinion without labelling as news nee; Fox News. Such is part of the problem of the political right, a lack of seeing the truth of what is fact and what is opinion.

    Viewers or readers who can not see thru the forest to differentiate simple factual news from an opinion piece, must bear that responsibility. Thats not Mels problem, as long as it is clear that the published piece is actually an opinion … or an editorial. He cant be responsible for every readers interpretation of what an opinion is … and what news is.

    He also isnt responsible to put forth the opinion of the opposing argument … why is that his problem? They can write their own piece, as you have.

    Which included your ‘Trump Derangement Syndrome’, which is also an opinion, even if you think it is, or want it to be … a fact.

    Thankfully, you dont argue that Mel should therefore stay quiet, as other commenters have done. You do believe in discourse and democracy … which is why Im engaging here. I appreciate that.

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