It's the Wise Men vs. the wise guys in Trump's America
By Jon Meacham, Walter Isaacson and Evan Thomas
Geography, Napoleon is reputed to have remarked, is destiny, and this axiom came to our minds this week as we watched two very different but neighboring universes collide before the House Intelligence Committee. The ramrod-straight William B. Taylor Jr. and the bow-tied George Kent, two diplomats from the largely WASP ethos of the post-World War II foreign policy establishment, one headquartered at places such as the Council on Foreign Relations imposing Harold Pratt House at 68th Street and Park Avenue, found themselves bearing noble witness amid an impeachment imbroglio that may be best understood by an appreciation of the wilder mores of midtown Manhattan.
Only a few blocks away from the portrait-lined walls and genteel cocktails of the Council lies the real center of gravity in the politics of 2019: the gilded Trump Tower, built on the fluid morals and cutthroat deal-making of New York real estate. The Tower sits cheek-by-jowl (the image is chosen purposely) with the Grand Havana Room, a cigar club frequented by Rudy Giuliani, atop a Fifth Avenue building owned by the family of Jared Kushner. Walk a bit farther south you dont even need a Town Car and you reach Rupert Murdochs News Corp., home of Fox News and the New York Post.
To Trump supporters, the testimony Wednesday was the deep state surfacing briefly from the depths of white papers, institutional knowledge and a facility with U.S. military and diplomatic history. (Kents evocation of von Steuben and Lafayette was straight out of a Ward Just novel.)
To Trumps critics and defenders of constitutional norms, the Republican narrative that the presidents threats to deny security assistance to Ukraine was just the kind of thing tough guys do (and, after getting caught, he didnt do it!), suggested that tabloid hyperbole, Fox News arcana and New York hardball had replaced the real world. From the Long Telegram to Twitter, and from Averell Harriman to Sean Hannity: To borrow a phrase of Henry Adams, himself a scion of presidents, the current moment disproves Darwin.
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https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/its-the-wise-men-vs-the-wise-guys-in-trumps-america/2019/11/14/277f1850-0708-11ea-ac12-3325d49eacaa_story.html?wpisrc=nl_opinions&wpmm=1