With Trump still considering a military strike against North Korea, America is standing in the path of a devastating avalanche.
“They
will be met with fire, fury and frankly the power the likes of which
the world has never seen.” That was President Trump’s response on August 8th to learning that North Korea has successfully miniaturized nuclear warheads
that can fit into missiles, a move making the isolationist country the
latest, and certainly one of the scariest, additions to the handful of nations now possessing nuclear weapons technology.
As
a sociologist who has studied international politics, however, I think
the world has a lot more to worry about from Donald Trump than it does
from Kim Jong-un and North Korea.
Last August, prior to the 2016 election, a group of 50 GOP national security experts published a letter in the “New York Times” warning about Donald Trump. Despite Trump’s fanciful claims
of being “modern day presidential,” the security experts warned that
Trump “continues to display an alarming ignorance of basic facts of
contemporary international politics.” Trump, they agreed, “would be a
dangerous President and would put at risk our country’s national
security and well-being.”
In
the days since then, Trump has shown no interest in change or assuaging
those fears. Instead, in the days shortly following the election, Trump
warmed up to Vladimir Putin after he committed an act of war against America by interfering in the 2016 election. He has lashed out at our allies and upset fragile international relations. And, much as he did at his campaign rallies, Trump has incited violence and attacked former rivals and those in the media who would hold him accountable.
It’s little wonder that Trump moved the Doomsday Clock closer to midnight or that a team of 35 psychiatrists at a Yale conference said that Trump has a “dangerous mental illness” and is unfit to lead our country. It’s also no wonder why, after Trump’s defense of neo-Nazi terrorists in Charlottesville, Senator Bob Corker said
this past week that Trump “has not yet been able to demonstrate the
stability nor some of the competence that he needs to demonstrate in
order to be successful.” A bigot and rampant liar who can’t control himself on Twitter has no business leading America. In my mind, Trump’s belief in “alternative facts” combined with his unwillingness to learn or to take responsibility for his actions make him a graver threat than North Korea.
And the threat Trump poses appears to be growing. Far-from relying on careful diplomatic pressures to rein in North Korea, the Trump administration is said to be planning to spend $1 trillion over the next 30 years on ramping up America’s nuclear stockpile. As of September, 2015, the United States had over 4,500 warheads in its nuclear stockpile, a number which the Arms Control Association estimates to be closer to 6,800 – a number far greater than the 10 to 30 warheads estimated to be in North Korea. That suggests that Donald Trump–an authoritarian liar who incites violence, refuses responsibility, and has his eyes on a new nuclear arms race has over 100 times the destructive power in his hands than does Kim Jong-un and therefore poses over 100 times the threat.
And the threat Trump poses appears to be growing. Far-from relying on careful diplomatic pressures to rein in North Korea, the Trump administration is said to be planning to spend $1 trillion over the next 30 years on ramping up America’s nuclear stockpile. As of September, 2015, the United States had over 4,500 warheads in its nuclear stockpile, a number which the Arms Control Association estimates to be closer to 6,800 – a number far greater than the 10 to 30 warheads estimated to be in North Korea. That suggests that Donald Trump–an authoritarian liar who incites violence, refuses responsibility, and has his eyes on a new nuclear arms race has over 100 times the destructive power in his hands than does Kim Jong-un and therefore poses over 100 times the threat.
I’ve
spent years studying domestic and international politics. Along the
way, I’ve come to appreciate the sensitivity, grace, and tact required
of our world’s leaders. With Donald Trump, I see none of the qualities
needed of the “leader of the free world.” Instead, as psychiatrists and
national security experts before me, I see a man who is as much a danger
to America as he is to the world.
It’s hard to accept what’s happening in America today. It’s far easier to escape into a cloud of denial,
to write-off criticisms of President Trump as the delusions of
unpatriotic, liberal snowflakes. But with Trump still considering a military strike against North Korea,
America is standing in the path of a devastating avalanche. Trump is
that avalanche, and he threatens to destroy all in his path – Democrat,
Republican, and Independent alike – if we can’t set aside our party
differences to steer our nation back on course.
_____
DaShanne Stokes, Ph.D. is a sociologist, political scholar, and pundit. Follow him on Twitter @DaShanneStokes .
An earlier version of this article originally appeared on Patriot Not Partisan.
Originally published on http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/trump-is-a-danger-to-america-and-the-world_us_5996e9eee4b02eb2fda31f09?section=us_us-news
Originally published on http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/trump-is-a-danger-to-america-and-the-world_us_5996e9eee4b02eb2fda31f09?section=us_us-news
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