Before actually addressing the nation, Comrade President Trump called in to Fox & Friends to chat about the raid that captured/kidnapped Venezuelan president Maduro. He said this:
“I mean, I watched it literally l like I was watching a television show. If you would’ve seen the speed, the violence — it was an amazing thing.”
Like I was watching a television show. There it is. Trump and his Cabinet of Yahoo Nazgûl suffer from cinematic epistemology. Their understanding of how the world works–and more importantly, how military operations work–is based on action movies. The good guys (and, again, this is TrumpCo’s definition of ‘good guys’) swoop in quickly, there are explosions and gunfire, a few secondary characters get shot (and maybe die heroically), the bad guys are killed or captured, the good guys manage to barely escape. Once back at their base, the exhausted heroes laugh and joke and maybe weep manly tears for their lost/wounded comrades, but are nevertheless proud to have served their nation. Then the credits roll.
They don’t give much thought to what happens after the credits roll. That shit’s boring. If the film is profitable and draws an appreciative audience, they may consider a sequel. Maybe in a new setting. But basically, once the music starts and the lights go up, the movie’s over. Somebody will clean up and put stuff in order, doesn’t much matter who.
Did some Venezuelans die during this raid? Nobody’s bothered to discuss that. They’re just background actors. Non-player characters. Who cares about NPCs?

Don’t get me wrong, Maduro IS a bad guy. A very bad guy. He’s a dictator; he’s banned opposition parties, he stole Venezuela’s last election, he’d blatantly corrupt, he’s encouraged corruption among his administration and military leaders. He’s approved of torture and murder. He’s made deals with drug dealers. He’s…well, he’s a lot like Trump his ownself.
But Maduro really isn’t the issue. At least not for those of us in the US. The issue for us is that we have a corrupt, delusional president, a Cabinet that caters to his corruption and delusions, a Congress that refuses to challenge him, and a Supreme Court that shrugs off most of his depredations.
We’re not in a goddamn movie. We need leaders who understand that. We desperately need leaders who’ll at least try to hold Trump and his enablers accountable.
Editorial Note: The illustration is an 1883 wood engraving by Albert Robida for his book entitled “Le vingtième siècle” (The Twentieth Century). The original caption is “Les correspondants à la guerre” (The war correspondents).
My jaw is almost on the floor about this. It’s so blatantly obvious it’s a major power grab and asset stripping exercise. He’s delivered a moronic speech to the world and the drunk next to him is undoubtedly getting off on it all. My god. America used to be aspirational.
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We’ve become a banana republic. And not a very good one.
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It’s just unbelievable.
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Brother, I WISH it was unbelievable.
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I just got done reading a book about Tim Hetherington, the British photojournalist and filmmaker who was killed in Libya in 2011. In the book, the noted that the U.S. soldiers appeared to be “acting like they were in a movie” because that’s how many of them came to know what war was like – soldiers in movies. It’s all play acting. Except to those 40 people, some civilians, killed in the raid on Maduro. Another “war” the clown will say he ended. Even though he started it.
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I accused TrumpCo of suffering from cinematic epistemology. but the truth is ALL of us suffer from it to some degree. Epistemology is just the study of how we know what we know, and a great deal of what we ‘know’ comes from visual media. We ‘know’ how forensic science works from watching CSI; we ‘know’ how medicine works from watching doctor shows; we ‘know’ how soldiers behave from watching war movies; we ‘know’ what private detectives do from watching television.
We all suffer from cinematic epistemology to some degree. The difference is we’re not setting policy or running the government. We expect the people in charge to actually KNOW how things work, not just how they work in movies.
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Oh, and Tim Hetherington…he was the real thing. There’s a relatively small cadre of photographers who do the really hard, unappreciated work of conflict and disaster photography. We almost never learn their names.
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All great points.
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