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A Tale Told By an Idiot
Shakespeare gave us the phrase for nights like this one: A tale told by an idiot, full of sound and fury, signifying nothing.
Thursday night, in a primetime address he demanded the networks carry (but most didn’t anyway), the President of the United States told his tired tale again. He shared not one fact that survives contact with his own government’s prior findings. Not one policy that would make a single American’s vote safer. Only sound. Only fury. Only the seed of doubt he needed to plant before November.
Here is the shape of it, stripped of the theater. States that refuse to hand their voter rolls to Washington must be hiding something. There is no third option in Trump’s arithmetic. Comply, or be suspected. Surrender the data, or be treated as an accomplice to fraud nobody can find. This is not an argument. It is a trap built to have only one honest-looking exit, and the exit leads to federal control of a process the Constitution left to the states on purpose.
The Justice Department has already tested this trap in court, fifteen separate times, against fifteen separate states, seeking the unredacted rolls Trump wants. It lost all fifteen. Zero and fifteen is not a record of a government uncovering hidden fraud. It is the record of a government that went looking for a crime and found nothing but judges willing to say so. A man with an average IQ notices the pattern. Trump’s supporters are being asked not to.
Having no domestic villain that would hold up, Trump reached for a foreign one. He told the country that China had stolen two hundred and twenty million voter files, an “unprecedented election security nightmare,” his words, and that Beijing had worked for years to sabotage his first term and the 2018 midterms his party lost. It is a serious charge. It is also one his own declassified intelligence does not support. American agencies concluded, in a report his administration itself released years ago, that China considered meddling in the 2020 election and chose not to, for fear of damaging relations with Washington. The President did not update the country on new intelligence Thursday night. He asked the country to forget the intelligence it already had.
This is the method, laid bare. Manufacture a threat large enough to justify the remedy he already wanted. The remedy is not better cybersecurity. The remedy is a national voter file, built and held by the very administration that just spent a year trying to pry rolls out of states that said no.
Behind the speech sits a bill, ten billion dollars in incentives for states that adopt the citizenship checks and identification rules Trump favors, written to move through reconciliation so it can skip the Senate votes it could never win on the merits. Behind the bill sits a threat: comply, or lose federal disaster funding, FEMA money, held hostage to a state’s willingness to hand over its voter rolls. That is not election security. That is a protection racket run from the Oval Office, and Thursday night was the sales pitch.
There have been dishonest presidents. There have been vain ones, cruel ones, corrupt ones. None of them built an entire governing identity on convincing free people that their own votes cannot be trusted, that their own neighbors administering their own elections are suspects, that the machinery of self-government is itself the enemy. Trump has. Call it what it is: a man who campaigns against the freedom of the people who elected him is not a patriot with rough edges. He is the thing the founders wrote the whole Constitution to guard against, standing at a podium, in prime time, asking for the keys to the whole goddamn kingdom.
If you watched Thursday night and believed him, I owe you an honest word instead of a kind one. I feel pity for you, and I feel fury at you, and both come from the same place. Not malice. Not cruelty. Stupidity, plain and monumental, the kind that mistakes a magic trick for a miracle because the man performing it is loud and looks certain.
Trump is not certain. He is an empty suit. He told you a tale full of sound and fury, and if you believed it, it did actually signify something:
The idiot is you.