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Let There Be War – The Dispatch

So I wrote my Los Angeles Times column this week on how I think this will all end badly. You might ask, “What is ‘this’ referring to?” (I know my editors—who are constantly asking me to replace pronouns with actual names, objects, terms, etc.—would ask, if it wasn’t clear at this point I was going to tell you.) 

The “this” in the column was specifically referring to Trump’s push to send troops into California, and ultimately, other states. But, more generally, I think the concerted, multifront effort to assume war powers will end badly, too. If you look under the hood at the arguments that Trump, his administration, and his cheerleaders have been making in courts, executive orders, interviews, and speeches, the single most important through line is Trump’s desire to be a wartime president without a war. When he accuses political opponents of “treason,” as he invokes the Alien Enemies Act and similar laws, when he insists everything is a crisis and an emergency, the logical and psychological next step from that—not to mention the implicit and explicit legal and political arguments he and his defenders have been making—is that he should be an American Cincinnatus, or what some of his intellectual enablers have dubbed a “Red Caesar.”

On riots.

I’m going to go on a bit of a digression for a moment. 

I have gotten into some, mostly civil, disagreements with friends about how to interpret Trump’s activation of the National Guard and, now, the Marines to deal with the unrest in Los Angeles. I use the word unrest because the other terms ignite distracting arguments. If I call them riots, some will say, “They’re not riots!” or, “They weren’t riots until Trump’s escalation.” If I call them demonstrations or protests, others will angrily say, “They’re riots!” And then proceed to—rightly—point out that throwing rocks at cop cars, looting Apple stores, and setting Waymos on fire is not mere “protest.” So, I call it “unrest,” because I think both sides have a point. And unrest is sufficiently capacious to cover both legal protests and illegal violence.

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