DCZards wrote:nate33 wrote:I've gotten used to it. Trump is gonna Trump.
He is trying to establish a condition where there is a wide gap between being on his "good side" and on his "bad side". When you're on his good side, he will praise you and help you out. When you're on his bad side, he will attack you mercilessly. His ultimate goal is to make people fear being on his bad side so that he can get things done by simple cajoling rather than legislation. It could be a useful advantage in international negotiations and in negotiating with CEO's. It appears to be working so far with the automobile companies:
Petulance like that displayed by Trump may at times seem to be a winning approach but at the end of the day it's destined to be a failed strategy. The kind of divide and conquer you seem to applaud and accept is never a good thing for a country and its people.
I see it the other way around. I think it looks childish now, but will end up being a winning approach. It's what Trump has done throughout his career and it's why he has been a successful businessman in a highly competitive and mature business that does not rely on luck or first-mover monopoly power (like Google, Microsoft or Amazon).
The Trump detractors continue to think Trump is bumbling fool, a "petulant child" who just somehow lucked his way into the presidency. Trump has been successful for 50 years. He was successful as a businessman; he was successful as a TV star; he was successful in taking over and reinventing the Republican party; he was successful in taking on a discrediting the media; and he was successful in defeating the Democrat machine against all odds. Maybe, just maybe, he's not a bumbling idiot, and he actually knows what he is doing.