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Thank Trump, or Youll Be Sorry
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Trump supporters watch as the motorcade of President Trump passes by in West Palm Beach, Fla., on Sunday.CreditKevin Lamarque/Reuters
*Trump recently tweeted, The United States, under my administration, has done a great job of ridding the region of ISIS. Where is our Thank you, America? *Trump has often criticized Americans for not being grateful enough. Now he has chastised the whole world as a thankless lot of humanity a globe of ingrates. Mr. Trumps obsession with gratitude is a regular feature of his unscripted remarks and speeches. When people thank him, he likes them. But when slighted, he is quick to criticize unappreciative offenders. He has attacked Puerto Rican leaders as politically motivated ingrates; demanded public thanks from his cabinet and members of Congress; wants people to thank him for stock market gains; and excoriated a corporation as failing to thank him when he approved a project to its benefit.
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Gratitude is central to Mr. Trumps politics. He demands it of his followers, his cabinet and, indeed, of all citizens. He deploys gratitude against his enemies and critics to embarrass and shame. Being grateful is not an option. It is a requirement. Donald Trump has made thank you divisive.Yet gratitude has always been political. Sometimes it is used toward good political ends (such as public celebrations of thanksgiving). More often, however, authoritarian leaders have used gratitude to control critics and consolidate power.
The misuse of gratitude in politics goes back a long way ancient Rome mastered it. In that empire, structured as an economic and political pyramid, a few people at the top held most of the wealth and power. At the bottom, where most people barely survived, there was very little. What held this inherently unjust system together? There was, of course, a feared army. But there was also something else: a social structure based on a particular form of gratitude. The emperor Caesar the head of the Roman empire was believed to be lord and savior. He owned everything, the benefactor who distributed his gifts and favors (gratia in Latin) at will. Even if you were a slave with a single piece of bread to eat, that bread was considered a gift of the emperors.
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There is, however, an alternative to the pyramid of gratitude: a table. One of the enduring images of American self-understanding is that of a Thanksgiving table, where people celebrate abundance, serve one another and make sure all are fed. People give with no expectation of return, and joy replaces obligation.This vision of gratitude is truly virtuous, sustains the common good, ensures a circle of equality, and strengthens community. Instead of Mr. Trumps gratitude-as-duty politics, what our country needs is a new vision of an American table of thanks.
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/04/22/opinion/donald-trump-gratitude.html
Tommy_Carcetti
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