A Texas Panhandle political leader and I were having lunch today at an Amarillo restaurant.
We talked about a lot of things: loyal pets, the state of affairs in the county where he works, Amarillo City Hall turmoil related to the interim city manager. Then we talked briefly about the presidential campaign.
My good friend is as loyal a Republican as you’ll find.
I asked him, “Is your party going to nominate Donald Trump as its candidate for president of the United States?”
“It’s not the party” that’ll nominate Trump, if it comes pass, he said.
People are angry, he said. They want things done. Trump needs to do three things, my friend said: secure the border, bolster our military and get rid of Obamacare and send health insurance back to the states.
Fine. I said. Will he get it done?
My friend doesn’t know. But if he does, he said he’d vote for him for a second term as president — presuming, of course, that he gets elected this November. My friend didn’t vote for him in today’s Super Tuesday primary; he didn’t tell me who got his vote, and I didn’t ask him.
My pal believes the nation is on a course to “implode.” He wants something done. Now. Suffice to say I do not share his gloomy vision of the future. I chose not to engage him on that, as we both had to be other places.
As we walked out the door, my friend said, “I’ll tell you this much: Donald Trump doesn’t know what he doesn’t know.”
He meant that Trump has never worked in government. Never been exposed to its inertia, or lack thereof. He doesn’t know what he’s getting into if lightning strikes (that’s my description) and he gets elected.
That could be a curse or a blessing, depending on what you want, my friend indicated.
I came away from my meeting with my pal getting what he meant. My own sense is that Trump’s utter ignorance of government has made itself quite evident with every proclamation and brash promise he’s made.
I sincerely hope we don’t have to pay for his ignorance come next January … and I will hold on to the belief that we won’t.
So what you are saying is that Trump suffers from the Dunning-Kruger effect. If so, I agree. http://psych.colorado.edu/~vanboven/teaching/p7536_heurbias/p7536_readings/kruger_dunning.pdf