Matt Moloney via StockSnap
Matt Moloney via StockSnap Credit: Matt Moloney via StockSnap

There is some similarity between Putin and Trump. Putin wants to occupy part, if not all, of Ukraine, a country his military is trying to destroy. If he succeeds, he will rule over a virtual cemetery and take his place in the Hall of Infamy with other despots. If โ€œpride goes before destruction,โ€ delusional imperial ambitions precede a slaughter of innocents.

Trumpโ€™s sacrilegious claim to be the only person who can โ€œsave the nationโ€ in defense of โ€œfreedomโ€ would turn the dream of a unified America into a civil nightmare, since he means by โ€œfreedomโ€ the power to eliminate all who oppose his vision of America as an exclusive golf club for white nationalists, evangelicals, bona fide heterosexuals, para-militarists, antisemites, asylum seekers, new immigrants, and those who think of book-banning as a form of education.

His America would be incapable of functioning as a preeminent nation to which oppressed and persecuted people around the world still look with hope for โ€œsalvationโ€ and โ€œfreedomโ€ as defined by Lincoln, โ€œof, by, and for the people,โ€ not any one person or one group.

We can disagree about the meaning of key words, but Putin and Trump would eliminate those who donโ€™t worship at the altar of their demagogic slogans. They would replace oppositional diversity with the needs of their monomaniacal egos; and too many people, who feel threatened by the new constituencies of an evolving America, are willing to surrender their identities in exchange for the illusion of self-importance through an identification with these two Orwellian Big Brothers.

The former president needs to read more enlightening books instead of clinging to his โ€œbrilliant mindโ€ boxes as proof of his superiority.

Classified documents may be his security blanket, but his attachment to them puts the country at risk.

Howard R. Wolf

Amherst, New York