Everything Trump Touches Dies: A Republican Strategist Gets Real About the Worst President Ever
by Rick Wilson
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30-year Republican political campaign strategist, ad maker, columnist, and commentator Rick Wilson confronts the absurdity of American politics in the Age of Trump. Wilson mercilessly takes down Trump and exposes the damage Trump has done to the country, to the Republican Party Wilson served for decades, and to the conservative movement that has abandoned its principles for the worst President in American history. Wilson is no left-winger. He's a lifelong conservative who delivers his show more withering critique of Trump from the right. A leader of the Never Trump movement, he takes on his own party to warn them of the political catastrophe Trump has caused and concludes that everyone involved with Trump leaves with their reputation destroyed and their life in tatters. Wilson unblinkingly dismantles Trump's deceptions and the illusions to which his supporters cling. He sheds light on the causes of the Trump phenomenon and identifies the guilty parties who empower and enable Trump in Washington and the news media. He calls out the social conservatives who looked the other way, the race-war dead-enders who hitched a ride with Trump, and the alt-right basement dwellers who worship him. But he also offers an optimistic path forward for the GOP, the conservative movement, and the country. show lessTags
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No question that Wilson has a way with words, especially of the derogatory kind. But in between the quips, is a serious examination of how Trump has moved the traditional GOP completely off its conservative philosophy roots. He has little respect for the new GOP, a sycophantic oleaginous breed (to quote George Will) that thinks of nothing but collecting as much money for themselves and getting reelected.
They have apparently bought into the Trump way of doing business: borrow as much money as possible then stiff the contractors and workers, default on the loans, skim as much as possible, repeat infinitely. He thought he could do that in office. We have now learned from Rex Tillerson that the legality of a policy was irrelevant. Trump show more would just fire and replace with someone with fewer scruples. And then call the former names. Tillerson remarked about Trump, "It was challenging for me, coming from the disciplined, highly process-oriented Exxon Mobil Corporation, to go to work for a man who is pretty undisciplined, doesn't like to read, doesn't read briefing reports, doesn't like to get into the details of a lot things." Trump bragged about being a non-reader and being undisciplined.
Some of the more juicy quotes:
“Everything about Trump’s opening speech was moral poison to anyone who believed in any part of the American dream. Everything about his nationalist hucksterism smelled like … a knock on the door of authoritarian statism.”
The right is “merrily on board with a lunatic with delusions of godhood”.
“There’s an odds-on chance that our grandchildren will hear this tale while hunched over guttering fires in the ruins of a radioactive Mad Max-style hellscape.” One can only hope Wilson is not prescient.
“All the things evangelicals had said for generations that made a candidate anathema were suddenly just fine … Being a goddamned degenerate pussy-grabber with a lifetime of adultery, venality, and dishonesty is not, to my knowledge, one of the core tenets of the Christian faith … Trump has opened entirely new theological avenues … There is literally not one aspect of Trump’s behavior as a citizen, a husband, and as a man that shows the slightest scintilla of repentance for anything, ever.”
The tax bill was a masterwork of “gigantic government giveaways, unfunded spending, massive debt and deficits, and a catalogue of crony capitalist freebies”.
Trump's far-flung empire of bullshit makes the Teapot Dome scandal look like a warm-up act in the Corruption Olympics. Trump has surrounded himself with Wall Street alumni “who have behaved with weapons-grade venality … and Master of the Dick affects. They were there … only for the tax bill. Nothing else ever mattered to any of them.”
The Trump administration has been “a hotbed of remarkably obvious pay-to-play and crony capitalist game-playing. How obvious? Think 1970s Times Square hooker on the corner obvious … The degree to which this president has monetized the presidency for the direct benefit of himself, his soft-jawed offspring, and his far-flung empire of bullshit makes the Teapot Dome scandal look like a warm-up act in the Corruption Olympics.”
The presidency “hasn’t been an endless exercise in self-fellation, until now”.
Wilson is sure the reason why Trump is so reluctant to release his taxes is that it will reveal numerous instances of "loans" that were really income received from Russian oligarchs through shell companies with no expectation they woujld ever be paid back. Paul Manafort got in serious trouble for the same shenanigans. It has a name: tax fraud.
The question now (read just after the Capitol insurrection) is whether the thing that dies will be the GOP. show less
They have apparently bought into the Trump way of doing business: borrow as much money as possible then stiff the contractors and workers, default on the loans, skim as much as possible, repeat infinitely. He thought he could do that in office. We have now learned from Rex Tillerson that the legality of a policy was irrelevant. Trump show more would just fire and replace with someone with fewer scruples. And then call the former names. Tillerson remarked about Trump, "It was challenging for me, coming from the disciplined, highly process-oriented Exxon Mobil Corporation, to go to work for a man who is pretty undisciplined, doesn't like to read, doesn't read briefing reports, doesn't like to get into the details of a lot things." Trump bragged about being a non-reader and being undisciplined.
Some of the more juicy quotes:
“Everything about Trump’s opening speech was moral poison to anyone who believed in any part of the American dream. Everything about his nationalist hucksterism smelled like … a knock on the door of authoritarian statism.”
The right is “merrily on board with a lunatic with delusions of godhood”.
“There’s an odds-on chance that our grandchildren will hear this tale while hunched over guttering fires in the ruins of a radioactive Mad Max-style hellscape.” One can only hope Wilson is not prescient.
“All the things evangelicals had said for generations that made a candidate anathema were suddenly just fine … Being a goddamned degenerate pussy-grabber with a lifetime of adultery, venality, and dishonesty is not, to my knowledge, one of the core tenets of the Christian faith … Trump has opened entirely new theological avenues … There is literally not one aspect of Trump’s behavior as a citizen, a husband, and as a man that shows the slightest scintilla of repentance for anything, ever.”
The tax bill was a masterwork of “gigantic government giveaways, unfunded spending, massive debt and deficits, and a catalogue of crony capitalist freebies”.
Trump's far-flung empire of bullshit makes the Teapot Dome scandal look like a warm-up act in the Corruption Olympics. Trump has surrounded himself with Wall Street alumni “who have behaved with weapons-grade venality … and Master of the Dick affects. They were there … only for the tax bill. Nothing else ever mattered to any of them.”
The Trump administration has been “a hotbed of remarkably obvious pay-to-play and crony capitalist game-playing. How obvious? Think 1970s Times Square hooker on the corner obvious … The degree to which this president has monetized the presidency for the direct benefit of himself, his soft-jawed offspring, and his far-flung empire of bullshit makes the Teapot Dome scandal look like a warm-up act in the Corruption Olympics.”
The presidency “hasn’t been an endless exercise in self-fellation, until now”.
Wilson is sure the reason why Trump is so reluctant to release his taxes is that it will reveal numerous instances of "loans" that were really income received from Russian oligarchs through shell companies with no expectation they woujld ever be paid back. Paul Manafort got in serious trouble for the same shenanigans. It has a name: tax fraud.
The question now (read just after the Capitol insurrection) is whether the thing that dies will be the GOP. show less
Wow, Rick Wilson, bitter much? LOL! With acerbic wit and humor, the longtime Republican strategist rips into the so-called Trump presidency, flogs Trump's enablers (Ryan, McConnell, et al) and pounds the cretins (Bannon, Milo, Miller, basement-dwellers, et al). He bemoans the downfalls of his beloved party and his brand of conservatism, then wraps with what needs to happen next in order to remove the stench if the Republicans are to be saved. Democrats and liberals get a skewering, too, but his main animus is against all things Trumpy. Anti-Trumpers will read for the cathartic benefits although much of what Wilson addresses has been well-covered in the news. It's hilarious and snarly and he makes his case but after a while it can weary show more because you know, Trump. show less
Full disclosure: I am not a republican, nor am I a fan of Rick Wilson's political/personal attack campaign strategies. I did, however, think it would be interesting to see the Trump Issue from a lifelong republican insider perspective.
To say I'm disappointed is a whopping understatement.
A postive to start with: Wilson has an entertaining, easily accessible writing style, with occasional moments of real humor. I was especially interested in the opening chapters, as we see how and why Trump, a grumpy reality TV star with terrible business sense, made it to the highest office in our country.
Now, what I disliked: Rick Wilson is as adept at name-calling and bullying as Trump is. We have a steady barrage of insults throughout the book. I show more found the childish name-calling excessive, and I thought the juvenile approach trivialized the seriousness of the subject matter.
Wilson includes a section directed at democrats. Here, I was hoping for a grownup to step in and help bridge this ever-growing party divide. But no, Wilson instead lumped all democrats into the stupid libtard category, overgeneralizing concepts and mostly saying we should all be republicans.
Then we get to the section on racism, where he dumps the current crisis solely in the lap of Trump and the alt-right. He clearly worships the republican party, effectively freeing them all of any association with racist views over the years. Also, every single republican president prior to Trump was perfect, and every democratic president only managed to not screw things up because republicans held them in check. C'mon.
So, while I did manage to read this book, I had to take frequent breaks because this author makes me almost as angry as one of Trump's tweets. If his intent was to help Trump polarize the country, he succeeded. show less
To say I'm disappointed is a whopping understatement.
A postive to start with: Wilson has an entertaining, easily accessible writing style, with occasional moments of real humor. I was especially interested in the opening chapters, as we see how and why Trump, a grumpy reality TV star with terrible business sense, made it to the highest office in our country.
Now, what I disliked: Rick Wilson is as adept at name-calling and bullying as Trump is. We have a steady barrage of insults throughout the book. I show more found the childish name-calling excessive, and I thought the juvenile approach trivialized the seriousness of the subject matter.
Wilson includes a section directed at democrats. Here, I was hoping for a grownup to step in and help bridge this ever-growing party divide. But no, Wilson instead lumped all democrats into the stupid libtard category, overgeneralizing concepts and mostly saying we should all be republicans.
Then we get to the section on racism, where he dumps the current crisis solely in the lap of Trump and the alt-right. He clearly worships the republican party, effectively freeing them all of any association with racist views over the years. Also, every single republican president prior to Trump was perfect, and every democratic president only managed to not screw things up because republicans held them in check. C'mon.
So, while I did manage to read this book, I had to take frequent breaks because this author makes me almost as angry as one of Trump's tweets. If his intent was to help Trump polarize the country, he succeeded. show less
It is hard to argue with much of what Wilson has to say about Trump, his enablers and defenders, including figures like Steve Bannon, Stephen Miller and various figures in the "Alt-Right." But while acknowledging that the worst aspects of Trumpism didn't begin with the Dear Leader himself, he doesn't fully come to terms with the role of Republican leaders, including Ronald Reagan, Newt Gingrich and John McCain (by picking Sarah Palin as his running mate), in making a Trump presidency possible. Wilson denounces Paul Ryan for his enabling Trump and the lack of courage to speak up and act to fight to preserve Congress's role as a coequal branch of government, but he has too little to say, for example, about the GOP leaders whose responses show more to Trump's birther campaign against President Obama helped to create the 2015-16 Trump phenomenon. When Wilson steps into his traditional GOP role, dishing out attacks on Democrats and liberals, he sounds a lot like the party operatives he sometimes condemns in these pages. It's worth noting that he is still one of them and likely will be again.
Probably, the best response to this type of work is to welcome it and acknowledge that for now there is one big fight worth waging, and all allies in the effort to defeat Trumpism must be welcomed until that fight is won. But it is also wise to remember that some of those in the Never Trump movement will never be true allies of those who oppose Trump's GOP from across the partisan divide. Wilson is an entertaining writer and commentator, and he remains a partisan GOP strategist and man of the right. show less
Probably, the best response to this type of work is to welcome it and acknowledge that for now there is one big fight worth waging, and all allies in the effort to defeat Trumpism must be welcomed until that fight is won. But it is also wise to remember that some of those in the Never Trump movement will never be true allies of those who oppose Trump's GOP from across the partisan divide. Wilson is an entertaining writer and commentator, and he remains a partisan GOP strategist and man of the right. show less
Everything Trump Touches Dies: A Republican Strategist Gets Real About the Worst President Ever by Rick Wilson is a book I picked up from the library. Wow, this guy pulls no punches! He is a Republican himself! He knows we Dems have the saying " When they go low, we go high". He is a Republican and their motto is "Kick them even harder when they fall"...so this book was great!
It was like Batman taking on Joker and his gang of idiots...lol! I almost could see the "POW" or "BOOM" after each snarky but appropriate hit! Clever and witty he mopped up tRump and the flimsy excuse for Congress backing he has. The GOP (I call G-Grumpy O-old P-Pricks) gets blasted by the author, and I remind you this is a big wig Republican!
I didn't agree with show more everything but I enjoyed enough to give home a 4 star on this book for the witt , cleverness, and for standing up to the orange buffoon which no one in the Authoritarian Party (previously known as Republican party) has done! show less
It was like Batman taking on Joker and his gang of idiots...lol! I almost could see the "POW" or "BOOM" after each snarky but appropriate hit! Clever and witty he mopped up tRump and the flimsy excuse for Congress backing he has. The GOP (I call G-Grumpy O-old P-Pricks) gets blasted by the author, and I remind you this is a big wig Republican!
I didn't agree with show more everything but I enjoyed enough to give home a 4 star on this book for the witt , cleverness, and for standing up to the orange buffoon which no one in the Authoritarian Party (previously known as Republican party) has done! show less
This is one of many books written by people who are vehemently opposed to Donald Trump and his fascist tendencies. What makes this book even more impressive is that Rick Wilson was a prominent Republican strategist and is still a staunch conservative.
I found the writing to be entertaining, intellectual, factual and well-documented. The author's humor shines through at unexpected times and adds to the readability. But he hates Trump and his reasons are made clear.
The one area of concern is the timing. This book was written as the Mueller investigation was reaching a climax, and Wilson had some hope that the results of that investigation would bring Trump's faults and crimes into full public view. Instead, it allowed the Senate majority show more to skate over the subsequent impeachment by the House, and the Trump trail lumbers onward into the current crisis over the COVID-19 virus pandemic.
The book is good enough that I have ordered his next book "Running Against the Devil." show less
I found the writing to be entertaining, intellectual, factual and well-documented. The author's humor shines through at unexpected times and adds to the readability. But he hates Trump and his reasons are made clear.
The one area of concern is the timing. This book was written as the Mueller investigation was reaching a climax, and Wilson had some hope that the results of that investigation would bring Trump's faults and crimes into full public view. Instead, it allowed the Senate majority show more to skate over the subsequent impeachment by the House, and the Trump trail lumbers onward into the current crisis over the COVID-19 virus pandemic.
The book is good enough that I have ordered his next book "Running Against the Devil." show less
A hilarious extended exercise in invective by a conservative operative who drew the line at supporting Trump. He takes on anyone and everyone—though the one target he doesn’t aim at much is Russia.
This liberal enjoyed reading it.
This liberal enjoyed reading it.
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Rick Wilson is a seasoned Republican political strategist and infamous negative admaker. His regular column with The Daily Beast is a must-read in the political community. Published in The Washington Post, politico, The Hill, and Rolling Stone, he's also a frequent guest on Real Time with Bill Maher, CNN, MSNBC, NPR, and other national networks. show more Wilson lives in Tallahassee, Florida, with his wife, four dogs, and a nameless cat. They have two grown children. show less
Common Knowledge
- Canonical title
- Everything Trump Touches Dies: A Republican Strategist Gets Real About the Worst President Ever
- Original publication date
- 2018
- People/Characters
- Donald Trump; Ivanka Trump; Jared Kushner; Melania Trump; Robert Ailes; Steve Bannon (show all 22); Chris Christie; Michael Cohen; Kellyanne Conway; Ted Cruz; Newt Gingrich; Sebastian Gorka; Sean Hannity; Paul Manafort; Stephen Miller; Rupert Murdoch; Carter Page; Mike Pence; Reince Priebus; Paul Ryan; Sarah Huckabee Sanders; Roger Stone
- Important events
- Presidency of Donald J. Trump
- Dedication
- To Molly, Nora, and Andrew,
who took even the toughest of the last three years with grace, humor, encouragement, great editing, and love.
Team Wilson, ride or die - First words
- If you’re like me, the Trump presidency has turned you into a light sleeper.
- Quotations
- That anger they feel each time we remind them of the gulf between conservatism and Trumpism is the pain of their souls trying to renter their bodies.
I missed the part in Article I, Section 1 of the Constitution about kissing the president’s ass 24/7, but apparently Pence found it.
Honestly, I expect you to think of me as being morally ambiguous, politically opportunistic, vicious, spiteful, and committed to my bottom line before anything good or wholesome. Spoiler: mostly true.
In all, 34% of the White House staff was gone in the first year, a number unprecedented in any country that isn't run by pirates, drug lords, or cannibal dictators. And yes, it gave us more than a bit of pleasure to say we ... (show all)told you so.
From Masters of the Trump Universe to disgraced, unemployed, and unemployable laughingstock is a bad look on anyone, but the personnel meat-grinder of this White House has those of us on the outside looking at them with a weapons-grade case of schadenfreude. (Chapter 10: "Welcome to Hell")
No, not every Trump supporter is a racist, xenophobic, alt-reich man-child.
However, every racist, xenophobic, alt-reich man-child is a Trump supporter. [...] Xenophobic fury at brown people coming here to live a bett... (show all)er life doesn't motivate every person who voted for Trump, But every single person motivated by a xenophobic fury at brown people coming here to live a better life was a Trump voter, and he shamelessly, consistently, and viciously played that card on the campaign trail and in office.
Trumpsplainers have demanded since the election that we listen to the Trump voters and that we understand their anxiety and their sense that Washington has betrayed them for decades. These may be true and explicable motivations for their choice of Trump, but those normalizing this president tend to elide and dismiss the centrality of racial animus and anti-immigrant hysteria in Trump's campaign, his supporters, and his government. (Chapter 15: "The Alt-Reich")
I know it's hard to admit, but our president may be the most egregious racist since Woodrow Wilson held the presidency, and that takes some doing. (Chapter 15: "The Alt-Reich")
History repeats, first as tragedy, then as Trump (Chapter 15: "The Alt-Reich")
The moral failure of leadership he displayed over Charlottesville alone should have disqualified Donald Trump from managing a Starbucks, to say nothing of leading a great, diverse nation, particularly one where we have strugg... (show all)led so long and so hard to bend that arc of history toward what we can be as a people, rather than where we started. (Chapter 15: "The Alt-Reich")
Gorsuch doesn't reflect Trump's principles, ideals, or philosophy. As Trump has no principles, ideals, or philosophy beyond his narcissism and self-regard, how could he? (Chapter 16: "But Gorsuch")
STOP FIGHTING THE LAST WARS
Americans have made up their mind on gay marriage. They're fine with it, and that's not going to change in any foreseeable future. [...] There's a shrinking number, but it's time to tell th... (show all)e evangelical cohort in the GOP that since they've shown their true colors by giving Donald Trump a series of mulligans on his porn-star-screwing, pussy-grabbing, serially adulterous life, they've lost their moral authority to scream at the rest of us. (Chapter 18: "My Party after Trump) - Last words
- (Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)The GOP needs to end the War on Drugs absurdity that costs billions, incarcerates far too many, and profits no-one except the booming private prison industry.`
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)Also, Trump has tiny, tiny hands (Epilogue: Post-Trump America) - Blurbers
- Avlon, John; Cox, Ana Maria
- Canonical DDC/MDS
- 973.933
- Canonical LCC
- E912
Classifications
- Genres
- Nonfiction, Politics and Government, General Nonfiction, History
- DDC/MDS
- 973.933 — History & geography History of North America United States 1901- New Millennium, Post 9/11 (2001-Present) Donald Trump, 1st Term (2017-2021) COVID-19 Response, Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017, Impeachment of Donald Trump
- LCC
- E912 — History of the United States
- BISAC
Statistics
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- Reviews
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- Rating
- (3.95)
- Languages
- English
- Media
- Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 7
- ASINs
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