Wrong. Normal presidents may exaggerate; some occasionally lie. But Trump has taken lying to an entirely new level. He lies like other people breath. Almost nothing that comes out of his mouth can assumed to be true.
For Trump, lying is part of his overall strategy, his MO, and his pathology. Not to call them lies, or to deem him a liar, is itself misleading.
4. Referring to Trump's and his aide's possible "cooperation" or "coordination" with Russia in the 2016 presidential campaign.
This won't do. "Cooperation" and "coordination" sound as if Trump and his campaign assistants were merely being polite to the Russians, engaged in a kind of innocent parallel play.
But nothing about what we've seen and heard so far suggests politeness or innocence. "Collusion" is the proper word, suggesting complicity in a conspiracy.
If true -- if Trump or his aides did collude with the Russians to throw the election his way -- they were engaged in treason, another important word that rarely appears in news reports.
5. Calling Trump's and Paul Ryan's next move "welfare reform," as in "Trump has suggested more than once that welfare reform might be the next big legislative item on his agenda."
Rubbish. They're not going after "welfare." Welfare -- federal public assistance to the poor -- was gutted in 1996. Trump and Ryan are aiming at Medicaid, Medicare, and Social Security.
Nor are they seeking to "reform" these programs. They want to cut them in order to pay for the huge tax cut they've given corporations and the wealthy. "We're going to have to get back next year at entitlement reform," Ryan said recently, "which is how you tackle the debt and the deficit."
So call it what it is: Planned cuts in Medicaid, Medicare, and Social Security.
6. Describing Trump's comments as "racially charged." "Racially charged" sounds like Trump doesn't intend them to be racist but some people hear them that way. Rubbish.
Trump's recent harangue against immigrants from "shitholes" in Latin America and Africa comes only weeks after The New York Times reported that at another Oval Office meeting Trump said Haitian immigrants "all have AIDS" and that Nigerians who visit the US would never "go back to their huts."
This is the man who built his political career on the racist lie that Barack Obama was born in Africa, who launched his presidential campaign with racist comments about Mexican immigrants, who saw "fine people on both sides" in the Charlottesville march of white supremacists, and who attacked African-American football players for being "unpatriotic" because they kneeled during the National Anthem to protest police discrimination.
This is the same man who in 1989 took out full page ads in New York newspapers demanding the return of the death penalty so it could be applied to five black and Latino teenagers accused of raping a white woman in Central Park -- and who still refuses to admit his error even though they were exonerated by DNA evidence.
Stop using terms like "racially charged" to describe his statements. Face it. Trump is a racist, and his comments are racist.
Words matter. It's important to describe Trump accurately. Every American must understand who we have as president.
(Note: You can view every article as one long page if you sign up as an Advocate Member, or higher).