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OpEdNews Op Eds    H3'ed 1/14/17

The Dullest -- and Most Shocking -- Moment in Trump's Press Conference

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Richard Eskow
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"I'm also very much of a germaphobe, by the way, believe me."

Try not to think too much about the story that led to this comment from the President-Elect of the United States. It's not easy, I know. We're only human, after all, and that story is so ... so out there. It's hard to turn away.

It's also hard to turn away from Trump's abusive treatment of the press, or his poor grasp of national security, or those long periods when his rambling turns to near-incoherence. All of those qualities were on conspicuous display in Wednesday's press conference.

So was the brush-off he gave when concerns were raised about Putin's role in the election: "Well, if Putin likes Donald Trump, I consider that an asset, not a liability."

About that unconfirmed hotel story, the salacious one that led to the "germaphobe" remark, the one for which no evidence has been presented: The very fact that people think it might be true tells us that we're in a new and different historical moment. It suggests sordid chaos at the highest levels. It feels like end-state, social decay, late-stage-empire stuff. It's Caligula-in-the-corner-office stuff.

But there's something more important going on, and you don't need unsourced reports to see it. It was hiding in plain sight when, in a bizarre intermezzo, Trump interrupted his own press conference for a legal presentation from the law firm of Morgan, Lewis & Bockius LLP.

People joked about attorney Sheri Dillon's flat affect and boring speaking style. But it was Dillon, not Trump, who provided the day's biggest shock. If her dullness of tone helped camouflage it, that may not have been an accident. It was Dillon who outlined Trump's plan for managing his businesses while he's in the Oval Office.

If that plan doesn't amount to premeditated corruption, it certainly paves the way for it.

Dillon made it clear that Trump won't be selling his assets to avoid conflicts of interest. Nor will he be establishing a blind trust, a form of distancing that's far from adequate (no less an authority than Mitt Romney once called blind trusts "an age-old ruse") but at least provides a minimal distance between an officeholder and his or her assets.

Instead, Trump intends to turn leadership of his organization to his two sons. "It would be impossible to find an institutional trustee that would be competent to run the Trump Organization," said Dillon. (Apparently, nobody in the entire universe of experienced business people has that special blend of insight and experience that is so self-evidently present in Eric Trump and Donald Trump Jr.)

Dillon insisted that Trump would not accept any revenue from foreign governments and would instead "voluntarily donate all profits from foreign government payments made to his hotel to the United States Treasury."

That from someone who reportedly hasn't paid any taxes to the United States Treasury for years.

Leaving aside the more obvious questions -- such as, who determines what is and isn't a "foreign government payment," and, who determines the amount of profit received? -- that leaves an even more fundamental conflict in place: What will Trump do if, as president, his national security team proposes a course of action that will affect travel to a country where he has extensive hotel holdings?

Remember, Trump will still know exactly what he owns, and where. Decisions of war and peace could be influenced by how they might affect his own bottom line.

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Host of 'The Breakdown,' Writer, and Senior Fellow, Campaign for America's Future

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