Famously, Nixon White House attorney John Dean told President Nixon about Watergate, “I think that there is very much a cancer on this presidency” that, left to spread, would destroy the administration. Only with the Trump administration, the presidency is a cancer on the country. And left to spread …
I’ve lived in this place 57 years—through a few wars, several recessions, good times and bad. (And probably none much culturally grimmer than the years I was growing up, in between rusting Cleveland and rotting Akron, Ohio.)
There’s more meanness in this country now than I can ever remember. Far more. Words hurled rather than shared by people clearly angry about something other than what they are shouting about.
For instance, Wyndham Clark seems to be a somewhat bratty guy who struggles to control his emotions and publicly talks about seeing a therapist to help him deal with it. Did those shortcomings rate five hours of verbal abuse from thousands of emotionally deranged goons on an old-money country club on Long Island Sunday—people mockingly screaming “don’t choke,” and cheering madly at Clark’s every mistake?
And before we get off the subject of Clarks!—does it make any sense that the young professional basketball star Caitlin has to endure what appear to be wholly fabricated rumors by mobs on X and elsewhere about problems with her teammates and rivals alike, and answer reporters’ questions about them at press conferences? Clark has handled all this almost impeccably, even occasionally criticizing her own fans who have said racist or rude things about others. But after several years of it, the once ebullient and spirited competitor looks by turns deeply worn down, and a little bitter, herself. She’s 24.
And why did a LinkedIn conversation I was having last week escalate into an online shouting match when the other guy started sounding so much like President Trump—he actually referred to a newsletter I publish as “the failing Executive Communication Report”—that I finally asked him, “Are you Trump’s ghostwriter, or is he yours?” Before he erased our whole exchange from the thread, apparently.
A close friend asked me later, “Why would you start a fight with that guy on LinkedIn?” Admitting that I do sometimes like to get a rise out of people, and explaining that I’ve been waiting to get a rise out of this particular guy for about three decades, I reminded my friend that my initial two or three salvos were gentle and non-confrontational in tone and substance, and that the guy ratcheted up the rhetoric by addressing me as “dude,” telling me I was too stupid to comprehend his intellect and, also Trump-like, calling my lack of agreement with his point of view “sad!” (And then, yes, I questioned the value of 30 years of his “thought leadership”; fighting words for sure.)
I think my friend might really be asking a deeper and much more troubling question, that too many of us are asking: Why would anyone risk any disagreement in public conversation with anybody, anywhere? It’ll probably escalate quickly, it will probably go nowhere or become about something far beyond what it’s about—and what’s the upside? I ask that question more and more myself. Which would be troubling for any professional communicator, but especially for the author of a 2021 book titled, An Effort to Understand: Hearing Ourselves (and One Another) in a Nation Cracked in Half.
Once, in an Italian neighborhood in Chicago then known as a hub for gangsters, my unwitting father in law, visiting from out of town, had his car blocked, in a parking spot. He started hollering about it, in hopes that the offender would hear him and move the car. I practically pounced on him to hush him, because this could only lead to trouble in a neighborhood where you don’t pick your battles, you avoid battles altogether.
That’s how it feels everywhere right now. Why? I guess I can’t assign all of that to more than a decade of President Trump’s rhetoric and the rest of the world’s counter-rhetoric, seemingly useless in defense. But if you think all that vulgar, all-caps propaganda from the leader of the free world is not a big factor in building the spite walls between us, then I guess you don’t believe that leaders have any influence at all.

Trump Derangement Syndrome? Trump Dyspepsia is more like it. And for communicators, anyway—dystopia, too.
On some Tuesdays it makes me want to put the words away, start working at a soup kitchen, and call it a day.
