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Every single time Donald Trump gives a speech, it’s a chaotic mess. He always rants about his personal grievances. He makes up accomplishments that do not exist. He veers into bizarre fantasies that end up becoming reckless American policy. He also regularly tells lies and spreads conspiracy theories. During the 2024 presidential campaign, the news coverage rarely portrayed the jarring reality of the Trump gibberish accurately. Instead, the odd bits about fictional movie characters were ignored, the long-winding answers to questions about economic policy sanded down to a cogent few words. Even his nazi-style threats were glossed over. Now four+ months into Trump’s second term, the New York Times has given us a new entry for the Trump sanewashing hall of fame. This past Saturday, Trump gave the commencement speech at West Point. As usual, Trump repeatedly veered away from his prepared remarks. Speaking for nearly an hour, Trump’s ramble included comments about trophy wives, yachts, Chicago mobster Al Capone, a ‘stolen’ rocket, short golfers, male models, drag shows, trans women, and the size of his election victory. All while wearing the most prominent political symbol of his campaign, a red MAGA hat. The New York Times headline writers decided all that (including the 6-minute trophy wife diatribe) was not worth mentioning. The headline in the paper of record is “Trump Gives Commencement Address at West Point, Stressing a New Era”. Wow. That is some incredible sanewashing. It almost sounds like Fox, Trump’s state-tv network, wrote it. In the Times story itself, you have to read all the way to the 20th paragraph to get the slightest mention of Trump’s trademark rambling:
Compare the New York Times headline to this from The Independent: “Trump gives rambling speech about trophy wives, golf and the ‘great late’ Al Capone in politically-charged West Point address.” That headline describes what actually happened. The Independent’s article about the speech also did a better job of including many of the weird comments including Trump’s odd fascination with late real estate developer William Levitt and his wife. Climate scientist David Ho was so struck by the huge difference between the two headlines that he put them side by side in a social media post that’s now gone viral with the comment “Hard to believe they’re talking about the same event.” I reached out to Ho to ask him about his post. He told me:
The headlines jumped out to him because “one was objective, and the other was trying to be neutral and finding meaning where none existed.” About the New York Times, Ho added:
You can watch the entire Trump West Point speech here or see the low-lights from Aaron Rupar’s clips on Bluesky. Once you see and/or read what Trump said, it’s hard to credit the Times with good faith reporting when they ignore the absurdities and the blatant politicization that were such a big part of the West Point speech. Esquire political writer Charlie Pierce called the Times out saying the paper was a Trump 'normalizing machine.” Longtime Chicago journalist Mark Jacob, who has written a lot about the Times' penchant for misleading headlines and sanewashing, was also critical. Jacob told me:
Fortunately, there were fewer news outlets than usual joining the Times’ sanewashing effort. Instead, many offered more accurate, fact-based reporting:
See, it’s not that hard to report fairly and accurately about what Trump is saying. More news outlets are doing just that with some very impressive, fearless reporting on Trump 2, even his bizzaro speeches. Last fall, when sanewashing seemed to be at its peak, journalist Parker Molloy called for journalists (& the public) to recommit to the pursuit of truth. She wrote:
I’m glad that some news outlets are taking this advice to heart. The New York Times should do the same. Jennifer Schulze is a longtime Chicago journalist. She’s on Bluesky @newsjennifer.bsky.social and writes the “Indistinct Chatter” Substack. Read the original column here. You’re currently a free subscriber to Lincoln Square Media. For full access to our content, our Lincoln Loyal community, and to help us amplify the facts about the assault on our rights and freedoms, please consider upgrading your subscription today with this limited-time offer: |