Biden's Latest Regulations Will Crash the Electric Grid
NYPD Patrol Chief Shuts AOC Down After She Posts Defense of Pro-Hamas Agitators...
USC Cancels Commencement Ceremony Amid Pro-Hamas Antics By Lunatic Students
Iran-Backed Terrorists Resume Attacks on U.S. Service Members in the Middle East
White House Attempt to Cover for Biden's Latest Gaffe Might Be Its Most...
US, 17 Other Nations Issue Joint Statement Calling on Hamas to Release Hostages
DeSantis Reveals How Florida Colleges Will Respond to Pro-Hamas Students
Here’s Why Several State AGs Filed a Lawsuit Against a Biden Administration Abortion...
A Principal Was Removed, Faced Threats for Making Racist Comments. There's Just One,...
The Biden White House Is Still at Odds With The New York Times
Newsom Unveils Bill in Response to Arizona's Impending Pro-Life Law
Wow: Biden Just Endorsed a Disastrous, Unpopular Economic Policy That Will Inflict Even...
The Left Would Prosecute Trump for Acts He Never Committed, But Obama Did
Another Poll on Battleground States Is Here to Toss Cold Water on Biden's...
Could Texas Ban ‘Gender Nonconforming’ Teachers From Schools?
OPINION

The Five Stages of Trump

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement

In 1969, Dr. Elisabeth Kübler-Ross published "On Death and Dying" in which she described the five stages of grief:

Denial, anger, bargaining, depression, and acceptance.

Advertisement

Herewith are the five stages of Trump:

Denial: Along with everyone else, maybe including Donald Trump himself, I loudly proclaimed Trump was a carnival sideshow. And, like a sideshow after we had been tricked into paying a quarter to go inside the tent once, we would not be fooled again and his act would wither and die.

In June 2015, I wrote:

Trump is not a serious candidate for President, but he can afford to be a raspberry seed in the tooth of this campaign season.

The Denial Champion of 2016 has to be Gov. John Kasich who maintains that his single victory (in his home state of Ohio) proves that the Republican party is desperate for him to be its nominee.

Anger: In July of 2015, Trump was in Iowa and said of Sen. John McCain:

“He's a war hero because he was captured. I like people that weren't captured, OK?"

Like most people I was outraged at that remark and, like most people, pronounced the Trump campaign officially over at that point.

The whole "wall" thing with Mexico was cringe worthy. His pronouncement that Muslims should be denied entry to the US for any reason - vacations, lectures, shopping - was embarrassing.

Advertisement

We're not even going to get into his Megyn Kelly/Carly Fiorina stuff because it won't make it through the Mullings Director of Standards & Practices screen.

Bargaining: I was confident that Trump's appeal was to a minority of the minority. I remember pulling out my slide rule and saying: If he gets 30 percent of the GOP vote and only 23 percent of voters claim to be Republicans, that's 30 percent of 23 percent or about seven percent of the voting population.

I got to be like the GPS in my car, recalculating and recalculating as his winning percentages continued to grow and grow until they hit 60 percent in the New York Primary.

Listening to him call into one cable news program after another I decided he was beginning to sound more reasonable only because I'd heard it all so many times before. And, when Paul Manafort told the member of the Republican National Committee that Trump had been "playing a part" I was happy to believe him.

Trump, on the other hand, was apparently not so happy to hear his campaign's senior advisor compare the campaign to a scene from William Shakespeare's "As You Like It"

Advertisement

All the world's a stage,
And all the men and women merely players;
They have their exits and their entrances,
And one man in his time plays many parts.

Depression: When the 2016 Presidential campaign began there were 17 Republican candidates. One by one they dropped out: Bush, Perry, Walker, Huckabee, Rubio …

As the field was winnowed, it became more and more likely that Donald Trump would be among the last candidates standing. He kept winning: The Northeast, the Southeast, the Super Tuesday states, the Acela primary states.

In the five primaries last Tuesday, the New York Times pointed out "His routs represented a breakthrough: He received more than half the vote in every state" including the states of confusion and, ultimately, the state of depression.

Acceptance: Resume attached.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos