Bruni: Will Trump put dollar signs above vital signs?

The Associated Press / President Donald Trump speaks during a press briefing with the coronavirus task force at the White House last week.
The Associated Press / President Donald Trump speaks during a press briefing with the coronavirus task force at the White House last week.

Listening to our marginally articulate president the other night, I suddenly understood: The economy wasn't merely his pride. It was more like his lover. He can't get enough of it. He won't be kept from it.

Ain't no mountain high enough. Ain't no pandemic grim enough.

Briefing after briefing, I see it, sense it: how he itches to feel that rush again. He digresses from the terrifying present and uncertain future to revisit the heady past, when he lavished trinkets on the Dow and it purred on cue, telling him how potent he was.

Having it turn on him is more than he can bear. It has addled him - I mean even further. "Our country wasn't built to be shut down," he said during the White House briefing Monday evening. He repeated those words - "this is not a country that was built for this; it was not built to be shut down" - and then trotted them out yet again at a town hall on Fox News on Tuesday, apparently convinced that their profundity demanded it.

He also boasted - for the zillionth time - about how the economy just before the pandemic was the best economy ever. Those lips! Those eyes! They'd be reunited, he and his amour. They'd be together again when the credits rolled.

My metaphor may be lighthearted, but my concern sure isn't. There are tough choices ahead, because what's necessary to save lives and what's necessary to salvage livelihoods are in tension. Our leaders have to figure out how much disruption is too much disruption.

That's the calculus that Trump is signaling with his and his allies' new favorite refrain: "We cannot let the cure be worse than the problem."

That's what was on his mind when, during the Monday briefing, he insisted that the health and economic threats of the coronavirus were separable. "We are not going to let it turn into a long-lasting financial problem," he said. "It started out as a purely medical problem, and it's not going to go beyond that."

News flash: It already has. But that aside, the president is acknowledging a genuine and intensifying debate over whether social distancing, if enforced too rigidly and for too long, could leave so many people destitute, isolated and despairing that what America sacrifices rivals what it gains.

"Look, you're going to lose a number of people to the flu," he said during the town hall. "But you're going to lose more people by putting a country into a massive recession or depression."

That unease is hardly confined to the president and to glib conservative supporters of his like Dan Patrick, the 69-year-old lieutenant governor of Texas, who said in an interview on Fox News on Monday night: "I'm not living in fear of COVID-19. What I'm living in fear of is what's happening to this country. And you know, Tucker, no one reached out to me and said, 'As a senior citizen, are you willing to take a chance on your survival, in exchange for keeping the America that all America loves for your children and grandchildren?' And if that's the exchange, I'm all in."

The issue of trade-offs and of how best to balance epidemiological and economic concerns has informed many articles in the Opinion pages of The New York Times, receiving more measured consideration from my colleague Tom Friedman, from two academic titans and from a public-health expert, David Katz, who recently wrote, "I am deeply concerned that the social, economic and public health consequences of this near total meltdown of normal life - schools and businesses closed, gatherings banned - will be long lasting and calamitous, possibly graver than the direct toll of the virus itself."

That perspective transcends political party. A prominent Democrat, for instance, said to me, "Will we lose more Americans to suicide than to the coronavirus?" That was days before Trump, during the town hall, said that if the country is locked down for long, "you're going to have suicides by the thousands."

The president's obsession with the economy is an extension of his obsession with wealth. He has only two lenses through which he sees the world, two yardsticks by which he measures everyone and everything: money and celebrity.

During Sunday evening's briefing, when he was supposed to be comforting Americans on the precipice of financial ruin, he instead lamented the billions of dollars he had supposedly forgone to be president.

"I think it's very hard for rich people to run for office," he said. "It's far more costly. It's a very tough thing. Now, with all of that being said, I'm so glad I've done it. Because, you know, there are a lot rich people around. I've got a lot of rich friends, but they can't help and they can't do what I've done, in terms of helping this country."

It has been observed, accurately, that he's exactly the wrong leader for this crisis because he has thinned the ranks of responsible professionals in government, because he has hollowed out relevant departments and agencies, because he devalues science, because he degrades information and because he parted ways with credibility years ago.

But it's worse than that. He's facing judgment calls that require an emotional depth and moral finesse that simply don't exist in him. America is relying on him, of all presidents, to care as much about vital signs as about dollar signs.

He did that when he asked the nation to stand still for 15 days, but can he continue to do it? I'd have doubts if the economy were merely the biggest of many bragging points for him, if it were just a major part of his political profile.

But it's all-defining and all-consuming, the repository of his vanity and an expression of his virility. And clear thinking is sometimes impossible - and conscience inaccessible - when you're this crazy in love.

The New York Times

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