Trending Today ...
Mohave Valley man pleads guilty to conducting a

MOHAVE VALLEY - A Mohave Valley man involved

Big Sandy Shoot 2025

MOHAVE COUNTY – The Big Sandy Shoot is

Diet Center’s Weight loss tip of the week

Have you ever wondered, “will substituting food items

letter to the editor
A Snake in the Garden

Dear Editor,  Erica Green has a very nice

Adams named to Fall 2024 Dean’s List

FT. MOHAVE –  Samantha Adams of Fort Mohave

WIC service ready in Colorado City

COLOARDO CITY – Women, Infants, And Children (WIC) is

Thank you for reading The Standard newspaper online!

A Snake in the Garden

letter to the editor

Dear Editor, 

Erica Green has a very nice article in the New York Times about President Trump’s constant contradicting of himself over things like Greenland, Gaza, Black History Month, a third term, whether to condemn criminals or pardon them, and whether Zelensky is a dictator or not. He has a distinct tendency to reverse course, do a 180, even come back 360 degrees to his initial view. One observer calls this “whiplash,” another calls it “cover,” another “domination,” yet another “lying.” (“’You Can’t Pin Him Down’: Trump’s Contradictions Are His Ultimate Cover,” New York Times, 3-8-25)

One example Ms. Green gave was Greenland. Trump said, “We strongly support your right to determine your own future, and if you choose, we welcome you into the United States of America.” Moments later, he said offhandedly, “One way or the other, we’re going to get it [Greenland].”

What Trump is really doing politically is appealing to both sides of an issue. This has historically been called “speaking with a forked tongue,” something the proverbial talking snake in the Bible was wont to do.

God said not to eat the fruit of the tree in “the midst of the garden” or even touch it, “lest ye die.” But the devil, or Satan, often on God’s side, said that Adam and Eve could go ahead and eat that fruit because they would not surely die. While God says people need boundaries in this life, otherwise known as ethics and laws, the forked-tongue serpent says boundaries are not necessary.

Trump says it is okay to go ahead and grab a new female acquaintance by the crotch, go with the flow, present yourself both as a peacemaker and a warlord, usurp Congress’ lawmaking and spending powers and then tell the people you are restoring true democracy, confuse people so much they will rely on you for a pathway through all the uncertainty.

This is not the first time the United States has seen a president famous for constantly changing course. One observer said of President Woodrow Wilson that anyone who followed him down a political path was almost certain to meet him coming in the opposite direction. He changed from being staunchly pro-business to being staunchly pro-union. He was totally against getting America into World War I and soon enough he was the biggest champion of getting the country into the midst of the war. He promised America freedom of information about the war, then imposed a wall of secrecy and censored opposing viewpoints. He was a perfect example of a flip-flopping politician flattering people on both sides of an issue in order to get to a point of autocratic power.

The White House press secretary says Trump is “the most accessible and transparent president in American history.” He is accessible because he loves people treating him like the font of all wisdom, the answerer of all questions. He is open and transparent like a desert mirage. When you look at the mirage you always see plenty of clear water nearby.

A “forked-tongue devil” deals in pleasure and treachery, hope and disappointment, truth and lie, salvation and destruction. All of this is exceeding fun, especially for the political authoritarians who ride all the uncertainty and confusion into life-long luxury and long-term power.

Ordinarily it would be good for Americans to know the truth about national politics, but most Americans today are not interested in truth. They are only interested in localized fun, government benefits, as little science and history as possible, and a lot of evil mixed in with a little good. The truth just muddies that beautiful desert mirage and puts a damper on all that fun. Who has even heard of Woodrow Wilson anyway?

Robert Kimball Shinkoskey