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tomder55
Feb 13, 2022, 10:35 AM
Another absolute gem from my favorite gum-shoe reporter Salena Zito .

INDEPENDENCE, Missouri — The half-circle of 13 chairs that framed the statue of President Harry Truman in the heart of the historic Independence Square this past fall was placed there in the days after 13 American soldiers were killed in the attack on the airport in Kabul, Afghanistan, in late August.The flags on either side of Truman flew at half-mast, with the chairs bearing the names of each service member lost in that attack. All hailed from small-town corners of our country. Their average age was 22. Eleven were Marines, one was a member of the Army, one a Navy medic.Youth court students and volunteers in the community had placed the memorial there.
They weren’t alone. Memorials like this were placed in bars, front yards, and town squares all across the country. Some of them still stand.

The loss of these brave service members marked the beginning of an awakening. Many people stepped outside the comfort of their political beliefs and began to question everything coming out of the government.
Few national journalists noticed it at its inception because few national journalists leave their desks or disconnect from Twitter long enough to listen to people outside of their bubble. Had they listened, they would have heard the questions and the doubts.
The more Joe Biden's White House stubbornly and willfully refused to answer questions and insisted it had acted rightly, the more distrust in government grew.
The images of Biden walking away, his back to the press and metaphorically to the people, in the days and weeks after the pullout projected arrogance and negligence. When he repeated that exit, it only served to hasten the awakening.

Soon, the questions about Afghanistan became questions about how the government was handling the pandemic — in particular the mandates, masking, and the treatment of our children. Many people had been afraid to make their complaints public — they saw how lives and livelihoods could be destroyed if you questioned the motives of the government or teachers unions.
Across the political spectrum, people who had been struggling so hard to keep their businesses open and their children in school or who dared to question the usage of masks or the authority of the government were called racists, fascists, grandma-killers, insurrectionists, and white supremacists.

Never mind that most of them had done all of the right things. They stayed home at the beginning, washed their cardboard Amazon boxes before they opened them, refrained from hugging their parents and children and grandchildren, lost jobs, lost friends, lost family members, got boosted, saw their children flail emotionally and academically. They watched crime escalate in their cities and suburbs. They watched depression and suicide affect their loved ones and fentanyl flood their nice neighborhoods and communities. They watched their cities turn into ghost towns and their grocery and energy bills diminish their wealth.
No one in the press really picked up on this movement. They see everything as either Republican or Democratic. This awakening is not so easily characterized. It is an inside-outside movement reacting to a government that chose to play politics with the virus and continue a long-standing partisan battle.
This week, it finally became acceptable among the insider set to say that the pandemic is over. But this abrupt change is part of an apparently coordinated effort to save a political tribe; as such, it does not pass the smell test for most people.
It is now too late to save the insiders. People had moved away from elite insider opinion long before the insiders finally gave their permission to say the pandemic is over. Their insincerity is overwhelming. Something deep has changed for all the outsiders, and very few insiders ever saw it coming.
The great awakening | Washington Examiner (https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/opinion/columnists/the-great-awakening)

tomder55
Jan 18, 2025, 05:26 AM
Have I said lately that Salena Zito is my favorite reporter ? She hits the ground and takes the REAL pulse of the nation. Her latest is a lengthy essay about her decade long relationship with Trump. Back in 2016 she was one of the few reporters who correctly predicted a Trump win against Evita. Her now famous line about Trump was that “the press takes him literally, but not seriously; his supporters take him seriously, but not literally.”

Taking Trump Seriously, Not Literally - The Atlantic (https://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2016/09/trump-makes-his-case-in-pittsburgh/501335/)

Here is her latest .


My Decade with Donald Trump - by Salena Zito (https://www.thefp.com/p/my-decade-with-donald-trump-salena-zito?utm_campaign=email-post&r=1etcob&utm_source=substack&utm_medium=email)


The legacy media focused on his rhetoric about Mexicans and Muslims, his behavior toward women, but I knew none of that mattered to the working-class voters who wanted a brawler to stand up for them. I took a lot of flack from other journalists (https://www.huffpost.com/entry/columnist-salena-zito-trump-swing-voters_n_5b8581afe4b0162f471cf3ac) for predicting Trump would win. But I was just relaying what I saw. “People believe he is listening to them,” one voter from East Liverpool, Ohio, told me. “That’s a potent feeling for an area like ethis.”

She is quite honest about him She predicted that he had destroyed his political career with the January 6 riot.


But Biden appealed to just enough blue-collar voters to win the election that year. And in the months that followed, I saw another side of Trump. His lowest point was, of course, January 6, 2021. As I reported (https://nypost.com/2021/01/09/with-reckless-dc-riots-trump-betrayed-his-base-and-his-future/) in the New York Post, his reckless behavior betrayed his base. I also argued that it jeopardized his political future. It was clear he would run for president again in 2024, but now I thought he didn’t have a chance.

And his fortunes were sinking until his response to the train derailment in East Palestine .

At the time he was angry with her because she wrote an article that favored Ron DeSantis . She went to the town to get folks reactions .Trump was there so she covered her head incognito She observed Trump without him knowing she was there .


I raced to the scene to talk to the people (https://www.thefp.com/p/we-dont-know-what-we-are-breathing) who lived there. And guess who else was there? Donald J. Trump.
He had arrived with two 18-wheelers filled with water bottles, and bought everybody around him McDonald’s. He wandered through the town in galoshes, stepping in puddles. You could see the slime and scum in the water. His appearance that day sent a message that was, essentially, I see you. I’m here for you. I’m not leaving you.



But I remember scribbling (https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/opinion/2810431/trumps-track-victory-began-when-train-derailed/) in my notebook that this might be a turning point. As he had in 2016, Trump was showing everyone that he understood America’s forgotten men and women. Soon after, national polls showed (https://www.ipsos.com/en-us/reutersipsos-issues-survey-march-2023) he had pulled ahead of the other Republicans vying for the presidential nomination. One year later, on March 12, 2024, he clinched it (https://www.pbs.org/newshour/politics/trump-clinches-2024-republican-nomination).

She was on stage when he got shot .


It was weird how calm and slow everything felt, despite the horror. It felt like we were in a terrible dream. Afterward, we learned that a firefighter, who had two daughters, had been tragically killed (https://www.redmondfuneralhomeinc.com/obituary/Corey-Comperatore) by one of the bullets.
The next morning, I was sitting at my kitchen table drinking a cup of coffee, when Trump called me and asked: “Salena, are you okay?”
And I said, “Mr. President, yes, but are you freaking kidding me? You were just shot, right?”
He told me, “I’m so sorry about Corey”—the firefighter who had been killed. “I just want to do right by Corey and his family.” It shook him to think that someone could be killed simply because they had supported him.



Up until the election, Trump kept visiting voters throughout Rust Belt Pennsylvania. Westmoreland County, Allegheny County, Armstrong County, Indiana County, and back to Butler County. People lined up to see him in the small towns and big cities, standing on top of buses, trucks, and tractors. Everywhere, there were road closures. I’ve never seen anything like it.
I thought: It’s over, right? It’s totally over. I knew Kamala Harris was never going to be elected. Though she arguably won the single presidential debate, when I talked to the voters around me, they didn’t care. They felt they didn’t know her. Trump, they knew.



This Monday, Trump will be sworn in as the 47th president in Washington, D.C. I won’t be there. The best way for me to cover Trump, or any elected official, has always been on my home turf, listening to the people who put him in office. And, this time around, I hope the media takes him less literally. Although I think everyone takes him pretty seriously by now.