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THE WASHINGTON POST

Trump's Frightening Belief That He Can Act With Impunity

Trump on Capitol Hill on Tuesday
Trump on Capitol Hill on Tuesday
Philip Rucker and Ashley Parker

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump this week disseminated on social media three inflammatory and unverified anti-Muslim videos, took glee in the firing of a news anchor for sexual harassment despite facing more than a dozen of his own accusers and used a ceremony honoring Navajo war heroes to malign a senator with a derogatory slur, "Pocahontas."

Again and again, Trump veered far past the guardrails of presidential behavior. But despite the now-routine condemnations, the president is acting emboldened, as if he were impervious to the uproar he causes.

If there are consequences for his actions, Trump does not seem to feel their burden personally. The Republican tax bill appears on track for passage, putting the president on the cusp of his first major legislative achievement. Trump himself remains the highest profile man accused of sexual improprieties to keep his job with no repercussions.

Trump has internalized the belief that he can largely operate with impunity, people close to him said. His political base cheers him on. Fellow Republican leaders largely stand by him. His staff scrambles to explain away his misbehavior — or even to laugh it off. And the White House disciplinarian, chief of staff John Kelly, has said it is not his job to control him.

For years, Trump has fired off incendiary tweets and created self-sabotaging controversies. The pattern captures the musings of a man who traffics in conspiracy theories and alternate realities, and who can't resist inserting himself into any story line at any moment.

"In an intensely polarized world, you can't burn down the same house twice," said Alex Castellanos, a Republican campaign consultant. "What has Donald Trump got to lose at this point?"

There's an upside to the bellicosity.

Castellanos added that for many voters, and especially Trump's base, there's an "upside" to his bellicosity. "A strong daddy bear is what a lot of voters want," he said. "Right or wrong, at least he's fighting for us."

On Wednesday, Trump took to Twitter before sunrise to share three unverified videos with his 43.6 million followers that seemed designed to stoke anti-Muslim sentiments. He then relished in the firing of Matt Lauer from NBC's "Today" show for sexual misconduct, and fanned unsubstantiated rumors about three other NBC and MSNBC executives and personalities.

Two days earlier, Trump used a ceremony honoring the World War II Navajo code talkers to deride Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., by using his nickname for her, "Pocahontas." Native American leaders and other Americans have strongly objected to the characterization as a racial slur.

Trump traveled on Wednesday to Missouri, where he pitched the tax plan. He explained that he did not mind that the bill might close loopholes for the wealthy like himself.

Trump and other wealthy Americans are poised to benefit from the plan, according to tax experts, because of cuts to estate and business taxes and other relief for real estate holdings. Trump has refused to release his tax returns, so it is impossible to say exactly how he would benefit.

In Missouri, he was talking about taxes, but he might as well been describing his mind-set.

"Hey look, I'm president," Trump said. "I don't care. I don't care anymore."

Trump's anti-Islam tweets on Wednesday — he retweeted videos first posted by a leader of the far-right Britain First party, an extremist group that targets mosques and Muslims — earned him a sharp rebuke from the British prime minister's office.

They also caught his West Wing team off guard. One aide said staffers were unsure exactly how to respond to - let alone defend - his tweets, while another noted that the tweets were unexpected but not necessarily out of character.

"He got pretty fired up this morning," said the second aide, speaking anonymously to offer a candid assessment. "This was not planned."

White House spokeswoman Sarah Huckabee Sanders defended Trump's post as evidence he wants to "promote strong borders and strong national security." But she sidestepped questions on whether the president should give his Twitter endorsement to content whose authenticity was not verified.

"Whether it's a real video, the threat is real, and that is what the president is talking about," Sanders told reporters.

Jason Miller, a former Trump campaign adviser, said the media was overreacting to the president's sharing of anti-Muslim videos.

British Prime Minister Theresa May delivered a rare rebuke from 10 Downing Street.

"A very small number of people, primarily in New York and Washington, are complaining about the origin of the tweets, and most of the rest of the country is talking about the need for stricter border security and the threat of radical Islamic terrorism," Miller said.

Still, by sharing the videos, Trump created problems for himself. He undermined the administration's legal strategy in defending the controversial travel ban by offering evidence of anti-Muslim bias. Federal judges have blocked various versions of the ban because it is akin to an unconstitutional ban on Muslims, which Trump had called for during the campaign.

One of Trump's aides, deputy press secretary Raj Shah, also may have complicated the legal strategy. Aboard Air Force One on Wednesday, Shah answered a reporter's question about whether Trump thinks Muslims are a threat to the United States by saying, "The president has addressed these issues with the travel order."

Trump also strained, at least temporarily, the special relationship with the United Kingdom. A spokesman for British Prime Minister Theresa May delivered a rare rebuke from 10 Downing Street: "British people overwhelmingly reject the prejudiced rhetoric of the far-right which is the antithesis of the values that this country represents: decency, tolerance and respect."

Trump's advisers and friends said the president feels emboldened, even invincible, to communicate as he chooses - especially on cultural issues, believing his stances work for him politically by galvanizing his base.

Having long trafficked in conspiracy theories — his political rise was fueled by his role as one of the nation's leading champions of the false claim that President Barack Obama was not born in the United States — Trump continues, as president, to promote falsehoods and reject facts.

Trump has recently told friends that he believes Special Counsel Robert Mueller III's Russia investigation will be winding down by the end of the year, and that he will be exonerated, even though many experts and others close to the wide-ranging probe say that view is overly optimistic.

Trump has watched as other high-profile men's careers have crumbled under the weight of public accusations of sexual misconduct. Yet Trump has faced no disciplinary repercussions, even after bragging on a 2005 tape about having sexually assaulted women. "Grab "em by the p----. You can do anything," Trump told "Access Hollywood" host Billy Bush, who lost his job over the incident.

During the 2016 campaign, more than 12 women publicly came forward with claims that Trump had sexually harassed or assaulted them. Yet Trump categorically denied the women's accounts and won the election.

Trump occasionally has even speculated, in private conversations with advisers and friends over the past year, that the voice in the "Access Hollywood" may not be him, or that the tape may have been unfairly doctored.

Roger Stone, a former political adviser to and longtime friend of Trump, said the president is less strategic and more spontaneous with his controversial comments.

His instincts on the news cycle and how to tweak his enemies is extraordinary.

"I just think you're seeing the president as way too Machiavellian," Stone said. "He doesn't necessarily have a strategy. His instincts on the news cycle and how to tweak his enemies is extraordinary ... He's a master marketer, and the only thing worse than being wrong is being boring. We're talking about this now."

Trump feels especially liberated when he is at Mar-a-Lago, his lush seaside resort in Palm Beach, Florida, where he spent the Thanksgiving holiday, according to his friends. There, Trump enjoys a less structured and disciplined environment than at the White House, where Kelly attempts to tightly control who the president sees and what information he receives.

In Palm Beach, friends and club members can approach Trump at will — over meals in the Mar-a-Lago dining room or on the greens and club houses at his nearby golf courses — and plant ideas in the president's head, which he sometimes repeats or acts upon.

Two outside advisers to Trump suspected it was no coincidence that Trump returned to Washington on Sunday night and soon thereafter struck a pugnacious tone in his public comments.

"Mar-a-Lago stirs him up," said one of the advisers, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to be candid.

On Capitol Hill, Republicans struggled Wednesday to defend the president. Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., said Trump's retweets of the videos were "particularly unhelpful."

"We don't want to take a fringe group and elevate their content," Graham said. "I think it also is not the message we need to be sending right now where we need, you know, Muslim allies."

Sen. Jeff Flake, R-Ariz., an outspoken Trump critic, agreed: "I just thought it was highly inappropriate. Not helpful."

Republican strategist John Brabender said Trump's tweets distracted from his agenda to pass a tax cuts bill and focus on the nuclear threat from North Korea. But, he said, "this is not new in Donald Trump's world."

"We're seeing the message hijacked by the messenger," Brabender said. "That's been problematic for a long time and it's still problematic ... Sometimes we all just scratch our heads."

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Future

Life On "Mars": With The Teams Simulating Space Missions Under A Dome

A niche research community plays out what existence might be like on, or en route to, another planet.

Photo of a person in a space suit walking toward the ​Mars Desert Research Station near Hanksville, Utah

At the Mars Desert Research Station near Hanksville, Utah

Sarah Scoles

In November 2022, Tara Sweeney’s plane landed on Thwaites Glacier, a 74,000-square-mile mass of frozen water in West Antarctica. She arrived with an international research team to study the glacier’s geology and ice fabric, and how its ice melt might contribute to sea level rise. But while near Earth’s southernmost point, Sweeney kept thinking about the moon.

“It felt every bit of what I think it will feel like being a space explorer,” said Sweeney, a former Air Force officer who’s now working on a doctorate in lunar geology at the University of Texas at El Paso. “You have all of these resources, and you get to be the one to go out and do the exploring and do the science. And that was really spectacular.”

That similarity is why space scientists study the physiology and psychology of people living in Antarctic and other remote outposts: For around 25 years, people have played out what existence might be like on, or en route to, another world. Polar explorers are, in a way, analogous to astronauts who land on alien planets. And while Sweeney wasn’t technically on an “analog astronaut” mission — her primary objective being the geological exploration of Earth — her days played out much the same as a space explorer’s might.

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