"To hell with the truth! As the history of the world proves, the truth has no bearing on anything. It's irrelevant and immaterial, as the lawyers say. The lie of a pipe dream is what gives life to the whole misbegotten mad lot of us, drunk or sober," spoken by Larry, a character in Eugene O'Neill's The Iceman Cometh.
Moreover, Hickey, the loudmouth salesman in the play enthralls his boozin' buddies with dreams of a better tomorrow. By the end of Act One, even the audience has been dazzled. However, like life, Act Two reveals what's beneath Hickey's propaganda. The result? All are deflated, including playgoers, and become silent with disbelief.
Donald Trump makes a great pitch but does he deliver? Trump has those qualities which, if O'Neill were alive, the playwright would recognize and probably put on paper. Donald Trump, the real estate mogul sweeps his audience away with clear talkin' platitudes. How quickly followers have forgotten Donald's foray into reality television with, The Apprentice. He and the show's producers convincingly bamboozled viewers into believing that show had real people, unscripted and undirected. However the devilish Omarosa later revealed otherwise: she displayed a much softer side, so much so the great, late actor Michael Clarke Duncan asked her to marry him. Known for his gentle, kind nature it's unlikely Duncan would fall for a she-devil. Still, the illusion continued. The Apprentice became the focal point for Donald Trump's larger-than-life personality and not a revelation of his real character.
Trump's outrage and nanosecond reactions, now seen on the political stage, do reveal his inability to stop, think and make rationale arguments for or against particular issues. Reactionaries rarely make effective leaders. Demonstrated in Trump's business practices, many in-the-know have reported that allegedly turn-over among Trump's staff rival Leona Helmsley's. As his empire grew, stories about Trump's ruthless management style have often seen in New York dailies.
We can't dispute that Trump knows what he wants and talks to the people without flourishes or stilted language. Qualities which helped him build his wealth and seen among many New York real estate moguls and brokers, too. These pitch-people have the street smarts and sales language to convince the most incredulous buyer to invest in properties. Hence, the major building boom which has attracted wealthy investors, many of whom rarely use their residences, and has pushed out regular workers from Manhattan properties.
And, like this picture, Trump has mastered the art of deception:
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"Time is Money" by Gayle B. Tate (via Google Images) |
I know you become such a coward that you'll grab at any lousy excuse to get out of killing your pipe dreams. And yet, as I've told you over and over, it's exactly those damned tomorrow dreams which keep you from making peace with yourself. So you've got to kill them like I did. (Hickey, Act III, The Iceman Cometh)