| We have to take the Presidents Statements are credible, firstly, because it's the closest thing to the truth anyone has. He has no real strategy, he makes things up on the spot. Secondly, even if argument could be that 'some other, more credible president would lie' - this actually does not hold up, because nobody could operate in those terms. The presidents statements in an official context are official, that's it. Except in rare cases. "He tells people what to do on a whim" and "has longstanding personal beefs and gripes" - that's it. We don't know what he's going to wake up and tweet tomorrow so all we have are his statements. Also, I think we give way to much credit to this notion of '4d chess' - he lies in the moment because he can get away with it, not out of some well plotted deception. He's not servicing some complicated scheme - just his gut. He'll say something else the next day, but for that moment, what he says is policy. |
* "Statements", not "statement". Past statements can be used to assess the credibility of more recent ones.
* Actions speak louder than words. Pardoning the king of cocaine trafficking demonstrates just how seriously the administration is trying to counter drug trafficking.