4 comments

[ 4.3 ms ] story [ 20.6 ms ] thread
Not a fan of Trump, also not a fan of this news. With less information he's likely to make worse and worse decisions.
I wonder what effect the council had on him. Did he ever take them seriously?
Apparently the council had not actually met or done anything at all yet.
This assumes he was actually absorbing the information in the first place.

On the one hand, I too would like our leaders to be as informed as possible, to have access to the most expert advisers available, and to have any tools that will aid them in understanding the choices they will have to make. Even the leaders I disagree with. Competence is a nonpartisan value.

On the other hand, advisers are only valuable if their advice is listened to. Past a certain point, one has to cope with the possibility that they aren't actually being called on to advise and inform, but merely to provide a sheen of respectability to whatever the leaders wanted to do in the first place. This is a gradient, not a bright line, but it's still a threshold that can be crossed.

I'd love to be corrected, but I've been paying fairly close attention and I can't think of a single issue, big or small, where this advisory council convinced the president to change his stance. If an advisory body can't do that, then what purpose does it serve?