Washington sources reported that Donald Trump started off his administration leaving his aides, like former press secretary Sean Spicer, to do the spinning on things like crowd size. Now he does it himself, constantly. Reportedly in the past few weeks he is invented a personal relationship between his wife and North Korean dictator Kim Jong Un, moved markets with reports of high level trade talks that didn't happen and generally continued his habit of inflating or deflating things to make what comes out of his mouth hurricane, trade talks, whatever seem correct.

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Further the day after he shared the Sharpie-doctored hurricane map to justify his belated suggestion that Hurricane Dorian was headed for Alabama, Trump tried to spin the state of the US economy, which has emerged as his chief concern heading into the 2020 campaign. Perhaps it looked like he was spilling the beans on the official government jobs report scheduled to come out Friday, though the White House later insisted he was talking about other, already-public numbers and it wasn't the first time.



Moreover it's actually an insidious example of his assault on fact, which divides the country into people who believe him, people who don't and everyone else who has stopped paying attention. Perhaps more than ever, the White House is part "Veep," in which an endlessly replaceable cast of aides who have replaced the original cast of seasoned public servants guys like Gen. 


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