Commentary Mea culpa. I had assumed there were limits to Donald Trump’s narcissism and it turned out there were not. I never liked Trump, and I never had any illusions about his character—both weak and bad—but, like so many others who voted for Trump (or in Canadians’ case, “voted”), I believed the alternative would be worse. My “vote” was transactional: accommodation to a disagreeable human being as a reasonable price to pay for “disruption” of a progressive, post-national, self-loathing technocracy in thrall to increasingly far-left perspectives; and a resetting of the national compass to national self-respect, common-sense approaches to climate change, and prosperity-enhancing economic policies. Trump has indeed been disruptive. Those of us who hoped he might grow into his role and achieve a more dignified, presidential lamination were disappointed. But we set our disappointment alongside Trump’s real, and in some cases, exciting accomplishments. His sweeping 2017 tax cut the …