During
the last 18 months or so I’ve heard a lot of talk about chess. This guy or that
guy is playing chess while everyone else is playing checkers or some mastermind
is playing 3 dimensional chess, etc. I find it odd that these statements are
made given that only a tiny percentage of Americans know how to play chess with
that number sitting around 5% or slightly over 14 million people. This is too
bad because if the population, as a whole, had a better understanding of chess
then the actions of President Trump would make perfect sense.
History:
The school district where I was employed drastically cut its music programs and
decided that chess would be an appropriate alternative to music instruction. I
was not entirely opposed to this as there were published research papers
extolling the virtues of chess and there appeared to be a direct relationship
between playing chess and higher academic achievement. Besides, anyone can play
chess while not everyone has the dexterity to be a musician. Wishing to be part
of the solution, I agreed to become a coach and took on after school chess
programs on three different campuses.
Our
school district was kind enough to foot the bill for some necessary chess
coaching and needed chess supplies. Not only that but I had the great fortune
of having World Chess Champion Garry Kasparov’s former full time coach as my
new teacher as the former Russian coach had relocated to the very city where I
lived and had been contracted by the School District to get us up to speed.
Private lessons with Kasparov’s coach! Can you imagine it?
It
took my new coach all of about 30 seconds to figure out my level of chess
competence which was not very high and I will paraphrase what he said next:
“You are not very good and there is not enough time to teach you the correct
way. But, I can teach you simple rules that will enable you to defeat anyone
that doesn’t study chess full time.” He called his method “active chess”
whereas a weak player like myself could use a simple formula to play the most
aggressive game possible and win against stronger players. He believed that
strategy flowed from tactics and his method allowed for a very fluid game of
strategy. So, what did he teach me and how does it relate to our president? Is
Trump playing chess?
Chess
is a game where the number of possible positions rises at an astronomical rate.
By the 2nd move of the game there are already 400 possible positions and after
each person moves twice, that number rises to 8902. My coach explained to me
that I was not trained enough to even begin to keep track of those things and
that my only chance of ever winning was to take the initiative and never give
it up. “You must know what your opponent will do next by playing his game for
him.” was the advice I received.
Now,
I won’t bore you with the particulars but it boiled down to throwing punches
each and every turn without exception. In other words, if my opponent must
always waste his turn responding to what I am doing then he never gets an
opportunity to come at me in the millions of possibilities that reside in the
game. Again, if I throw the punch – even one that can be easily blocked, then I
only have to worry about one combination and not millions.
My
Russian chess coach next taught me that I should Proudly Announce what exactly
I am doing and why I am doing it. He explained to me that bad chess players
believe that they can hide their strategy even though all the pieces are right
there in plain sight for anyone to see. A good chess player has no fear of this
because they will choose positions that are unassailable so why not announce
them? As a coach, I made all of my students tell each other why they were
making the moves that they made as well as what they were planning next. It
entirely removed luck from the game and quickly made them into superior
players.
My
Russian coach next stressed Time as something I should focus on to round out my
game. He said that I shouldn’t move the same piece twice in a row and that my
“wild punches” should focus on getting my pieces on to the board and into play
as quickly as possible. So, if I do everything correctly, I have an opponent
that will have a disorganized defense, no offense and few pieces even in play
and this will work 9 out of 10 times. The only time it doesn’t work for me is
when I go against players that have memorized hundreds of games and have
memorized how to get out of these traps. With all that said, let’s see if
President Trump is playing chess.
First,
we can all agree that Trump, if nothing else, throws a lot of punches. We
really saw this in the primaries where barely a day could go by without some
scandal that would supposedly end his presidential bid. His opponents and the
press erroneously thought that responding to each and every “outrage” was the
correct thing to do without ever taking the time to think whether or not they
had just walked into a trap. They would use their turn to block his Twitter
attack but he wouldn’t move that piece again once that was in play but,
instead, brought on the next outrage – just like my coach instructed me to do.
Second,
Trump is very vocal in what he is going to do. Just like I had my students
announced to each other their plans, Trump has been nothing but transparent
about what he intends to do. After all, announcing your plans only works if
your position is unassailable. It demoralizes your opponent. You rub their face
in it. Another benefit to being vocal is that it encourages your opponent to
bring out his favorite piece to deal with said announced plans. This is a big
mistake as any good chess player will quickly recognize which piece his
opponent favors and then go take them.
Time
has been the one area that our president is having problems. Executive Orders
and Twitter Wars have pushed the opposition off balance but he has not been able
to use this time to get all of his pieces into play. The Justice Department
(his Queen) is still stuck behind a wall of pawns. Furthermore, only 5 of his
15 Cabinet picks have been confirmed as of this writing. Without control over
these departments, the president can fight a war of attrition but he really
can’t go on the offensive. In chess, I will gladly trade a piece for a piece if
it means you have to waste your turn dealing with it. It isn’t a long term
strategy if you do not have all of your pieces ready to go.
In
the end it would appear that Trump is playing the kind of game that I was
taught to play by my coach. His opponents are never given time to mount an
attack. Their queen – the MSM has been removed from the board and their
favorite piece – the Celebrities are locked in a war of attrition while Trump
gets the rest of his pieces on the board. Remember, these are all Tactics but
Strategy flows from Tactics. Sooner or later the Left will find itself in some
terrible position and the Strategy to drain the swamp will present itself.
Also,
since I did mention Garry Kasparov’s, he had this to say on his Twitter feed
just yesterday.
“It’s
the birthday of Ronald Reagan, whose courage and moral clarity helped win the
Cold War & free many millions from Communist servitude.”
Damn
right Garry, damn right.