President Trump's nominee to the Supreme Court, Brett Kavanaugh, is soaking up all the headlines at the moment, and with good reason. It's not just that Dr. Christine Blasey Ford has accused Kavanaugh of sexual assault when they were teenagers. Kavanaugh also has a Totally Normal financial background that has largely gone unexplored, and there's reason to believe he may have lied under oath on multiple occasions while testifying before Congress.

But while all that and Hurricane Florence have been percolating in The Discourse, we've learned a little bit more about how our Large, Adult President's very good brain works. It's worth pausing to digest a few of his new ideas—or at least the ones we've recently learned about. After all, it's always nice to be reminded that the world's most powerful man is swimming in a mental sea of informational flotsam. Most of what you might otherwise call his knowledge consists of fragments of reality he internalized around 1982. Those fact-like objects have been fermenting there ever since, re-filtering through his kaleidoscopic reasoning faculties each time he dispensed a crank observation at cocktail party.

Now, of course, he's the president. Here are some of the things he thinks.

Build the Wall (in the Sahara)

Keith Hamshere/INACTIVE Getty Images

If there's one consistency to our president's thinking, it's his ability to find the simplest possible solution to an incredibly complex problem. That's not to say it's really a solution at all, since it's often infeasible, ineffective, or simply incomprehensible. But it's a response. Take his advice, brought to us by the BBC, to Spain's foreign minister:

President Trump recommended building a wall across the Sahara to solve Europe's migrant crisis, Spain's foreign minister says. Josep Borrell, also a former President of the European Parliament, disagreed with the strategy.

You don't say. I can't believe the Spaniards didn't bite on you should build a 3,000-mile wall, at incredible expense, through one of Earth's most extreme environments. "The border with the Sahara cannot be bigger than our border with Mexico," Trump reportedly told the minister, a statement that has the downside of being verifiably false. (The U.S.-Mexico border is less than 2,000 miles.) Of course, Trump doesn't think in those terms. Reality can be molded to suit his needs and wants, and besides, if he doesn't know something it's probably unknowable. It can't possibly be bigger, he suggests, and more to the point, how could we possibly know?

MANDEL NGAN Getty Images

The BBC pointed out another issue as well:

Spain has no sovereignty over the Sahara, but it does possess two small enclaves on the north African coast, Ceuta and Melilla, separated from Morocco by controversial wire fences. The enclaves have become magnets for African migrants seeking a better life in Europe.

Funny enough, the proposal shares a lot in common with the proposed Wall on our southern border. There are issues with Native American sovereignty, there is already a fence in some areas, and, of course, it won't actually fix the problem.

Silent Bombs

Ethan Miller Getty Images

According to a new book excerpt published in The Washington Post, the president's visit to CIA headquarters on his first full day in office was not merely concerning for the self-aggrandizing speech the president made in front of a wall honoring intelligence officers killed in the line of duty. Trump was also given a tour of the agency's drone operation facilities, with startling results:

When the agency’s head of drone operations explained how the CIA had developed special munitions to limit civilian casualties, the president seemed nonplused. Shown a strike in which the CIA delayed firing until the target was a safe distance from a compound with other occupants, Trump asked, “Why did you wait?” And when Trump noticed that militants had scattered seconds before another drone attack, he said, “Can they hear the bombs coming? We should make the bombs silent so they can’t get away.”

It obviously jumps out that our president thinks this is how, well, bombs work. But the more pressing issue is his absolute commitment to racking up civilian casualties. We've discussed before his inability to empathize with other human beings, but this seems to be on another level. It's particularly reassuring when Trump has reopened the CIA's lethal drone program—missions were shifted exclusively to the military towards the end of the Obama years after criticism of its secrecy and civilian casualties—and we're now apparently running drones over large parts of Africa, too.

"Just Run the Presses"

Alex Wong Getty Images

A bit farther back, a little book by Bob Woodward came out and reassured everyone that everything inside the White House is just as bad as it looks from the outside. But in the maelstrom of news about gobsmacking incompetence and worse, you might have missed this gem showcasing the president's economic genius, as highlighted by CNBC:

As a candidate, Donald Trump pledged to balance the federal budget and lower the national debt, promises that are proving difficult to keep. Once he won, Trump considered an unusual approach that was quickly slapped down by his chief economic advisor...

"Just run the presses — print money," Trump said, according to Woodward, during a discussion on the national debt with Gary Cohn, former director of the White House National Economic Council.

"You don't get to do it that way," Cohn said, according to Woodward. "We have huge deficits and they matter. The government doesn't keep a balance sheet like that."

Cohn was "astounded at Trump's lack of basic understanding," Woodward writes.

He honestly thought you could just print the $20 trillion and wipe out the debt.

Chip Somodevilla Getty Images

It's important to remember that the president knows nothing about anything and cares less. He is profoundly incurious about the world in a truly startling way. It would not occur to him to read up on federal monetary policy, or even just the basic concept of inflation, before taking a job running the federal government. It wouldn't even really occur to him to listen to his advisers. The governing force of his mind is stubborn ego, which props up his stunning ignorance with self-assurances that he is right because he thinks what Donald Trump thinks, and Donald Trump has always thought it.

Take his discussion with Cohn on trade:

"Several times [chief economic adviser Gary] Cohn just asked the president, 'Why do you have these views [on trade]?' 'I just do,' Trump replied. 'I've had these views for 30 years.' 'That doesn't mean they're right,' Cohn said. 'I had the view for 15 years I could play professional football. It doesn't mean I was right.'"

The president's views on trade are his views because they've been his views for 30 years. They're right because they're his views and always have been. There's no need to learn anything when you already know it all—and you know you know it all because you know what you know. God help us.

Jack Holmes Politics Editor Jack Holmes is the Politics Editor at Esquire, where he writes daily and edits the Politics Blog with Charles P Pierce.

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