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Can America recover from Trump? A radicalized right wing suggests dangers ahead

  

Category:  Op/Ed

Via:  john-russell  •  5 years ago  •  15 comments

Can America recover from Trump? A radicalized right wing suggests dangers ahead
As candidate and president, Trump has already demolished standards of civility, worsened the racial and ethnic fractures of the American public, and reduced the Republican Party to a slobbering set of sycophants.

S E E D E D   C O N T E N T



The religious devotion of the Trump base to their secular god demonstrates that between 30 and 40 percent of Americans are unfit for participation in Democratic society. For the sake of job preservation, the overwhelming majority of Republicans in Congress have become equally as zealous as their voters in their insistence on ignorance, delusion and racism as criteria for political judgment. Given that polite people across the political spectrum can agree that disenfranchisement is not a legal or moral option, the most relevant question of contemporary debate is, “how do we deal with these people?”


.....A recent leak of the president’s daily schedule reveals what anyone rational would have assumed — Trump is lazy and egocentric, devoted more to “executive time,” which includes hours angrily tweeting while watching television and shooting the bull on the telephone with his sociopathic chums, than he is to governance. Several reports also demonstrate that Trump has little knowledge of history and no attention span for public policy, and even as the leader of the world’s most powerful nation is obsessed with opportunities for grift. All this is worthy of celebration, and reason to breathe a heavy sigh of relief.

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Imagine if Trump was a brilliant, learned leader committed to the enactment of a consistent agenda; a man who could summon considerable skill and savvy, not merely to promote himself but to fundamentally transform American law and reinvent the relationship between the federal government and its citizenry. As candidate and president, Trump has already demolished standards of civility, worsened the racial and ethnic fractures of the American public, and reduced the Republican Party to a slobbering set of sycophants. And he has done all of this by barely lifting a finger. The true danger might emerge when Trump slithers into the sunset, and his enraged and frenzied loyalists, who now control the infrastructure of one of America’s two major political parties, are looking for a replacement and find the real thing.



....Republican pollster Frank Luntz, for example, thought that Trump’s mockery of John McCain’s war record would endanger his entire campaign. It did not even cause a temporary dip in his poll numbers. The same goes for the “Access Hollywood” tape. The same goes for the New York Times report on a lifetime of lying about his wealth. The same goes for the conviction of his campaign manager. The same goes for his former lawyer testifying under oath that he is a “racist, cheat and con man.”



 


Trump lapdogs fetched and rolled over on command recently at CPAC — a gathering of the American right under the sponsorship of the American Conservative Union, or in the words of former Trump official, Count Seb Gorka, “The biggest conclave of conservatives in the United States.”


A dedicated masochist, perhaps bored with the kinkier elements of internet pornography, might want to watch some of the speeches and panel discussions from CPAC, all of them now on YouTube. More than depraved thrills, they offer insight into the modern right wing. Charlie Kirk, the leader of Turning Point USA, an organization committed to Trumpian evangelical work on college campuses, told an approving audience that “liberals have always hated America.” Kirk’s consigliere, Candice Owens, a black Republican who recently told an audience that Hitler would have been fine if he “just wanted to make Germany great,” cited as evidence that racism no longer exists in America the fact that she “has never been a slave.” Wayne LaPierre, executive vice president of the NRA, advocated arming everyone but toddlers as the solution for every social ill. And speaking of guns, Jerry Falwell Jr., a nut that did not fall far from the family tree, implied that his sons would shoot Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez if she tries to take their cows.


The main event, of course, was President Donald Trump. The emperor made his entrance to the blaring mawkishness of Lee Greenwood’s “God Bless the USA,” and actually hugged a large American flag, while grinning ear to ear. The audience roared as Trump made it to first base with the Stars and Stripes. It was one of many times they would rise to their feet in ecstatic displays of devotion.

Trump’s speech combined megalomania with right-wing observational comedy. It was almost a combination of Fidel Castro and Jerry Seinfeld, if both men were incoherent.


The most alarming aspect of the speech was not that Trump lied about easily verifiable matters. For example, he claimed that when he took office the stock market was “headed down toward disaster.” (In reality, it finished 2016 with a 13.6 percent gain .) It wasn’t even that Trump lied about matters that might result in the eradication of women’s rights and violence toward elected officials. He repeated the slander, now popular in right-wing circles, that Democrats want to rewrite laws so that doctors can execute live babies after birth. The most disturbing part of the horror show was that no matter how absurd, narcissistic or psychotic Trump became — bragging about his inaugural crowd, inventing stories about conversations with a military general named “Raisin Cane,” mocking concerns about climate change — the audience dutifully and enthusiastically stood at attention, cheering, laughing and applauding. CPAC’s own internal survey showed that 91 percent of attendees “strongly approve” of Trump’s performance as president.


The giddiness of the crowd makes other polling numbers seem rather banal when they indicate that 45 percent of Trump supporters believe that white people are the most oppressed group in the United States , and that 45 percent also believe Jefferson Davis would make a better president than Barack Obama. During the 2016 campaign, majorities of Trump voters believed that his run for the presidency represented America’s “last chance for survival,” and that Obama was born outside the United States .


Fox News has become the bastion of far-right conspiracy theory, which amounts to little more than good business, considering that 46 percent of Trump voters believe that Hillary Clinton’s emails include details regarding “Pizzagate” — the theory that the former secretary of state and first lady was running a pedophile sex ring from the back room of a Washington pizza parlor. Sixty-two percent of Trump voters believe that “millions of illegal immigrants” cast votes, presumably for Clinton, in the 2016 race. Brett Kavanaugh, some might recall, during his testimony in front of the Senate asserted that Christine Blasey Ford’s allegations that he had sexually assaulted her was orchestrated as “revenge for the Clintons.”



.....The radicalism, resistance to objective fact and comfort with violence on the far right undresses a few of the most prevalent bromides in mainstream reportage and commentary. First, “both sides” are not to blame for the dysfunction of American political culture. Anyone who says as much is willfully ignorant, and deserves permanent placement on mute. Democratic socialism, as much of Western Europe can attest, is not “extreme.” Even if it does strike some voters as overreaching, it is not remotely comparable with anything that the contemporary right espouses.


Second, liberals are not “to blame” for the antisocial politics of the far right. Even if some liberal commentators can seem smug, and even if American pop culture often reduces the heartland to flyover status, that would not justify, or logically explain, the right’s celebration of xenophobia, acceptance of paranoid rambling as substitution for historical knowledge, and comfort with the countless character defects and leadership deficiencies of Donald Trump.


Second, it is clear that anyone who still supports Donald Trump is unreachable. No amount of evidence or erudition will convince someone who still believes that Trump is “making America great again” while he battles the deep state, the Zionist cabal, and the liberal elites.




.....Arthur Miller, the great playwright, once said that millions of Americans are “aching for an Ayatollah.” The worship of a greedy and hedonistic self-promoter is odd vindication for Miller’s dark observation. Progressives must maintain their concentration on the quality and severity of the current threat to democracy. Many analysts describe Donald Trump as a danger to democratic norms. He is merely the weapon. The real danger comes from the weapons manufacturers – the millions of people aching for satisfaction of their ancient impulses for authority and control.


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JohnRussell
Professor Principal
1  seeder  JohnRussell    5 years ago

The most disappointing thing about the past three and a half years, to me, has been the extent to which some "moderates" and "independents" have been willing to normalize or accept Trump. But as bad as that is, the mdia is worse. We may very well likely see a very clsoe election in Nov 2020, because the media will insist on creating a "horse race" that is close, and constantly employing the language of "both sides" ism. 

 
 
 
Jack_TX
Professor Quiet
1.4  Jack_TX  replied to  JohnRussell @1    5 years ago
The most disappointing thing about the past three and a half years, to me, has been the extent to which some "moderates" and "independents" have been willing to normalize or accept Trump.

So "refusal to become hysterical" is disappointing for you. This is in spite of the fact that the only actual change to your life since Trump took office is your "feelings".

But as bad as that is, the mdia is worse. We may very well likely see a very clsoe election in Nov 2020, because the media will insist on creating a "horse race" that is close, and constantly employing the language of "both sides" ism. 

We may see a very close election in 2020 because the Democrats look likely to run an even more bullshit candidate than last time.

 
 
 
luther28
Sophomore Silent
2  luther28    5 years ago

Kind of what happens when you turn politics into a religion. This would appear to be the Jim Jones version, should they lose in 2020 they may be breaking out a different type of Kool-Aid.

 
 
 
JohnRussell
Professor Principal
2.1  seeder  JohnRussell  replied to  luther28 @2    5 years ago
45 percent of Trump supporters ,, believe Jefferson Davis would make a better president than Barack Obama.

The media rarely confronts facts such as this one. Someone is going to win this "war" , and while time and demographics can convince us that it won't be the Trumpsters, we cannot depend on simple biological deterioration of these people. They need to be opposed.

 
 
 
JohnRussell
Professor Principal
2.1.2  seeder  JohnRussell  replied to    5 years ago
biological deterioration

dying off eventually

 
 
 
Tacos!
Professor Guide
3  Tacos!    5 years ago
As candidate and president, Trump has already demolished standards of civility, worsened the racial and ethnic fractures of the American public

What nonsense. The president does not set the standard for my behavior. Trump is not responsible for anyone treating anyone else with disrespect. I say that because if Trump is the one responsible, it means the people are not.

Is Trump an adolescent, boorish ass sometimes? Absolutely. But if you're an ass, that's your responsibility, not his. If you really think that uncivil debate, racism, and general disrespect wouldn't be part of the fabric of our society without Donald Trump in the White House, then you haven't been paying attention for the last few decades. Or maybe you're just that partisan and you believe there is no limit to the things government controls and is responsible for.

I'll take a moment here to point out the absurd, partisan hypocrisy of all this. I can remember George Bush (the elder) calling for America to be a "kinder, gentler nation" and being roundly mocked for it by the political left. Now they want to pretend that they always preferred that.

If you don't like the way people talk and behave, don't curl up in a ball and blame Trump. Sadly, people do that kind of thing all the time. They say that injustice or poverty exist because of someone else they can't control - absolving themselves of responsibility for the remedy. Take action yourself. Be an example to others with your own civil and respectful behavior. Also, encourage or applaud the same in others.

(the above is directed at everyone, but not at any individual in particular)

 
 
 
Jack_TX
Professor Quiet
4  Jack_TX    5 years ago
The religious devotion of the Trump base to their secular god demonstrates that between 30 and 40 percent of Americans are unfit for participation in Democratic society.

Sooooo..... anybody who disagrees is "unfit for participation".   

That's not batshit at all.

I can't imagine how everybody doesn't want to convert immediately and swear their undying fealty to Bernie Sanders.

 
 

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