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Donald Trump, Coronavirus Hero

  

Category:  News & Politics

Via:  john-russell  •  4 years ago  •  7 comments

Donald Trump, Coronavirus Hero
Many white men feel that their gender and race has been vilified, says the sociologist Arlie Russell Hochschild. Their economic prospects are bad, and American culture tells them that their gender is too. So they’ve turned to Trump as a type of folk hero, one who can restore their sense of former glory. Exposing themselves and others to the coronavirus is part of that heroism.

S E E D E D   C O N T E N T




The far-right group Super Happy Fun America protests in Boston on October 18. (Mark Peterson / Redux)


.......Some   82 percent   of Republicans approve of Trump’s coronavirus response—a higher percentage than before the president was diagnosed with the virus. This is despite the fact that more than 220,000 Americans have died, and virtually every public-health expert,   including those   who have worked for Republican administrations, says the president has performed abysmally.





In fact, this tendency to approve of one’s own side might become self-reinforcing. If someone doesn’t support Trump and all that he does, they might stop considering themselves a Republican, and thus stop showing up as one in surveys, says Robb Willer, a sociologist at Stanford University.


..... A prominent scholar of the American right believes Trump support among men, in particular, is rooted in something more psychological.

Many white men feel that their gender and race has been vilified, says the sociologist Arlie Russell Hochschild. Their economic prospects are bad, and American culture tells them that their gender is too. So they’ve turned to Trump as a type of folk hero, one who can restore their sense of former glory. Exposing themselves and others to the coronavirus is part of that heroism.

Or as Kurtis told me when I asked him how he felt about Trump getting the coronavirus, “Trump’s willing to accept that risk to win for the American people. And Joe Biden is sitting in his basement.”

Hochschild describes her subjects’ deep story in a metaphor of a long line of Americans standing on a hill, waiting to get over the top, to the American dream. But as they stand there, tired and eager, they see that certain people are cutting the line in front of them. Women, African Americans, and immigrants are getting ahead, boosted by the government and its affirmative-action programs. As Hochschild writes, they feel “your money is running through a liberal sympathy sieve you don’t control or agree with.”






Many white men, in particular, feel “shoved back in line,” she writes. Unable to draw confidence from their wealth, which is in many cases nonexistent, or their jobs, which are steadily being moved offshore, they turn to their pride in being American. “Anyone who criticizes America—well, they’re criticizing you,” she writes.


Trump, meanwhile, has allowed his male supporters “to feel like a good moral American and to feel superior to those they considered ‘other’ or beneath them,” she writes. Trump might not always represent his supporters’ economic self-interest, but he feeds their emotional self-interest. Trump is, in essence, “the identity politics candidate for white men.”

For a new book, Hochschild is talking with people in eastern Kentucky, another heavily conservative area. One trend she’s noticed is local white men’s lost sense of pride, and how they turn to Trump to restore it. To them, Trump seems to say, “I’m taking the government back and having it serve you,” she told me. “I’m your rescuer.”

In Strangers, some of the Louisianans Hochschild interviewed were upset that women were competing for men’s jobs and that the federal government “wasn’t on the side of men being manly.” Some of her male Kentucky interviewees, many of whom have a family history in coal, feel even more strongly that men’s rightful place in the world is slipping away.


Men in this community, she told me, “are starved for a sense of heroism. They don’t feel good about themselves. They feel like they haven’t done as well as their fathers, that they’re on a downward slope.” Coal jobs have evaporated, and liberals, they feel, are making enemies of white men. “Their source of heroism, of status, is humming; it’s fragile,” Hochschild says. This analysis comports with some polls of Trump voters. An Atlantic/PRRI poll conducted in 2016  found that  Trump supporters were more likely than Hillary Clinton supporters to feel that society “punishes men just for acting like men.

”As far as their leader’s pandemic response, Hochschild’s Kentuckians feel that Trump is doing the best he can, and as good of a job as possible under the circumstances. Though her subjects are worried about catching COVID-19, many see it as one of the unfortunate but acceptable risks of life. Confronting the coronavirus is a way to show stoicism and to feel heroic again. “I’ve heard it said that ‘This is hitting older people, and I’m an older person, but it’s really important to get back to work, and I’ll take the hit,’” Hochschild said. Her subjects think they can handle the virus just like Trump handles everything. “He’s a two-hamburger-a-meal guy,” she said. “He’s kind of a bad boy, and they relate to that.”


This part of Trump resonated with Kurtis, who told me he likes that the president “comes off as a man. He doesn’t come off as weak.”   Trump’s strength   is a benefit in the foreign-policy arena, Kurtis feels.






Joe Biden doesn’t give these men the same sense of restored pride. They feel the Democratic nominee is a   Trojan horse   liberal women and minorities are using to advance their own interests. Biden doesn’t present himself as a defender of white men, and they don’t see him that way.

Hochschild sees her new work as an extension of the deep story she began probing in Strangers. In that book, her interview subjects found their guy in Trump. Now her interviewees are coming to realize their hero is surrounded by enemies. He’s battling evil forces such as the liberal media, the impeachment, the Democrats in Congress, and the lawyers who indicted his advisers. But Trump is fighting all of those enemies—the left, the deep state, the pandemic—and he’s fighting them for his constituents.

The final chapter of this story, she said, is Trump becoming an almost Christlike figure to these men. “‘Look how I suffer,’” is how Trump presents himself, Hochschild told me. “‘I am suffering for you.’ And they say, ‘Thank you.’”


Kurtis wishes people would see the side of Trump that appeals to him: No apologies, what you see is what you get. Trump speaks the way people do at a barbecue, not at a dissertation defense. Sure, Kurtis reasons, the pandemic has killed a lot of people, but what was Trump supposed to do? Besides, the left called him a xenophobe for shutting down travel from China and for dubbing it the “China virus.”

He is tired of “white men [being] looked at as the cause of everybody’s problems. I’m not gonna apologize that I’m white. I shouldn’t have to go around feeling like I have this great debt of reparations.”





It’s been good to have a leader like Trump, he added, who takes no B.S. and is there to kick ass. “I’m proud to be an American again,” Kurtis said.

Other experts’ research generally supports Hochschild’s thesis. “People look down on us, and now is our time to win,” says Jonathan Metzl, a professor of sociology and medicine at Vanderbilt University, summarizing what he has found is the attitude of some Trump voters. Given that the pandemic has   disproportionately   killed people of color, some white Trump supporters may write it off as a “them problem, not an us problem,” he says.


Trump’s supposed heroism and sacrifice aren’t typically the reason his supporters offer when asked about his pandemic performance. Other explanations—the freedom to not wear a mask, the corporate tax rate, disdain for the leftward shift in the Democratic party—are more easily quotable.

But the central wound remains:   “Ban men”   is a socially acceptable thing to say. And men who attend Trump’s rallies sometimes tell journalists that they’re willing to risk their lives to show up for Trump. “ If I die , I die. We got to get this country moving,” these men tell reporters. Or: “ If I catch   COVID, that’s the consequences of my actions, so I’m willing to take that risk and have a good time today.” They’re bravely confronting COVID-19, just like the president.




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JohnRussell
Professor Principal
1  seeder  JohnRussell    4 years ago
So they’ve turned to Trump as a type of folk hero, one who can restore their sense of former glory.

There is a great expression of incongruity exposed when white men say their support of Trump is a return to manly honor and self respect.

How can one regain or express honor and self respect by identifying with someone who has lied cheated , and stole all his life ?  He's also soft, and ruled by flattery, his own narcissism, and the groveling of his underlings.  This inspires self respect? 

 
 
 
Kavika
Professor Principal
2  Kavika     4 years ago

If this article is accurate thank goodness I'm a Red man and don't require an overweight, bad combover, babbling idiot to identify with.

 
 
 
Buzz of the Orient
Professor Expert
3  Buzz of the Orient    4 years ago
"Trump becoming an almost Christlike figure to these men."

A good explanation for why Trump supporters deem that he can do no wrong, and even if they see that he HAS done wrong, they refuse to admit it.

 
 
 
Greg Jones
Professor Participates
4  Greg Jones    4 years ago

More racist psycho-babble. The ongoing spew of negativity against Trump proves his detractors are literally paralyzed with fear of his being reelected....they protest way too much

 
 
 
Sister Mary Agnes Ample Bottom
Professor Guide
4.1  Sister Mary Agnes Ample Bottom  replied to  Greg Jones @4    4 years ago
The ongoing spew of negativity against Trump proves his detractors are literally paralyzed with fear of his being reelected....they protest way too much

No fear here, m'dear.  Oh, except for that little matter of 227,000 dead people.

But carry on if you must.

Consider Trump dumped 2020!

 
 
 
JohnRussell
Professor Principal
4.2  seeder  JohnRussell  replied to  Greg Jones @4    4 years ago

I think there is a sincere attempt to understand those who claim to be honorable people yet support a serial liar, crook, bigot, moron , and cheat. 

 
 
 
Split Personality
Professor Guide
4.3  Split Personality  replied to  Greg Jones @4    4 years ago

If they were paralyzed, how could they protest so much?

Come on man....

 
 

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