The question whether Donald Trump is a
political idiot savant or Jerzy Kosiński’s, Chance the Gardner –
has been much debated over the last four years. His niece, the
psychologist Mary Trump, describes him as both a malignant
narcissist and the product of an abusive father who instilled in
him an almost feral instinct to achieve dominance at the expense
of any who crossed his path. She suggests that his sociopathy is
the logical consequence of a cruel and shallow childhood, where
his need to be emotionally rewarded was never met by his
sociopathic father - a man who favored white supremacy and
racist ideology.
We all sort of guessed that.
But the question for which we still seek an answer is why one
half of our country follows Trump as if he were a god. Why does
he still hold at least 1/3 of the Republican Party in his thrall
even if what he’s selling acts directly against the
self-interests of his self-ordained disciples? Trump’s
renunciation of mask wearing during an epidemic, his use of the
presidency to create a false narrative of reality, and his
chronic abuse of power, make him an enemy of those who look to
government to solve societal problems such as crime, poverty,
and social unrest. But Trump is an apostate from democracy. His
tacit approval of white supremacy and his attempts to politicize
our armed forces for his own political ends makes him an
enthusiast of fascism. And his transformation of government
itself into a vehicle for his own organized crime makes him a
reverse Robin Hood: He steals from the poor to give to the rich.
Donald Trump has taken Friedrich Engels’s definition of False
Consciousness and made it into a fatuous reality TV show. Engels
described this process of propaganda as the deliberate effort to
mislead the working class with a series of ideas, values, and
stigmas that conceal the actual exploitation of it by its ruling
class. The plutocrats of our society cultivate notions like
“upward mobility”, “liberty”, and “the makers and the takers” to
imbue a highly stratified society like ours with the notion that
this upper class will preserve the lower class’s access to
prosperity, justice, and security. Republicans have taken
ownership of memes like “tough on crime”, a “self-made man”, and
“the war against terrorism”, to instill in lower classes the
idea that continued management by Republicans is a bulwark
against mob rule.
The reality that Donald Trump is the opposite of a self-made man
is unthinkable to the pipe-fitter in Ohio or the electrician in
Michigan. The Republican Party sells “dignity-adjacent” to those
it exploits. The fact that Mitch McConnell - the Republican
Senate Majority Leader - represents the interests of one of the
poorest, least educated, least upwardly mobile states in America
doesn’t pierce this corporate veil of conservative propaganda.
Perhaps it is because it presents a sort of simulated reality
behind which lies a deeply eroded constituency of aimless souls.
We live in a simulacrum of reality where half of the country has
taken the blue pill, and the other half the red; where what lies
beneath is “the desert of the real”. We actually call what has
slowly crept into our culture over the last 20 years: Reality
TV. It is a form of entertainment for lotus eaters. Some can
remember a past where the pursuit of ideas like equality and
freedom from oppression gave life nobility, dignity. But in the
simulacrum where half of our population now resides, a life of
nobility is defined as though through a looking glass.
Islamic terrorists are to the 21st Century what Jews were to the
20th Century in Nazi Germany; obsession with them conceals the
business of business – the desert of the real, where the only
things left moving are the drilling rigs bobbing their
alien-like heads as they extract old energy from dead realities
to fuel a somnambulist reality of today.
I hope that November 3rd , 2020 has brought back democracy in a
form that we all can agree upon. A democracy wherein religion
will finally repudiate the very crimes for which it was intended
to proscribe. A democracy where pluralism is a virtue that
brings new ideas from the cornucopia of disparate human
cultures. And a deeply held humility that acknowledges both the
grandeur and the limitations of our own view of life. We must
somehow bring Donald Trump’s disciples back to reality, back
from the simulacrum that has sucked the life out of them,
because there are far better ways to see the world, to be
self-made, and to have dignity and purpose. |