The practice described as “trigger warning” gets some bad press, and, in many cases, deservedly so. When La Trobe University decided to issue a caution at student union meetings before discussion of potentially “triggering” topics including spiders and slippery food, Andrew Bolt’s column wrote itself. In efforts at inclusion, today’s progressive can tend toward the exclusion of actual progress. If you can elect not to talk about a horrible thing, then the possibilities of you addressing that horrible thing are limited. When the political becomes entirely personalised, you may end up with a steering committee full of nice well-to-do white guys, the only people insufficiently traumatised to discuss social trauma.
The liberal hypocrisy of the “trigger warning” aside, it does have its uses. Like a parental advisory message or a viewers’ caution issued on the news prior to footage from a war zone, it can save people pain. Its absence, for example, before the election of Donald Trump seems to be cause for a minor boom in the US mental health sector. If only Nate Silver had run the numbers differently and offered a psephologist’s trigger warning, there would not now be so many craving the couches that a broken US health system fails to provide.
[What Donald Trump learned from Australian border policy]
Reports of the distress US citizens feel are plenty. I’m sure this pain is real. Folks who can afford to do so are engaging therapists, and celebrities speak of their physical responses to this troubling event. As funny as it is to see a young and self-involved star claim that Trump was the cause of her weight loss, such stories do indicate a true and deep panic. The other day on Facebook, for example, I saw an otherwise rational associate ask others if their nights had been beset by nightmares featuring Trump. Within minutes, she received accounts of dreams sufficient to keep Dr Freud busy for a decade.
We can laugh at America’s counselling culture, now also our culture, but perhaps still see that the middle-class language of “healing” indicates an anxiety that is more widespread. Many Americans, especially people of colour, have reason to be genuinely fearful of a guy likely to produce policies from his own damaged superego.
But, perhaps it’s the fact of Trump’s own apparent lack of self-control that terrifies people across classes. In his failure to conceal his own views, he fails to conceal the character of America.
Trump, let it be plainly said, is a vile toilet of a man and I wish him nothing but critical plumbing problems. But the fact that he is flushing out some uncomfortable truths about the character of his own nation is fascinating, even as it is horrible. When he countered Bill O’Reilly’s description of Putin as a “killer” with, “You think our country is so innocent?”, he was telling the sort of truth for which even a Fox News audience might need a trigger warning. The US is a brutal interventionist power. It has interfered in elections, supported genuinely fascist leaders and, through war and sanctions, taken the lives of millions in the Kissinger tradition. You’re just not supposed to talk about it.
[The Turnbull-Trump phone call transcript]
Iran’s Supreme Leader puts it best, “Trump is showing America’s true face”. If you want to understand this widespread US neurosis, don’t look to snowflake celebrities on the Trump weight-loss plan, but instead to Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. Donald Trump is a repulsive man, but he is not an aberration in the terms of many of his decisions. His repeated failure in office to conceal the motivations for his actions reveal, in particular, the foreign policy principles that have led the US hegemon for decades.
We can say with some confidence that Trump had little knowledge of international relations before becoming President. This stuff is very new to him, and he’s clearly excited by his Pentagon briefings. Like a first-year student who has just discovered the difference between the realist and liberal schools of thought, he can’t stop talking about the interesting stuff he just learned! It’s like, “so we’ve been helping kill Yemenis for a while now, and I should maybe just keep doing that?” I surmise that he’s repeating in public a version of what he’s just heard from his teachers in the military.
Trump is neither clever nor chic enough to have quickly become an effective hypocrite. He may gain the skill over time and learn to Obama-ise his language; a little bit less “kill the dangerous Muslims!” and a bit more “this is an important moment of American leadership”. At this instant, however, he is unable to tell the difference between the liberal justification for intervention and the realist, self-interested one. And this is because, often, there is no real difference. It takes a few years at school to justify the death of a Yemeni in apparently moral terms.
You can mourn Obama. You can think of him as a gentle leader whose fondness for drones was completely rational. Those who live in the regions under attack, however, might not care if the justification for the death of a child was liberal or brutal realist. And now many US citizens are faced with a “true face” also yet to learn the difference between those kinds of death. No wonder they need to see a shrink.
Again, Trump is vile etc. The way that he has so quickly diminished rational public speech and accelerated racist attack within his own nation is sickening. But the way in which he has shown the US itself to have a patient history of violence is what, I think, accounts in large part for the terror many citizens feel.
Until the guy learns to apologise for murder in the way previous administrations have done, liberal Americans will keep having nightmares. There should have been a trigger warning. Someone should have told us all to turn away if we did not care to see a true account of America’s brutal foreign policy. Then we could leave the leaders to resume their work of inflicting trauma on the world in peace.
No, I think you’ve misfired here, Helen. Trump’s response to Bill O’Reilly wasn’t shocking because it let slip the veil concealing the brutality of US foreign policy, but because it revealed that US foreign policy is about to lurch in a terrifying new direction. Containment is out. Confrontation is in.
Gotta agree Will, and Helen, you’ve missed the mark pretty far on this one.
Please, then, offer a defence of the American foreign policy tradition, and tell me how a “soft” liberal moment like this one can be justified, then. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pmWRlfKy4e4
A dead body is a dead body.
What? Your article wasn’t arguing that past US foreign policy has been brutal. If it had, what disagreement could possibly have been taken with that? No one here disputed it. I certainly didn’t. So, I don’t see why you’re demanding I now try to justify US foreign policy under its ‘soft’ liberal Democrat guise. I never said it was justifiable. You have just thrown a strawman argument back at me.
What I did say was that US foreign policy up to Obama was far less dangerous than what Trump appears to be embracing (i.e. the unhinged ‘civilizational war’ agendas of Bannon, Flynn and Mattis), and, I described that as a paradigm shift from containment to confrontation. Yes, both employ warfare, which no one disputes is brutal and morally repugnant, but the confrontation paradigm dramatically aggravates the risk of war, and that is orders of magnitude worse.
Your article argued that Trump’s reply to O’Reilly was significant because it so publicly tore the mask of liberal respectability away from brutal US foreign policy, Obama’s being its most hypocritical incarnation. My reply, was, in effect, “so what?” Far more significance lies, I said, in Trump’s public refusal to take O’Reilly’s bait and recommit the US to the containment of Russia, but instead delivering implicit approval to unilateral aggression (i.e. Putin’s yesterday, Trump’s tomorrow). As Trump tweeted about Iran last Friday, for example, “Iran is playing with fire — they don’t appreciate how ‘kind’ President Obama was to them. Not me!”
Yes, a dead body is a dead body. But the really shocking thing about Trump’s reply to O’Reilly is that it put the world on notice to be ready to see a hell of a lot more of them. So, yes, you can lecture the liberal left about the hypocrisy of its commitment to civilized society; that’s your prerogative. I’m just saying I think it’s hypocritical of the material left to be doing so, when things just got materially a heck of a lot more dangerous for civilization itself. There’s bigger fish to fry now, Helen.
So. In short your argument is that what I said was correct, but far too obvious to say, and generally beneath the rigorous demands you place on analysis, right?
Might I suggest the Washington Post, which will fulfil your need for hard international relations of the type, and say, over and again, that we must be terrified, because this is the most terrifying man.
I am not sure what you mean by “containment”, however. As many reputable accounts of the actions take in Libya attest, even by bread-and-butter realists, this was “contained” only by Madam Secretary’s self-interest.
In short, you are repeating the Clinton argument that “we can’t have this man with his finger on the button!” As though there is any reason to suspect that a single finger is ever on the button, or that Trump’s ill-defined ideology will create more of a mess than that which has occurred by means of path dependency before.
Still. Knock yourself out. I am sure calling me stupid and naive is thrilling.
Here you are constantly saying that the personal isn’t the political, and yet the moment you’re politically queried you accuse it of being personal. Preposterous!
Will. Now you’re just pulling things out of your bot-bot.
I am yet to see you make a case against the article. Which clearly claims throughout that the deep personal pain that many US citizens feel is the result of a big reveal, particularly in foreign policy matters.
You don’t disagree that the US has been a brutal interventionist power (although you do hold, unlike many foreign policy analysts, that the US foreign policy path can be meaningfully changed by a President. You have no truck with the idea of path dependency, apparently. I recommend that you look to Eisenhower for some schooling on this matter.)
So as you’re not disagreeing with anything that I’ve actually said, and are simply urging me to join the chorus of people uncritically criticising Trump so that we can return to a nice old-fashioned brutal interventionist, I can only conclude that you are being personal.
If you were to make a single criticism of what I have argued, I would consider it a difference of opinion. But you really are carrying on like a pork chop and just saying, “WE MUST ALL AGREE THAT TRUMP IS THE ABSOLUTE WORST AT ALL COSTS”.
I don’t think we can say that on foreign policy at this time. I really don’t. I’m not the only person, and not the only leftist, saying that Trump’s simple-minded isolationism could deliver some unexpectedly good results. I don’t think I’m the only one who thinks there is some value in a clear and naive declaration of the brutal history of US foreign policy.
“Civilisation itself” has already been imperilled. How many bodies do you require dead before you believe this, too?
So, destroying Libya, arming extremists in Syria, indiscriminate drone assasinations and inciting NATO into needless provocation of Russia constitutes containment, as opposed to confrontation?
Hi No Chiefs. That’s the risk of brevity in comments. It’s very easy to misconstrue their intent. What I simply meant was this. The paradigm of containment (of the USSR/Russia and China) has been the foundation of US foreign policy since WWII – hence NATO, Korean War, Vietnam War, etc. That stayed in place, but got added to with neocon regime-change interventionism in the Middle East from the 90s on. Trump’s signaled that he’s not interested either interventionism or containment any more. Hence he has no criticism of Putin “taking back” Crimea or facing up to NATO.
He (and Steve Bannon) are all about confronting Islam (because it’s secret purpose is to destroy Christian America), confronting China (because it’s destroying America’s economy), and confronting anyone else who wants to harm the US in any way (illegal Mexican immigrants, terrorism-prone refugees, etc).
Yes, containment doesn’t prevent wars, but it is about avoiding them. Confrontation, on the other hand . . . . well, if it’s unavoidable, it makes striking first very much more attractive for everyone. That’s why it’s so terrifying.
I’m not convinced that you actually know what you’re on about.
MzRaz, some good points amidst the logorrhea but you really,rilly need to pare it down.
The first paragraph was OK and the rest added nothing except colour & (sluggish) movement.
Maybe. But you’re not arguing it. You’re just virtue signalling.
Thanks for reinforcing my initial concern.
So, destroying Libya, arming extremists in Syria, indiscriminate drone assasinations and directing NATO towards needless provocation of Russia constitutes containment, as opposed to confrontation?
In the U.S., as here, the debate relating to asylum seekers and immigration is contained within a dichotomy between a ‘compassionate’ stance which which elicits warm fuzzy feelings in liberals verses a ‘tough’ stance which makes nationalists feel secure. No one in the mainstream media is allowed to mention the ongoing and expanding U.S. imperial war that is the primary factor in displacing these people. I heard a 10 minute interview with an Obama apologist on Lateline last nignt that did not even mention Libya. This is an outlet that is supposed to be left-biased. Not only in the U.S., but also here, you can discuss how sympathetic you are for refugees or how Trump makes you feel but whatever you do, don’t mention the war.
Well, Razer keeps telling us we should set about “smashing the system” rather than “holding the centre”. Yet she complains when the US “smashed the system” in Libya, Iraq etc.
And now we’ll get to see what all this “smashing of the system” brings to us at home…no doubt a Marxist paradise.
My comment suggests opening a public discussion about U.S. imperialism via the mainstream media and you are off on your hysterical tangent once again about violent military overthrow. Damien, the centre is extreme – extreme in its military activity and extreme in its complicit silence.
This is the worst take on Helen’s arguments I’ve ever seen. Did you think this was clever?
Hay how come Razer the Grasp Failer wrote a book about looking for quality dick when she thinks rape is bad?
Lol. Grasp Failer. 🙂
Yes. The argument that any person who seeks significant political change also supports the invasion of sovereign nations by the hegemon cannot be answered.
Ah No Chiefs! If only the ABC WERE left biased, but their guest list on current affairs programs suggests not. Just look at Q&A: when it has a token leftist on the panel, nine times out of ten it’s a foreign artist of some kind touring Australia.
The worrying thing for me is the ABC is still believed to be leftist when it’s too afraid of budget cuts and all those baby boomers to be anything of the sort.
I agree wholeheartedly. It shouldn’t be necessary for the public breast-beating anytime one considers an upside to the Trump stage show, but it is: Trump is a dog, etc.
However… that said, having such a raw amateur crashing into a carefully constructed and sanctimonious institution like the White House is pure popcorn stuff. Having the POTUS openly telling Fox viewers that the US acts in the same vein as the bad guys when it suits them would have filled adult diapers all over the country. Making your barber the Undersecretary for the Interior, or whatever, may terrify the the professional classes around the world, but it also tears away the fabric shielding how this stuff is usually done. This guy is a blockhead in the same way that Obama was classy, but who will turn out to be more transparent, authentic or trustworthy in the end? This is also true even if your only trust in him is the certain knowledge that he will screw everything up.
To those who argue that this is not remotely funny because if he screws up badly enough he’ll take out the rest of us with him – my answer is it was always thus. An intelligent president like JFK had his finger paused above the button during the Cuban crisis, and probably had the intent to press it if need be. Less intelligent presidents than JFK have played with the world’s safety over perceived US strategic interests – we are all hostage to fortune. Talk about trigger warnings.
Obama was handed a sh*t sandwich & I’m sure didn’t like what he was doing. It’s easy to criticise from a safe distance but you need to walk in his shoes.
On the other hand I think Trump would enjoy some carnage as long as he wins.
A dead body is a dead body. And has no opinion on the amount of moral pain that caused their death. Nor do I.
Pretty good, Helen. Pity about the title. And I comment think Chump’s reply to O’Reilly was more a brain fart produced by his determination to always have the last word. The truth or otherwise of the comment was purely incidental.