Because your correspondent currently has a beast of an insomnia, turning night into day, he was fortunate enough to watch the Trump administration’s late act, in which reality fused seamlessly with every satire — the now historic Four Seasons Total Landscaping press conference.
As Trump issued and rescinded tweets about the presser’s time and place, pre-event set up footage filled the screen with a ratty low slung red brick building behind a chain link fence, all squeezed between a sex shop and a crematorium.
There were no words. This was going to be goooood.
Especially when, just as the thing was about to begin an hour late, word came through that AP and all media had called it for Biden, and a dozen journalists turned on their heel and ran to their cars.
By the time Rudy Giuliani, in his top flight dark-blue suit, came to the microphone in front of a garage door covered with laser-printed Trump signs, the dignity of the event was all but irrecoverable.
Giuliani had nothing new to offer in announcing the full press of the legal case, something made painfully obvious by the trio of Republican poll watchers he had produced to speak, and who had to be coached at the microphone into saying anything more than that they had to stand six feet away, or that they weren’t allowed in, none of which was necessarily suspicious.
The killing blow came when the journos informed him that the race had been called for Biden, and he managed to summon up enough oomph to make a supplication to heaven: “Ohhhhh the media called it! The media!” In the vestibule of Trump Tower or, hell, the White House, it would have looked impressive. Here it was too close to what was going on inside.
Desperate to stay close to Trump’s diminishing power, “America’s mayor” had ended up spruiking the testimony of some bewildered people in a car park between the porno and the pyre.
Since one of the featured GOP poll watchers turned out to be a perennial local government candidate who served three years in prison after being convicted for sexually exposing himself to children*, it all seemed apt. Whichever staffer responded to Giuliani’s venue request — “somewhere near an I-95 exit, so I don’t have to spend any goddam time in Philly!” — by checking Google maps and assuming there was a five-star hotel in an industrial park had done the world a favour.
What had begun in 2015 on a gold elevator in a marble tower before a crowd of paid C-list models was now stumbling over itself in an oil-soaked yard with a mob of “deplorables” in Joe Biden fright masks yelling about George Soros.
It was like the reveal in the Matrix: the gold tower and the beautiful people peel away, and America is just lawsuits, crazies, yelling in a decrepit suburb, from sea to stagnant sea.
Trump’s loss and his desperate bid to take this to the end is pushing the right to the sort of gangster movie choice, where you leave the life for “witness protection” — a la former candidate Chris Christie who is now a TV talking head on the US ABC network, about as close to anonymous relocation as you get — or you go down with the Don, figuring that there’s no life outside da life.
They stayed when it looked like the result might be 273-265, or 270-268, or even a tie, and the Don might come through. Now Smilin’ Joe’s at 309, and three states need to be flipped back, and the chances are nil.
You have to be impressed with the fidelity of those sticking with Trump. Twenty years after Downfall mash-up memes became tiresome, their pure scenario comes along, the one in which you could take the words of Downfall and put them across a Trump presser, or Stalingrad at the Four Seasons.
Systematically, the loyalist pundits are taking the wildest, evidenceless internet accusations — of 100,000-plus votes suddenly appearing, etc — and claiming that “they must be investigated”, while taking every conventional slip in counting as a result-changing event.
They haven’t yet touched the best one, yelled out by pro-Trump crowds at counting centres that media crews unloading their camera cases were smuggling in sheaves of fresh votes. That’s the point at which the vote conspiracy touches the QAnon conspiracy; the common aura of a mass, world-enveloping elite control, dedicated only to absolute evil and power for its own sake.
The paranoid style has become so hypertrophic in American politics, because the land of promise looks more like an exit ramp off the I-95 than Trump Tower, and for that the inhabitants of the latter cannot be blamed — “this is America” — by the citizens of the former, for sucking the life out of them. Something else must be found to fill that gap, and since the gap is so vast so too must be the conspiracy.
Now, in their desperation, the right (including our own Miranda Devine) are going for a recycled story by a Reno intelligence products grifter named Dennis Montgomery, who has ripped off US intelligence with fake surveillance tech, and twice spruiked whistleblowing on “deep state” software called “Hammer” and “Scorecard”, alleged to change thousands of votes in a flash.
Nothing mass TV can produce comes close to the invention and fluidity by which the Q narrative combines multiple strands of political conspiracy with crime networks, mad science, today’s celeb headlines and numerology. Nor for that matter, the overreach of the Russiagate theories, which mirrored it politically but differed stylistically (conforming to the demands of a college audience for structural consistency; Q is like wilder Stephen King — just one weird-ass thing after another until it is stitched together somehow).
In making their choice to go with the conspiracy, the real elites — around News Corp, the Republican party, the cashed-up think tanks and lobby groups — have doubled down on the absurd notion that Biden’s voters are the elites, despite somehow being a greater mass than Trump’s masses.
One can feel, in their writing and media appearances, their dark thrill at the audacity of it. They’ve toyed with it for years and now they’re going there: de facto saying that any victory by progressives must be illegitimate, and thus, the record will eventually be corrected.
It’s the same feeling that appears in pre-war narratives of those on the right who moved from conservatism to throw in their support for fascism: the sense of energy and relief that they no longer have to couch their arguments in supplicant utilitarian terms, but can assert the simple rightness of the right, a value that transcends even loyalty to the United States itself.
Trump’s three-state loss has deprived us of the ultimate showdown, whereby a Republican state legislature voids its state vote on grounds of corruption, selects Republican electors and the electoral college re-elects Trump. (Republican Senator Lindsay Graham, when asked about this on Sean Hannity’s Fox show, said that all options should be left on the table.)
Indeed, this was what several Republican senators were preparing for before the election, rehearsing constitutional literalism by reminding the public that the US is a “republic of laws”, with no founding mention of universal suffrage, thus preparing the ground for a literal constitutionalist coup.
That result, which remains an outside possibility, would oblige the armed forces to follow the letter of the law and support the legal coup — or support democracy by taking an arbitrary, audacious act, breaking the law. The likelihood has become remote, this time.
Equally remote is the likelihood that this democratic fistula will be fixed anytime soon. With the country likely to be culturally divided in a way that is deeper, in some ways, than class division, one would have to presume that a real crisis for American democracy is in the future.
In a carpark in outer Philadelphia, the desert of the real is revealed, the right’s white knights have white nights, and the sleeplessness of reason produces monsters.
Thrilling to read and oh so darkly comic analysis, and I think you’re correct: the very worst is yet to come for this broken country.
And it’s probably worth mentioning, that the name of the adult entertainment store, just across the road from Four Seasons Landscaping, is Fantasy Island. Which seems appropriate, since in the car park there was a sea of media, who surrounded Giuliani and his band of grifters, as Rudy tried to spin the deranged fantasy, that Trump really did win the election.
And that Trump is persisting with his claims, once again emphasises just how genuinely thick he is. There’s two main options. Firstly, he just doesn’t understand, that because the Democrats took coronavirus seriously, and a lot of their supporters voted by mail, there was always going to be late swings to Biden. Or secondly, he’s following what he thinks is some sort of master plan. On the lines of: don’t worry about losing the vote, because we can just claim that the Democrats cheated, then enough people will believe that they’ve cheated, so we can have the Biden crime family thrown in jail and then our lovely new Supreme Court will award the election to us.
Unfortunately, that involves the people that matter, believing a range of unbelievable propositions. Such as, the generally Republican election supervisors in swing states, decided to commit massive electoral fraud, for the benefit of the Democrats. Or that Republican observers weren’t allowed anywhere near the counts, when live feeds of the counting process, showed Republican observers inside the counting centres.
So, essentially what President-Reject Trump is doing, is not proving that he is the rightful president, but instead, he’s giving yet more excellent examples of why he shouldn’t be.
Less Red Queen before breakfast than “…that involves the people that matter, believing a range of unbelievable..” but those people believe in the green crinkly stuff and abhor & eschew the red.
Will the last human to escape the nonessential nation please pull the auto-destruct and save the rest of the world from the death throes.
Wonderful imagery. The defining characteristic of 21st century ‘Merica is that Matrix schizophrenia. The uncanny surreality of the Simulacrum. I wonder, though, if the mass media’s shift over thelkast week is a hugely optimistic sign? The way the Jake Tapperesque ‘celebrants of the tenuous marriage between material and abstract reality’, with only their words to seal that union, are finally making that diabolical duality impossible? The way Turnbull called out Paul Kelly – ‘Yes, I DO dare, Paul’ – making it impossible for that (too good a thinker, writer) to avoid making a choice at last to choose ‘one single reality’, not straddle both.
I am hugely optimistic, when even Fox News anchors are cutting away from McEveney’s b/s in real time now. Calling it out. Refusing to keep the Matric viable. It feels like poetry is becoming possible again.
And Guy: I can’t express enough my admiration for yours over the last desperately surreal years. In the end all we have are words, to connect the world we know, to the world of others, in a way that makes them more or the same one. Our pets…we always under-rate our poets, but they’re the last line. I think the CNN’s of the last weeks have…sung.
Nice words of tribute JR.
Thanks Beth. I think Guy is the rare kind of writer, for whom fidelity to words and their secular-sacred role in connecting humanity’s abstract and material world’s is more more important than anything else: success, money, fame, political fraternity…I suspect friendships, maybe even love. I’m surprised he’s lasted this long at the current iteration of Crikey. These political pieces are safe enough, but the gender and identity politics obsessions now obtaining hereabouts – and the smelly little orthodox line apparently demanded as a publishing bar – are problematic to someone of his honesty. It’s a lonely life to be a poet, I think. But our poets are the first and last line of our epistemological defence. To suppress them is to commit sentient suicide.
Someone’s done a ‘Downfall’ parody on the election results:
https://youtu.be/Jj7P4FUxu7k
personally, I think the parodies have gone too far.
The producers of ‘the Downfall’ should do one complaining about the parodies.
there was a parody about the parodies, a while back before Trump
It was said, re Il Duce, that it was impossible to satirise buffoonery.
Howevert, with Ill Douche it is more like autogamy than parthenogenesis.
Or so I desperately hope!
I though I saw Borat amongst the crowd.