Throughout the political career of President Donald Trump, the mainstream — and that is most of us — have repeatedly declared him finished with each fresh outrage.
This goes all the way back to the presidential campaign, and the Access Hollywood tape. Remember that? Trump caught on tape saying he could get away with groping women. It seemed unimaginable that his campaign could continue. But it did.
Through the last four amazing years, we’ve developed some understanding of Trump’s capacity to transform politics rather than be destroyed by it. But we’re never fully on top of the transformational process.
When the ragtag army of far-rightists invaded the Capitol yesterday — a mix of delusional MAGA-head Trump worshippers and ideological fascists who regard him as a useful buffoon — and Trump gave them a peekabo endorsement, everyone was in agreement that that was it, it’s over, dust off the 25th amendment, re-impeach, etc.
And then that evening the Republicans trooped back in and nearly 150 of them voted to reject certification of an election in which there is no evidence of statistically significant electoral fraud. Simultaneously, a YouGov poll was released showing that 45% of Republicans, and 20%-plus of the whole country thought the Capitol invasion was justified.
One suspects that such support is a mix of hard-right fervour about an election stolen by “woke communists”, and a touch of Jeffersonian anarchy, the belief that the whole system needs a real shake up now and again.
One has to admit that one’s outrage at such events is dependent on who’s doing it. If a bunch of actual yippies had managed to breach the defences of these stone halls in the 1960s, I’d look at it with admiration and a chuckle, and the same would have been true during, say, the refusal of the Republican Senate to confirm an Obama Supreme Court judge in 2016. Gutsy, I would have thought.
So too, many will be seeing the invasion as a salutary smack on the nose against a progressive “elite” who just won all three parts of executive-legislative government.
It’s not the first time the Capitol’s been targeted. President Washington had to lead an army to put down the Whisky Rebellion in 1794; the British burnt it in 1814; the Confederacy spent four years trying for it; Puerto Rican liberation fighters staged a shooting there on 1954. Further out, federal troops and Southern state troops squared off during school integration in the 1950s.
There is far more real division within US federalism than in our pallid rail-gauge version, or in unitary technocratic post-war European governments.
But the great switcheroo here — compared to recent times — is that this is coming from the right not the left, after decades in which the US right has sought to establish itself as the party of order, virtue and anti-fanaticism, and seeking to marginalise progressivism as an un-American minority cause. That worked well enough until 2008, when the polarities switched suddenly.
The final collapse of mass industry coincided with the rise of the knowledge economy, for which progressivism — a devotion to equality, scorning inherited tradition — is simply the hardwired worldview. Many of the hard right’s cells are ideologues whose commitment pre-dates the cultural-political crisis that began in 2008.
But that crisis has provided the context in which… well, in which nearly half of all Republicans approve the lethal storming of their own temples of power. Such political force sits atop a founding contradiction — that of a revolution of British men and women, claiming the rights they saw as an expression of an English ethnos, creating a new country founded in documents of abstract and universal rights.
Conservatism is usually fealty to an indivisible ethnos; in the US it is also fidelity to a revolution’s principles. The country’s history is a series of civil wars within those dual conceptions, which is why the myth of mass electoral fraud catches on so easily.
The progressive coalition that powered Biden to victory discards unitary tradition, calls on multiple ideas of citizenship; such a sundering, for some, ungrounds life to such a degree that it can only be made sense of as a concrete conspiracy by others.
Anarchy — with Trump as a sort of gonzo Jefferson — is the path to restored order. Congress can be invaded in the name of the higher congress being sought. Over the decades, north Euopeaness (whiteness) has replaced Englishness, but the defining “others” (Latin and Black cultures) remain the same.
Trump therefore may be finished this time, because he has ceased to bridge these contradictory expressions of the American right. Any amount of vulgarity could be brought into political life — modern US politics began with Andrew Jackson’s attacks on the northern elites in the 1820s, and his own vulgar style. Trump’s revolution was to abolish the division between elite style and US popular culture; Jerry Springer-style reality TV as new national discourse.
That’s one thing. But if you’re going to foment insurrection, you better make sure you have ’em by the balls, so hearts and minds will follow. In psychoanalytic and political terms, pussy-grabbers soon find they have hold of nothing at all.
When an empire reaches the limits of expansion, it disintegrates. Imperial power and wealth is based on the expropriation of the wealth and enslavement of the labour of the conquered.
To begin with the legions are manned by a tough and ruthless local peasantry, utilising world beating organisation and military technologies – but the process of conquest devours the local peasantry. So as the empire grows it must use firstly the colonial peasants and latterly to hire mercenaries from across the frontier to protect the imperial borders.
Each new conquest adds to the toll of innocent blood and stiffens the resistance of those nations without the imperial boundary. Each new military adventure costs more and yields less in slaves and booty.
In the imperial capital sloth and luxury and corruption are the rule for the aristos while for the proles, the flow of wealth from conquest has dried up; misery, illness and debt-bondage are now their lot. In the provinces, ever greater force must be applied to prevent revolt, while resistance must be repressed with ever greater cruelty and terror.
Ultimately, the empire runs up against nations it cannot conquer and must pay with gold for both protection and for luxuries it cannot produce and which the rulers feel they cannot live without. It is then that the frayed bonds of authority start to snap…
“So as the empire grows it must use firstly the colonial peasants and latterly to hire mercenaries from across the frontier to protect the imperial borders.”
Indeed. Which is, of course, where the Diggers come in. We really should be asking the US for a sizeable contribution to Anzac Day celebrations and also to the renovations to the Australian War Memorial; “We’re not going to take it any more!”.
If only some enterprising publisher were to put this out in Ladybird book form.
Two good pieces in a row Guy! And yes, ‘There is far more real division within US federalism than in our pallid rail-gauge version’, that is why that country is named ‘United’ states after all. If it were truly united it would have no reason to assert that it was united in its name, as is the case for UK and was for the USSR etc.
I’m not so sure the division is so much left/right, progressive/conservative; but I agree about the recent rise and rise of fascism, not 1920s fascism, but a more insidious version creeping up on us. And people in their respective bunkers are not noticing, listening carefully to the disaffected nor addressing the problems they face. As we see in Australia both major parties are owned, managed and directed by vested corporate interests. Is it any wonder that blue collar workers in Queensland followed that lead (it’s all about me and my interests and greed) and voted in a party with a vacuous leader whose only objective is to be in power? What choice do we have given that Labor’s current leader has effectively affirmed the radical right in the liberal party narrative of lie, and keep lying? I refer to his recent statement of ditching Labor’s policy on franking credits. Biden might not be as much a policy free zone as Morrison, but he sure hasn’t a policy manifesto like Bernie Sanders would have. Covid offered a catalyst to break out of us going down the same gurglar, but I think the US with Biden and Australia with either twiddle dumb or dumber in power will continue to not notice, not listen, not change. We will ‘snap back’ alright, back to a pathway to fascism or feudal capitalism.
The question we all should be searching for answers is why are western ‘democracies’ in such trouble? Why is the rule of law (or more correctly put the lawlessness) as applying to the executive arm of government such an issue? How is it that major political parties can, it would seem, be easily taken over by individual zealot radicals such as Trump (or in Oz like Latham), or be infiltrated and taken over by religious cults (like what is happening currently in the Liberal Party in Australia)? And what is it about those democracies that are not in crisis, like NZ or Germany?
Western democracies are ‘in trouble’ because their economic models are terminally flawed at core. The material impossibility of eternally sustained ‘growth’ capitalism – and if global warming isn’t enough empirical evidence to alert us to it, nothing can be – means that there does not exist a democratic model that will work.
There’ll only be un-democratic models. The democratic world is bound by golden handcuffs that will keep tightening until a critical mass of us have no choice but to storm our Capitols and/or perish, either by State/Corporate fascism or bio-habitat destruction.
I agree with you Jack about the growth fallacy so beloved by our main political parties. It’s even worse because whenever they speak about growth the actually mean ‘growth as measured by GDP’, which misleadingly counts as growth the depletion and consumption of resources, transfer from the non-market economy to the market (the market economy only makes up around 60% of tge economy), and transfers from other countries (such as would happen if we annexed NZ or via immigration).
But I don’t get how the pursuit of growth (which is stupid and self-destructive) is antithetical to democracy. Morrison went to the electorate with the ‘growth’ objective (absent any rational policy to fulfil it), and people voted for candidates which supported that. I do get that a democracy is predicated on a reasonably educated and well informed citizenry, and that this is undermined by our major political parties’ and Murdoch with their lies, lies, lies and untruths, as well as being undermined by ‘foreign’ influence, such as non-citizen entities such as corporations.
Geez Jack..I don’t know about any stormin’ ..The legendary days of pitchfork peasants knockin’ over all the king’s men & all the king’s horses are even anachronistic as kiddies’ bed time fairy tale nursery rhymes..Have you seen the power of the standing armies’ & police forces these days ? Of course you have ..We’ll be eating each other instead of eating the rich.;-)
Good news is most economies have moved away from industrialisation supported by fossil fuels but towards services, 70%+ of most western economies; most ‘growth’ under GDP is more transactions, not physical degradation of the environment.
Seriously?
What effect do you imagine those ‘transactions’ have on the ground?
In the real world, as it was once known.
Unless you are referring to an economy based on taking in each other’s laundry.
Money is now a commodity, traded like bushels of wheat & hog bellies, because there is too much of it swirling through the financial systems for want of anything constructive purpose.
Drew, GDP was a reasonable indicator for recovery after WW2. It is now well and truly passed its ‘use by’ date. It has never counted environmental degradation as negative growth or depletion of an asset, as it should have; it counted the income or expenditure of doing the degradation as ‘production’, in the same way that it doesn’t count the loss of infrastructure and destruction of assets (like houses) say caused by more cyclones due to climate change, but it does count the rebuilding of the destroyed houses as production (or growth). As an indicator of progress of post war reconstruction GDP it was not too bad as an indicator (not a measure), but is it now? I don’t think so.
Whether one likes it or not, GDP is simply a metric or a barometer (like the NOM) but promoted as then end of civilisation as we know it? Distorting its meaning and use, by obsessing about ‘growth’ and deeming all ‘growth’ as bad e.g. is growth in award wages bad? Growth in environmental protection policies?
Many people claim we need more industrialisation to provide assembly line jobs for unskilled (white) working class males (even subsidised e.g. auto), but then complain of too much industrialisation e.g. traffic congestion, wrecking the environment or quality of life, but then again opposing services and related employment as not real work and worse, it requires ‘immigrants’?
By dismissing GDP as (simply) a measure but claiming it is the root cause of modern day issues ignores the simple fact of individual, govt. and commercial choices.
In other words most people, businesses, govt. and/or households can reduce their consumption and income but choose not to…. or GDP can be reduced by simply pulling all state support for the property market allowing a managed decline in house prices, hence, GDP…. so why does it not happen? Many would be afraid of the consequences and flow on effects…. zero NOM is having same effect on property investment especially apartments and rents….
The West is a bird in a gilded cage and happy to tweet until the swiftly approaching end.
Both Germany and NZ have a more complex system electoral system with more than a single representative of each electorate in the lower house.
In Germany, 5% or more of the 2nd votes qualifies parties for representation in the house. This allows minor parties to play a more prominent role in forming coalition governments in the house and goes some way to avoiding the strangle hold on power by two parties or groupings that seems to result from our stucture.
Whether the sorts of power sharing or coalition government arrangements that these systems lead to is a blessing or a curse depends on your viewpoint I guess.
Yes, MMP Hare-Clerk etc which delivers a parliament more representative of the plurality of society and legislation is passed on a broader consensus rather than rammed through by a party whip etc. However as Guy indicates the US is so fractured and disunited they have zero chance of changing their system. Even reforming the stupid slave era electoral college system hasn’t got a snow flakes chance in hell of happening. But what’s happening here, the Liberals want to emulate the USA system.
The eminence grise grease stain on the upper levels of the Liberal party, exSenator, power broker and all round all of laughs, Nick Minchin has long and lengthily campaigned for the iniquitous off spring of the Rotten Borough & an established church, First-past-the-Post, 50%+1.
A, B, & C stand in an electorate of 100 (scale it up).
C wins 45, B has 35, A only 20 so clearly more rejected C than approved.
As a democratic prophylactic insert Electoral College.
This is why, from a much missed senator whose integrity was rock solid: https://meanjin.com.au/blog/bastard-pandemic-v-bastards/
I have mentioned, as recently as today, that the big boys of the USA financial houses received grants (no loans) that exceeded the NASA budget by an order of magnitude but nothing for welfare. On the other hand, one would have to reside in a cave in order to be unfamiliar with the content. A but like Cky: good headings but pitiful content.
As for personal and community stress, take a look at a short story by F. Scott F. with the title “The Crack-Up”. FSF ought to know. He died at age 45.
Excellent article jennywren. Thanks.
.” As we see in Australia both major parties are owned, managed and directed by vested corporate interests”
It takes discipline and significant time on a daily basis to sift through the marketing we are led to believe is news and information to find anything that develops understanding of how it all works, most people simply don’t have time.
There is no need to ponder and scratch ones’ head as to why we find ourselves living in a society that has its priority as materialism and making money and self interest, not to mention high levels of domestic violence drug abuse and suicide.
We must be bombarded with crap to a higher degree, the ratio of reasoning, logic and allowing sensible debate far smaller in our country than in NZ or Germany.
How do you remove vested interests from media to begin to produce unpolluted information when it also sponsors election campaigns and controls output ?
All reasonable people regardless of political persuasion are at the mercy of this dilemma.
Good article, but please Guy, leave out the casual sexism of the last line. Vaginas and vulvas are not defined by the absence of male genitalia. You are a clever writer and can find better analogies without recourse to genitals.
the first part is a Roosevelt quote so it’s not as casual as you make out.
I’ve missed the Roosevelt reference, despite rereading, not something one does willingly with a groundout grundle article.
I assume that it is the one that ends with his instructing his aide to “…tell the First Lady that“.
corcoric or kickericki or chicchirich?
I rust you have made a similar respose to Janine Perret, who falls for the cliched correlation of courage with possessing testicles. However, given Trumps boasting about his skills at sexual assault, it would be somewhat ironic to discuss grabbing others by female genitalia.
A deluded, divisive and dangerous demagogue, devoid of decency and empathy but replete with ignorance and a lifelong sufferer of mythomania who has never faced consequences in his pampered life. And he is unlikely to face any for inciting insurrection.
Chickensh*t tyre-kickers. The enduring image of the MAGA revolution will be a slack-jawed Donald Trump Jnr snorting coke off a gold-plated sh-tter seat while his plastic slap of a ride updates her Insta duck-face, moments before the Righteous Comradely Heroes break down the door…to take selfies with them.
‘Libertarians’, yeah nah.