Friday, October 7, 2016

Was reading essay in I think The American Interest about the left coast roots of Trumpism’s intellectual conceits – the argument that there’s any intellectual angle to Trump at face value seems absurd, but it isn’t. The essay made clearer to me something I’ve touched on before – namely, that a certain segment of Trump supporters embrace the ‘movement’ because they see American democracy as a broken thing that cannot be fixed and therefore Trump for them becomes the first manifestation of things to come – they don’t so much believe in Trump as they do in seeing him as the beginning of an end they’ve been predicting – again, America is broken and democracy as it’s currently dysfunctionally practiced in the West is not up to the task of fixing it.

What the essay fascinatingly points out is that it makes complete sense that this ‘ethos’ flowered in a place like California, a mess of a polity that used to have a strong conservative animus but has relentlessly been turned into a single party leftist tyranny by the very things that are turning America as a whole into a single party leftist tyranny – public institutions that serve a leftist agenda, a liberal elite in charge of a media/entertainment complex that serves a leftist agenda, and mass immigration of poor, poorly educated and low skill Latinos who have dramatically changed the demographics of California and whose left wing sympathies mean the statehouse will never again be open to conservative ideas – which effectively means California is now a one party leftist oligarchy - and consequently a dysfunctional high tax, high debt bureaucratic mess. You take away Silicon Valley and Hollywood and California is essentially a third world country at this point.

You see why these ‘intellectuals’ would not so much embrace Trump as welcome him as the advent of a ‘truth’ that will rattle the very foundations of the republic. Trump is no Caesar come to wrest control of the country from the corrupt hands of the elite – and I’m sure these intellectuals understand that – Trump is much more clown than he his anything even remotely Caesarian – but they no doubt welcome him as the first instantiation of an inevitable battle between an increasingly autocratic progressive elite and a now increasingly autocratic populist/nationalist/vaguely conservative reactionary reply.


Not saying I agree with these reactionaries point of view – am sympathetic to it though. I believe I recently read a poll that registered Obama’s approval rating at 55%. This guy is the worst president the country has ever had, an unmitigated disaster – foreign policy is a mess, domestic policy a mess, economy is comatose, racial animosity at levels not seen since the 60s, violent crime spiking, America’s standing in the world in decline – and then there’s all the scandals, lying, unconstitutional executive abuse - absolutely awful president – and yet if given the chance apparently would be reelected. How can one look at that and not think: something is horribly wrong.