BACKGROUND TO
THE TRUMP HORROR: AMERICA’S HERITAGE OF ANTI-REASON
Even in retrospect, the Trump presidency remains redolent
with wrongdoing and defilement. Though thousands of needless
American deaths represent the most conspicuous cost of this
sordid presidency, the US also suffered coinciding geopolitical
losses in North Korea, China, India, Russia, Iran and elsewhere.
These preventable deaths and geopolitical losses were generally
predictable, the expected result of a society that assiduously
discourages independent citizen thought. In essence, long
before the pandemic of Covid19, there already existed a corrosive
American plague of doctrinal anti-reason.
There is
more. During the acrimonious Trump Era, anti-intellectual
sentiments were routinely elevated to the status of ideology.
Worse, these barbarous sentiments were no longer expressed
sotto voce, cautiously, in the Congress or in the
White House. Instead, they became the celebrated underpinnings
of unprecedented Constitutional crises and variously retrograde
declarations of America First.
“Intellect
rots the brain,” shrieked Third Reich Propaganda Minister
Joseph Goebbels at a Nuremberg rally in 1935. “I love
the poorly educated” yelled Donald Trump during his
2016 campaign for the presidency. Inter alia, what these grim
assertions had in common was an ultimately lethal disdain
for science and education. Derivatively, they pointed to a
continuously deformed and twisted national ideal, one that
called for mindless public obeisance to democratic Constitutional
governance. As US Joint Chiefs Chairman General Mark Milley
recently pointed out, the January 6 2021 insurrection was
nothing less than Donald J. Trump’s “Reichstag
moment.”
That was
really saying a great deal.
In world
politics, both domestically and internationally, Trump Era
intellectual decline was not unique. Americans have seen indigenously
spawned monsters before. But in the Trump years, we the people
witnessed a virulent rebirth of catastrophic political bewitchments.
Most ominously, no matter how compelling and expansive the
evidence of Trump’s multiple derelictions became, millions
of his dedicated adherents remained steadfastly loyal to his
manipulations, to unreason. This assessment remains true even
now, even after the crude and murderous coup attempt at the
Capitol on January 6, 2021.
Lest we
forget, the event represented an American president’s
engineered insurrection against his own government. “Credo
quia absurdum,” said the ancient philosopher Tertullian:
“I believe because it is absurd.”
Trump-world
derelictions go much deeper than simple day-to-day infringements.
Briefly, we are all still afflicted and/or affected. Even
today, faith, not facts, is what matter most to dedicated
cadres of robotic Trump adherents. For them, and without any
apologies to Jeffersonian democracy (because these adherents
generally know nothing of US history), the perilous phrase
“I believe” is de rigeur. For such viscerally
compliant persons, the dialectically reciprocal phrase “I
think” remains unknown or reassuringly subordinate.
For the
self-parodying Trump faithful caught up in empty or invented
antimonies, the Cartesian “cogito” was too taxing.
For this “herd” (Nietzsche); “crowd”
(Kierkegaard); or “mass” (Jung) – these
useful terms are easily inter-changeable here – an imperative
to think meaningfully might just as well never have been raised.
The basic reason behind such willful abandonment of “mind”
is captured with clarity by 20th century German philosopher
Karl Jaspers in his Reason and Anti-Reason in our Time
(1952): “Reason is confronted again and again with the
fact of a mass of believers who have lost all ability to listen,
who can absorb no intellectual argument and who hold unshakably
fast to the Absurd as an unassailable presupposition….”
“The
Absurd.” Jaspers is still well worth reading. In this
regard, the enticingly simplifying gibberish of QAnon and
QAnon-type “explanations” should come immediately
to mind. Could any contemporary ideology be more patently
preposterous? The question is moot, of course, because this
ideology literally worships The Absurd. Could anything prove
more humiliating for Americans who still like to insistently
presume themselves “great again?”
A LEGACY
UNDERMINED: TRUMP’S REPUDIATION OF AMERICA’S INTELLECTUAL
ORIGINS
Some things
have changed. Back in the eighteenth century, Thomas Jefferson,
chief architect of the Declaration of Independence
and future American president, exclaimed with unhesitating
candor: “I have sworn upon the altar of god eternal
hostility against every form of tyranny over the mind of man.”
Later, US President Donald Trump, who learned only “in
his own flesh” (a clarifying phrase offered by Spanish
existentialist philosopher Jose Ortega y Gasset in Revolt
of the Masses, 1930) expressed an oath of support for
just such an insufferable tyranny. Early in his steeply-corrupted
presidency, Trump returned from the Singapore summit with
North Korea’s Kim Jung Un declaring that any calculable
risks of a bilateral nuclear war had just then been removed.
This argument, vacant prima facie, rested upon the
inane observation that he and Kim had “fallen in love.”
Subsequently, Trump offered grievously inexpert daily assessments
of assorted drug efficacies against the Corona virus. At the
same time, he responded to authoritative science-based prescriptions
with capricious doubt or absurdly brazen indifference.
For the
United States, these incoherent stream-of-consciousness excursions
into gibberish were more than merely dissembling. At a time
of palpable biological “plague,” these presidential
declensions were sorely tangible and immediately life-threatening.
Jurisprudentially, they came perilously close to becoming
genocide-like crimes.
A key observation
dawns. How pitifully inadequate were America’s political
processes and institutions in dealing with this president’s
rancorous instincts. For a time, almost an entire country
displayed near-infinite forbearance for Trump’s hugely
nonsensical commentaries. The resultant withering of an already-declining
nation’s heart and mind pointed to once-unimaginable
existential threats.
They pointed
directly and unambiguously.
While various
mega-death scenarios of relentless disease pandemic expressed
the most far reaching and credible dangers, the more “normal”
portents of nuclear war and terrorism did not miraculously
disappear. In certain worst case narratives that could still
be fathomed, war, terror and pandemic would occur more-or-less
simultaneously, and with harshly interactive results that
were not simply “intersectional” but also multi-layered
and synergistic.
There is
more. In any scenario of overwhelmingly destructive synergy,
the whole of a potential catastrophe would necessarily be
greater than the sum of its parts. In this aptly sobering
connection, Americans may usefully recall Swiss playwright
Friedrich Durrenmatt’s seemingly obvious but still insightful
observation: “The worst does sometimes happen.”
Are the
stubbornly dedicated minions of Trump sycophants mainly scoundrels
or fools? And which answer would be more ominous for the United
States? About this particular question, Jose Ortega y Gasset
in The Revolt of the Masses (1930) cites generically
to the writer Anatole France: “There is no way of dislodging
the fool from his folly . . . The fool is a fool for life
. . . he is much worse than the knave. The knave (scoundrel)
does take a rest sometimes; the fool never.”
At best,
and let us now be generous in spirit, there was nothing intentionally
murderous or genocidal about Donald Trump’s policies,
whether foreign or domestic. Nonetheless, plainly detectable
in his crude governance was a far-reaching indifference to
basic human rights and welfare. Spawned by an all-too evident
absence of empathy or compassion, this American president
gave new and portentous meaning to the common notion that
pain is incommunicable. “All men have my blood and I
have all men’s,” wrote American Transcendentalist
Ralph Waldo Emerson in “Self-Reliance,” but such
cosmopolitan sentiment was alien and incomprehensible to Donald
J. Trump.
As with
any challenging matters of intellectual judgment, this former
president’s near-total lack of empathic feelings revealed
frightful levels of personal emptiness. More precisely, they
revealed an American leader of breathtaking vapidity, one
who quite consciously constructed his venal presidency upon
the stupefying sovereignty of unqualified persons. This was
the literal opposite of Thomas Jefferson’s celebrated
democratic vision.
CITIZEN
OBLIGATIONS TO TRUTH
Where do
Americans go from this once foreseeable and once preventable
point in national political life? Whatever else we might conclude,
Donald J. Trump was no psychiatric enigma. Rather, he displayed
numerous and incontrovertible clinical derangements from the
start. But rather than continue to approach these liabilities
as if they were specifically important in their singularity,
we Americans must understand that there can never exist a
feasible political “fix” for concatenations of
monstrous presidential behaviour.
No doubt,
Trump and his diehard supporters still believe that he did
what he did with purity of heart. Similarly felt convictions
were readily detectable among the 1930s managers of German
propagandist Joseph Goebbels. Should we therefore “give
a pass” to the Third Reich’s Nazi Party? In reply,
if anyone wants to more fully understand the Trump phenomenon,
it would be best to listen to his speeches and ideas in the
“original German.”
Irony can
be instructive. Still, there is more. In America today there
is still too much “noise.” Among those many citizens
who so strenuously loathe all refined intellect and ascertainable
truth, this is largely the undimmed background noise of an
insidious political impresario.
Trump’s
continuously bewitched proselytes make their hideous sounds
with open enthusiasm. They do this because it allows them
to see themselves as privileged members of a very worthy “crowd.”
Reciprocally and consistently, their out-of-power but still-disjointed
leader makes complementary dissembling noises. He has, after
all, been selected 'for life' to direct this hideous 'crowd.'
Have any
of these proselytes read the United States Constitution? Have
any ever heard about US common law and Blackstone’s
Commentaries? The US legal system begins with Blackstone.
Did Trump’s senior Justice Department officials even
know that much?
The crowd
is “untruth” wrote 19th century Danish philosopher
Soren Kierkegaard; no crowd could be more untrue than the
one comprised of continuously retrograde Trump followers.
Anticipating what has now come to pass in the United States,
nineteenth century American Transcendentalist philosopher
Ralph Waldo Emerson (Life Without Principle) lamented
prophetically: “ . . . we do not worship truth, but
reflections of truth; because we are warped and narrowed by
an exclusive devotion to trade and commerce . . . which are
means, not ends.” From Plato to Emerson, Americans have
readily available templates for a more thoughtful and decent
society, but it is first up to them to seize such templates.
Significantly, with any such essential “seizure,”
political action would still be reflective, secondary and
epiphenomenal.
True change
will have to be intrapersonal.
In July
1776, over one short Philadelphia weekend of dreadful heat
and no modern conveniences, a then-future American president
composed more infinitely valuable prose than former president
Donald J. Trump (with all modern conveniences at his disposal)
could produce in several contiguous lifetimes. Naturally,
Thomas Jefferson did not arrive at his presidency with a well-honed
expertise in “branding,” but with a dedication
to Reason, to the antecedent understanding that an American
brand” should be based upon authentic qualities of accomplishment.
Promisingly, such traits would be inherently “true,”
both honourable and valuable.
“One
must never seek the higher man,” warns philosopher Friedrich
Nietzsche in Zarathustra, “at the marketplace.”
Years ago, America still stood for something more than mastering
raw commerce. Years ago, our national debates did not yet
center on mass killing and a presumed right to arm citizens
with military-style assault weapons. It may well be that this
country has never been ready to welcome Plato’s “Philosopher
King,” but there were at least certain times in our
national past that philosophical debates sounded more like
a university seminar than a self-defense course on tactical
weapons.
We Americans
generally remember our earlier presidents not for their transient
commercial successes in the frenetic marketplace of tangible
goods – products to be bought and sold – but for
their auspicious presence in a marketplace of ideas. For these
still-enviable presidents, it was always more important to
build a leadership legacy upon wisdom and learning than on
accumulated symbols of personal wealth. Can anyone imagine
Abraham Lincoln or even Dwight D. Eisenhower residing at faux
habitats like Mar a Lago?
MICROCOSM,
MACROCOSM AND “SOUL”: AN INDISSOLUBLE AMERICAN
CONNECTION
The full
horror of the Trump presidency – a horror still energetically
accepted by millions – began with the intellectually
unambitious American citizen, with the self-flawed “microcosm.”
Our American electorate, the macrocosm, can never rise any
higher than the amalgamated capacities of its separate members.
As Friedrich Nietzsche could have predicted from his vital
reasoning in Zarathustra, the whole of the American
polity is potentially more despoiled than the mere aggregate
sum of its parts.
Ultimately,
for better or for worse, every democracy must come to represent
the sum total of its constituent souls, that is, a composite
of those hopeful citizens who still seek some sort or other
of personal “redemption.” In our deeply fractionated
American republic, however, We the people – more and
more desperate for a seemingly last chance to “fit in”
and to “get ahead” – inhabit a vast and
ever-growing wasteland of lost human opportunity. Within this
desiccated society of vulgar and abysmal entertainments, of
political leaders with nary a scintilla of courage or personal
integrity, millions of 'hollow' men and women remain chained
to exhausting cycles of meaningless work.
There are
manifold ironies here. While generally unrecognized, such
de facto American servitude is sometimes felt by
the very rich as well as by the very poor. This paradoxical
“artifact” of American privilege is based upon
entire lifetimes spent in grimly sterile forms of endlessly
unsatisfying accumulation. To be sure, we are essentially
taught to revere billionaires more than thinkers, but it has
now proven to be an incomparably murderous instruction.
Now, America’s
most spirited national debates continue to be about guns and
killing, not about history, literature, music, art, philosophy,
or beauty. Within this vast and predatory nether world, huge
segments of cheerless populations drown themselves in vast
oceans of alcohol and drugs. Whether incrementally or suddenly,
this intractable submersion is already deep enough to swallow
up entire centuries of national achievement and entire millennia
of a once-sacred poetry. Today, the number of American suicides
or self-murders is virtually too high to actually calculate.
At its core,
America’s opiate addiction problem is not about drugsm.
Rather, prima facie, it is the evident symptom of
rampant individual unhappiness and intractable social despair.
A tangible residue of this refractory problem can be found
scattered as medical litter on America’s beaches and
playgrounds. In the end, this toxic litter instructs as a
squalid metaphor of a much larger social disintegration. In
short, this graphic metaphor references a society that during
the trump years became even more complicit in its own continuous
demise.
TRUE MEANING
OF FREEDOM
Let us be
candid. Americans remain grinning but hapless captives in
a deliriously noisy and airless crowd or herd or mass. Stubbornly
disclaiming any hints of an interior life, we proceed tentatively
and in almost every palpable sphere at the lowest common denominator.
When it is expressed in more annoyingly recognizable terms,
our vaunted American “freedom” is becoming contrivance.
Nothing more.
A simplifying
American intellectual context offers a regrettable but ubiquitous
solvent. This caustic substance dissolves almost everything
of analytic consequence. In formal education, the once revered
Western Canon of literature and art has already been replaced
by more generalized emphases on acquisition and business.
Apart from their pervasive drunkenness and often tasteless
entertainments, once-sacred spaces of American higher education
have been transformed into a rusting pipeline, a perpetual
conduit to unsatisfying jobs and sterile vocations.
Soon, even
if we should somehow manage to avoid nuclear war and nuclear
terrorism – an avoidance not to be taken for granted
in the still-unraveling post-Trump Era – the swaying
of the American ship will become increasingly violent. Then,
the phantoms of great ships of state, once laden with silver
and gold, may no longer lie forgotten. Then, perhaps, we Americans
will finally understand that the circumstances that could
send the compositions of Homer, Maimonides, Goethe, Milton,
Shakespeare, Freud and Kafka to join the works of long forgotten
poets were neither unique nor transient.
In an 1897
essay titled “On Being Human,” Woodrow Wilson
inquired about the authenticity of America. “Is it even
open to us to choose to be genuine?” he asked. This
American president had answered “yes,” but only
if we first refused to stoop to join the threatening and synthetic
“herds” of mass society. Otherwise, as Wilson
already understood, our entire society would be left bloodless,
a skeleton, dead with that rusty demise of broken machinery,
more hideous even than the unstoppable biological decompositions
of each individual person.
In all societies,
as Emerson and the other American Transcendentalists also
recognized, the scrupulous care of each individualsoul is
most important. There can be a better American soul, and also
an improved American politics,but not until we are first able
to acknowledge a more prior obligation. This is a far-reaching
national responsibility to overcome the staggering barriers
of a Kierkegaardian crowd culture, to embrace once again the
liberating imperatives of Emersonian high thinking. But there
can be no foreseeable end to crowd-induced political surrenders
until individuals no longer feel the persistent need to make
of themselves a quantité négligeable.
FINAL CITIZEN
OBLIGATIONS: IMPERATIVES OF SERIOUS THOUGHT
In the end,
Donald Trump’s defiling presidency was “merely”
the most debilitating symptom of a much deeper American pathology.
Today, the underlying American disease remains a far-reaching
national unwillingness to think seriously or independently.
Ultimately, if it is left suitably unchallenged, such reluctance
could transform us into something far worse than anything
ever imagined; that is, into the finely-lacquered corpse of
a once-ascendant American Civilization.
There are
several urgent lessons to be learned. For Americans, the most
ruinous evasion of all has been to seek comfort and succor
in primordial forms of political attachment, to escape moral
judgment as private citizens. This search won’t work.
“In eternity,” reminds Soren Kierkegaard, “each
shall render account as an individual.“ At least, we
are properly warned, there will be this residual sort of last
judgment.
Looking
back, 'horror' is the only correct term of judgment for an
American presidency that shamelessly encouraged egregious
crimes against the United States and against other nations.
Even without mens rea or what the jurists would call “criminal
intent,” Trump’s visible unconcern for science-based
judgments on disease, law, and war almost yielded the death
of millions. Inter alia, recalling Alexander Pope’s
Essay on Man, such presidential unconcern exhibited
a uniquely hideous species of vice, a species so distressing
that it still defies any measured, balanced or objective forms
of description.
Looking
ahead, to prevent another “monster of so frightful mien,”
Americans must finally embrace the faith of Reason, not Trump-like
anti-Reason or “reason of unreason.” Following
pertinent insights of 20th century Spanish philosopher Ortega
y Gasset's Revolt of the Masses (Le Rebelion
de las Masas, 1930), America’s redemption from
egregious governance will never be discoverable in politics.
Instead, it will require a nation to acknowledge that intellectual
efforts are demanding but indispensable.
Though the
Trump masses sought to rule American society without any actual
capacity to do so, failure to fully reject such presumptuousness
could only bring forth another grievous horror. All citizens
are certainly entitled to their opinions, but these opinions
ought not expect affirmations of correctness based upon assorted
wishes and lies. Most pernicious of all would be Trump-style
presidential opinions once again based upon appeals to violence,
inherently fallacious opinions known to logicians as argumentum
ad baculum. Of all such illegitimate opinions, Ortega y Gasset
concludes: “They are in effect nothing more than appetites
in words . . . ”
Following the
Trump horror, America has had enough of such verbal appetites.
They are starkly predatory and potentially omnivorous. We
can do much better.