I think I'm on to something –
finally! I've been puzzling for a long time now – really since the
2016 campaign – as to possible reasons for the absolute,
unremitting, fanatical hostility and hatred directed toward Donald
Trump. I mean, add up all of his real and alleged offenses, from
“colluding” with Russia right down to his ever-changing hair
color, and they still don't add up to what would, in normal times, be
considered ample reason for the never-ending campaign on the part of
pretty much everyone to force him from office – which, when it
involves the Justice Department, FBI, and intelligence apparatus,
amounts to a coup (or coup attempt – at least so far). Not to
mention, most if not all of his alleged character flaws, gaffes,
offenses, illegal activities, etc. have been characteristics of, or
indulged in by, any number of previous presidents as well as
countless members of Congress over the years (decades, centuries).
And yet they've never gotten a reaction of this magnitude, which
borders on psychosis (or maybe “borders” is too mild a term). In
fact, most have sailed through the political waters with nary a hair
on their head getting mussed. And yes, Trump is an outsider, which is
considered a major liability, if not an outright sin, among the
Beltway crowd and the ruling elite – but is he really that much
more of an outsider than, say, Carter was? Or Clinton? Or Obama?
Far from working their way up the ladder rung by rung, each of these
appeared pretty much out of nowhere and wound up on top of the heap.
(And if they were mere figureheads, empty suits, and scapegoats,
well... that's the way the presidency has evolved over the years,
isn't it? You take office and are handed the script, and woe unto
you if you ignore it.)
So what can I point to as the source of
my enlightenment – on this one issue at least? It's the film
“BlacKkKlansman” by Spike Lee. Unlikely? Bear with me for a
moment. When I saw that film I have to admit I was utterly baffled.
As social history it was crude and ham-handed. As a political
commentary on race relations, it was pretty pathetic – brimming
with ridiculous stereotypes like the perfectly matching afros of the
young black activists, and the Klansmen, who made those guys in
“Deliverance” look like Rhodes scholars. And then you have the
stilted dialogue that kept sucking the life out of scenes that might
otherwise have been halfway decent. And as some sort of “thriller”
it fell totally flat, except for the only halfway decent part of the
film, the action scene toward the end, which at least can be credited
with good timing and camera work.
That's what I thought, and that's what
I continued to think. But then I realized my mistake. I had been
judging the film based on the premise that it was a serious piece of
work. Then – shazam! – I realized it was a comedy! And that all
the stereotypes and wild exaggerations contributed to the overall
comic effect... and that, based on this new perspective, the film was
actually a success.
But wait! – you'll say -- Spike Lee
was not trying to make a comedy. This was a Serious Film with a
Social Message. Well, maybe it was intended to be, but sometimes
films wind up succeeding in ways that the writer and director never
intended, and which they would find upsetting – as witness any
number of films over the decades that used to be described as “so
bad it's good”. These have provided a fertile resource for MST3K
RiffTrax and its imitators, spoofing, and “ironic” film festivals
and “creature features”. (I guess the moral is, if you can't
make a good movie, make one so bad that it's memorable for that
reason at least. Ed Wood owes his claim to fame to some people's
urge to bathe in badness.)
Now, declaring “BlackKkKlansman” a
comedy doesn't detract from the intent of the people who made it,
only from the execution – or, if that is not to be questioned
either, from the ignorance of the audience. (I prefer the execution
theory.) The point is that intent can run aground on other people's
expectations. The creator expects their world to be recognized by
the audience, but the audience has a world too – a diversity of
worlds, in fact. We are used to this phenomenon in art, but it's
also true in politics, and the result can be startling at times.
So now let us turn to our
much-beleaguered and besieged president. It is no exaggeration to
say that he is holed up in the White House in a state of complete
isolation from the rest of Washington, except for his staff (or at
least the loyal portion thereof, however many that may be). His
domestic initiatives have been thwarted by Congress, and the few that
have passed that hurdle have been stopped dead in their tracks by the
judiciary... and foreign policy is, as far as I can tell, in someone
else's hands. So really, he doesn't have that much to do... and yet
everyone criticizes him for taking time off to play golf. Well, what
would you do if you'd been living a hyperactive lifestyle for decades
and then found yourself a prisoner in the White House? Watch daytime
TV? Learn a new language? Try macrame? I mean, really, the guy
must feel like a caged jungle cat in the National Zoo.
And yet, he seems to be enjoying
himself – immensely at times. He gets up at CPAC and goes “off
script” for over 2 hours. He's working the crowd like an
evangelist – or a borscht circuit comedian. He's just as feisty as the guy who took
that fabled ride down the escalator what seem like ages ago. He's
not hunkered down like Nixon, roaming the halls late at night talking
to the portraits on the walls. And he's not zoning out like Bush II,
or “retiring in place” like so many of his predecessors once they
ran out of steam. He's having a good time, and this is cause for
deep suspicion. What's his game?
Or, what was his game, and has
it morphed in some way over the last 3+ years? Some have theorized
that he never actually wanted to be president – that it was just some kind of massive stunt – and that he was just as surprised as anyone
when he actually won (or appeared to, or... well, whatever). (He is
in the White House, folks, so suck it up! He's not being controlled
like some puppet by Hillary and Bill hiding in the basement.)
I've never been very impressed by the
“not serious” argument. Given the guy's life history, I don't
think he ever got anywhere near a game he didn't think he could win –
and yet, being a master of the “deal”, he always has a backup
plan – and not only a Plan B, but a Plan C, D, E, etc. as he
recently said. Yes, on some level I'm sure he was perfectly able to
imagine losing the 2016 election, and prepared to go back to New York
and settle back into his gold-plated mansion in the sky. But he did
win, and as far as I can tell had a plan all ready to go in that
event – unlike certain other presidents who could be named. So, on
Inauguration Day 2017 a new day dawned in American politics –
something truly new under the sun. Not just an outsider, but a
radical outsider – different in every way from what everyone had
come to expect, and demand, from a president. Personality-wise,
there is zero overlap between him and any of his predecessors.
Style-wise, ditto. Management style, ditto. You name it, whatever
it is, he is as different as he would be if he were a Martian beamed
down from a hovering spacecraft, and, believe it or not, some people
find this upsetting – not least members of the Washington
establishment, who have played just one game one way for as long as
anyone can remember. But their set of expectations seems to have
percolated, over time, to the general populace – and a large
portion of the latter are even more visibly upset than those in
Congress and elsewhere in the government, who have at least learned
to put on a poker face, or an approximation of one, when times get
tough. (It's pretty much a truism that rioters are always way more upset than the people planning, and supervising, the riot. The latter tend to be cool-headed schemers by comparison, and their histrionics are at least partly a calculated act.)
But as I said before, even this is not
enough to explain the rage, hostility, and open warfare being
directed against this one person – and he is, after all, just one
person, and yet he has riveted the attention of the media and the
entire entertainment industry. He is the lead story on every
newscast on every network, nation-wide, every day. He is the main
subject of every late-night talk show, and even of all “awards”
programs (save of the country-western music type). He has, as the
saying goes, sucked all the oxygen out of the room, and continues to
do so on a daily basis, and his opponents won't have it any other
way. He fills their field of vision; he is Godzilla rising up out of
Tokyo Bay. He has come to dominate their lives... their thinking...
their emotions... even their physical health. (He has apparently
caused a boom in the psychotherapy business, especially on the East
and West Coasts.) And every day he remains in office just rubs more
salt into their festering and suppurating wounds. What power! What
total dominance!
And here's the real kicker – he likes
it. Just as someone once said there is no such thing as bad
publicity, Trump rides every wave that comes along – high, low,
good, bad, it matters not. His enemies feed him bile and poison, and
he just grows fatter (figuratively, at least). Sure, he'd prefer it
if people respected him and valued his programs and initiatives, and
were willing to help him get things done, but if not, hey... (insert
video of the famous Trump shrug). He believes in what he is doing,
but he also believes in himself – and you can say, well, that's
just, you know, narcissism and egomania, etc. Well, excuse me, but
how many presidents can you name who weren't narcissists on some
level, and who didn't have overly-developed egos? (insert sound of
chirping crickets) The difference is that Trump never flinches, or
ducks, or hesitates, or – especially this – apologizes. And
compared to his predecessors he spends a minimum amount of time “walking
back” and “clarifying”. Self-doubt is simply not in his
repertoire, on any level. And so he sails on, delighting his loyal
core supporters and enraging his opponents more each day.
Now, one could ask – and it wouldn't
be a bad question – is this any way to conduct a presidency?
Aesthetic considerations aside, don't we have a, let's say, slight
credibility problem here, not to mention an efficiency problem?
Doesn't Trump create feedback loops that only aggravate things
unnecessarily? Hasn't this turned into less an administration than a
shtick? Well, it's possible, but you also have to remember that
Trump didn't just pop up out of nowhere – outsider status
notwithstanding. He is a product of his time and place just as we all are. The pathologies in our political system have been
growing and metastasizing for decades now, and have contaminated all
other aspects of our life as a nation. So what was supposed to come
out of all of this in 2016? Another no-face, same-old same-old,
empty suit who would just keep us slouching down that same dreary
road? Frankly, I prefer a troublemaker – a bull in the china shop
– someone who skillfully absorbs all shocks from his opponents then
gives them back even more. And Trump fills that bill. No one else
could have, or would have. The Republicans will not, under any
circumstances, give Trump credit for bailing them out in 2016; in
fact, they're resentful and hostile (and not a little bit mortified).
And they're digging in their heels at every opportunity – warming
up for 2020, at which point, if you thought the DNC played a dirty
trick on Bernie Sanders in 2016, wait until you catch the RNC's act
when it comes to Trump in 2020. (This, of course, assumes that he is
still in office at that point, and I haven't checked with the odds
makers yet on that score.)
So yes, the gripe against Trump –
that which puts the Resistance over the top – is that he just keeps
on truckin', like the Energizer Bunny. They will argue that he is
highly – outrageously – flawed as a president, and as a human
being. But that's not what has them gnashing their teeth; it's just
an easily-recognizable talking point. Nor is it that he is some kind of
alien life form, as far as the D.C. crowd and the elite establishment
are concerned. It's the fact that his campaign, election, and
administration have all the earmarks of a gigantic hoax – and yet
they actually happened, and continue to happen. It's more than just
annoying, or scandalizing; it's disorienting, and devastating.
“Shattering”, to adapt the title of a book on the Hillary
campaign. To put it another way, the surreal has become real.
And I use the term “hoax” as
opposed to fraud. Many of his opponents will claim that he won the
election in a fraudulent manner; I'm perfectly willing to accept that
his election was authentic. I'm talking about a deeper issue – a
psychological issue, if you will. His opponents don't reject the
results of the election simply based on suspicions of fraud, or
“collusion”, or “meddling”, or because he shouldn't have won
simply because of who, or what, he is, but because a high degree of
unreality has been introduced into their lives. The antics of
Antifa, and the self-pitying writhings of the “snowflakes” on
college campuses are just the tip of this iceberg.
Deep-seated expectations create
deep-seated reactions. The most surprising thing, perhaps, is the
extent to which people have, over the years, developed a
hard-and-fast set of implicit “rules” for the way things ought to
be when it comes to the presidency. This is not about etiquette or
diplomacy, which are the common points of reference; it goes far
beyond that. Trump – in all innocence, perhaps – may have
assumed that people would be willing to accept him on the same terms
that they've accepted his predecessors – pro or con, friendly or
hostile, but not as the equivalent of the Golden Horde riding across
the Asian steppe in order to lay siege to Vienna.
And while Trump doesn't exactly have a
good “bedside manner”, politically-speaking, the situation is far
from being his fault. The fault, I believe, lies in the fact that
we, as a people, have developed the thinnest of thin skins. We are
like eggs without shells, scared of our own shadows. And this
phenomenon has been developing for quite a long time – certainly
since the 1960s. So the political game has been a delicate balancing
act all this time – make enemies as need be, but don't push them to
the brink. And then along comes Trunk – the “trigger” to end
all triggers – and people can't decide which is more frightening,
the idea that he's putting on an act or the idea that he might be
serious. So they do what people have done down through the ages when
they are presented with an avalanche of unfamiliar stimuli but have
no way of imposing order on them – they panic. And this is what
we're seeing now – anger and hostility for certain, but also rage,
hostility, and panic. And the question should not be where did Trump
come from, and what is to be done, but why we have become so
vulnerable and helpless.
The Spike Lee movie may or may not have
been a hoax, or a shtick, or a trick – but it happened. Maybe
Spike Lee was serious, and maybe Donald Trump was, and is, serious.
But that's less important than how things are perceived, and that, in
turn, is based on a lifetime of conditioning, expectations, imagery,
education (both good and bad), propaganda... that entire array of
influences that determine what we are willing, and able, to call
“reality”, and what we are unwilling, and unable, to accept or
even perceive because it violates not only our picture of the world
but our picture of ourselves. An “existential threat” doesn't
have to be physical danger, something threatening death. It can also
be – and can be more threatening as – danger to our world view.
To the Resistance, Trump and his administration are a nightmare from
which they can never awake until he's gone, and it is this that
determines their every thought, word, and deed. The problem is that
the nightmare is of their own making.
P.S. (for the Resistance) – The fact
that Trump pulled off a wildly improbable win in 2016 may indicate
that “they” didn't want Hillary to be president under any
circumstances. Your homework assignment is to quit bellyaching about Trump and try
to figure out who “they” are. (Hint: It's not the Russians.
Hillary is a much better friend to them than Trump will ever be.)