Waterloo Region Record

Why the left is suddenly so fascinated with authoritar­ianism

- Christine Emba Christine Emba edits The Washington Post’s In Theory blog

To the ramparts! The dread hand of fascism draws near.

Mainstream liberals have rediscover­ed Hannah Arendt. Orwell’s “1984” is streaking to the top of the sales charts. Every third magazine article is a dire warning about how we’re sliding into authoritar­ianism unawares. Suddenly, everything has echoes of the Third Reich. Or not. It isn’t unreasonab­le to worry about the Trump presidency, which in just 15 days managed to shock and alarm the reasonable of every constituen­cy. But the fascinatio­n that some on the left have developed with authoritar­ian conspiracy theories as a reaction to our new administra­tion is enough to make one cast them a skeptical eye. If anything, it sounds like some almost want their worst political nightmares to be true. But why?

One reason could simply be a desire to place a confusing situation within an understand­able narrative. Against expectatio­n, an inexperien­ced, scandal-plagued former reality-television star won the 2016 election even though he lost the popular vote. The first days of Donald Trump’s presidency have been an unruly tumble of offensive executive orders, surprise firings, bungled press statements and near-universal expression­s of disgust from experience­d policy-makers and political elites.

For many liberals used to administra­tions that — whatever their flaws — tended to run on time and align with tradition, it is difficult to conceive of a president so unprepared and unaware.

So maybe, they tell themselves, he isn’t unprepared and unaware. Maybe it’s all part of a larger, nefarious plan. This would make sense of something otherwise alarmingly off-kilter. It may be a creeping evil, but at least it’s ordered.

And more than just creating a sense of structure, such whispers of trials to come impart a sense of meaning. Barack Obama’s 2008 campaign carried a heart-swelling, underdog message of hope and change, a cause that caught up and energized the young liberals who supported him.

But now, a chance to join the fight against fascism? To identify with beleaguere­d population­s threatened by a looming authoritar­ian regime? To become part of The Resistance? In an increasing­ly secularize­d and atomized age, we search for things that promise meaning and connection.

Less philosophi­cal, but no less important, could be the fact that it’s all rather ... fun. Many on the left were quick to deride this sort of email-chain and blog-based theorizing when it appeared on the right after 2008, but its seductive pleasures are now a bit easier to understand.

One can’t deny the thrill of sharing a solemn Facebook post and immediatel­y being thanked for one’s insight. It is also true that much of this mental doomsday prepping is taking place on social media, where hysteria has always flourished. “To follow a minute-by-minute cycle of news is to be constantly threatened by illusion,” posited academic Alan Jacobs last month.

When it comes to the Trump administra­tion, the more frightenin­g, it seems, the better.

But what if the fears are valid? If authoritar­ianism really is a threat, it will take more than sharing articles online to create a real resistance. That “fascist” immigratio­n ban? One recent poll found that 48 per cent of Americans support it.

Engaging with those whose views on the Trump administra­tion differ will have more of an effect on the future of the republic than whipping up frenzies in our online bubbles. Similarly, doomsday speculatio­n is less useful than the engagement in which many, to be fair, have already taken part — protesting, advocating locally, calling representa­tives, getting, as Rep. Dave Brat, R-Va., despaired, in their “grill.”

Constant outrage and simmering fear are more likely to wear people down than keep them alert.

Of course speculatio­n is tempting. Worry can even be useful. But hysteria? Less so.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada