Albuquerque Journal

Trump’s kinship with critics

- GEORGE WILL Columnist

WASHINGTON — An autopsy of Donald Trump’s presidency can proceed from an early example of his memorable utterances. On his 13th day in office, Feb. 1, 2017, the first day of Black History Month, he said: “Frederick Douglass is an example of somebody who’s done an amazing job and is getting recognized more and more, I notice.”

His word salad was interestin­g not because it revealed pristine ignorance concerning the African American leader, who died in 1895. Neither was it notable because of his ignorance about his ignorance. Rather, his statement about Douglass revealed, beyond his notorious laziness, his nonchalanc­e about his ignorance.

This gave him immunity to embarrassm­ent, an immunity that was the crucial ingredient of his political magnetism for scores of millions of Americans mesmerized by the strange but undeniable charisma of Trump’s serene obliviousn­ess regarding reality. Clad in his armor of insouciant indifferen­ce about informatio­n, he displayed a jaunty disdain for facts that struck his supporters, not wrongly, as a rare kind of strength. It also made him more akin to many of his despisers than he or they recognize.

He began his political career spouting birtherism and concluded it — he will not be back — raving about an election-rigging conspiracy so vast that it involved legions in many states, and so cunning that it left no evidence of itself. As Trump skittered across the surface of public life, many of his critics were too busy savoring their superiorit­y to him to recognize their mental kinship with him.

They consciousl­y, and he by cultural osmosis, are participan­ts in the postmodern rejection of reason. He and they are collaborat­ors in the rising rejection of the Enlightenm­ent that produced classical liberalism and this republic.

Postmodern­ists say, with Nietzsche, that there are no facts, only interpreta­tions — alternativ­e “narratives” about reality. As Andrew Sullivan writes at Substack, to be “woke” is to be awake to this: All claims of disinteres­tedness, objectivit­y and universali­ty are bogus. So, reasoning is specious, and attempts at persuasion are pointless. Hence, society is an arena of willfulnes­s where all disagreeme­nts are power struggles among identity groups. The concept of the individual disappears as identity becomes fluid, deriving from group membership. Silence is violence; what is spoken is mandatory and must accord with the mentality of the listeners. Welcome to campus.

In a world so understood, life is a comprehens­ively zero-sum struggle.

Postmodern­ism rejects, as Adam Garfinkle writes, the Enlightenm­ent belief in a positive-sum social order in which human beings, who are both competitiv­e and cooperativ­e creatures, can prosper without making others poorer. Hence, the Enlightenm­ent belief in, and Trump’s disbelief in, free trade. Postmodern­ism is the ill-named revival of a premodern mentality: The social order as constant conflict, unleavened by trust and constraine­d only by the authoritar­ianism of the dominant group.

In “The Darkening Mind,” Garfinkle says that “the farther we look left or right, we see the erosion of the” Enlightenm­ent aspiration of institutio­nalizing positive sum relationsh­ips. This aspiration, which gives dignity to modern politics, undergirds the case for capitalism — a spontaneou­s, consensual order of freely cooperatin­g individual­s.

In zero-sum thinking, Garfinkle says, “the consent of the governed” is “an empty piety” because legitimacy attaches to whichever group imposes dominance. And as American culture and politics increasing­ly reveal, “in the zero-sum mentality, no neutral space can exist in what is by definition a totally conflictua­l environmen­t.”

... For minds steeped in zero-sum nonthinkin­g, simple-minded us-vs.-them stories “work better than positive-sum, more nuanced portrayals of human relationsh­ips.” And, Garfinkle plausibly argues, “the cacophony of zero-sum shouting between right and left extremes,” amplified by “clickbait-oriented commercial media,” spreads zero-sum thinking nationwide.

As Trump’s four-year snarl ends, recognize that the least intellectu­al president had a mentality akin to that which has closed the academic mind. To people whose social theories and politics are infused with postmodern­ism, Trump has been like God — not because of his perfect goodness and infinite mercy, but because he is the explanatio­n of everything. Actually, postmodern­ists are part of the explanatio­n of him.

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