Chattanooga Times Free Press

THE AGE OF EXTREMES

- Bradley R. Gitz lives and teaches in Batesville, Arkansas.

The extreme polarizati­on that afflicted American politics during Donald Trump’s presidency obscured the symbiotic relationsh­ip that developed between him and the radical left.

Trump needed the threat of the radical left to cement his support among conservati­ves, while the radical left needed the threat of Trump to acquire support among liberals. Trump’s takeover of the GOP was thus aided and abetted by the radical left takeover of the Democratic Party and vice versa.

For each side, the primary justificat­ion was the horriblene­ss of the other. For the Trump camp, any tactics were acceptable because the radical left was intent upon transformi­ng America into a socialist dystopia. For the radical left, any tactics were acceptable because Trump was intent upon creating a fascist America built upon racism and bigotry.

Joining one tribe or the other in lockstep was presented as necessary; any waffling or squeamishn­ess in signing up for the cause was viewed as a form of moral abdication.

The overall effect was to both stretch out the ideologica­l continuum and add lots of weight to the ends at the expense of the middle.

The resulting tribalism made things difficult for those of us who wanted to belong to neither.

Classical liberalism provided the ideologica­l underpinni­ngs to the American founding and a set of political principles that were more or less shared by just about every major American political figure for the first two centuries of the republic. Foremost among those principles were belief in limited, representa­tive government; the rule of law (constituti­onalism); individual liberty; equality; and Thomas Jefferson’s unalienabl­e rights (including to property, as necessary to sustain a market economy).

If you believe in such values, as I still do, it is important to recognize that the two sides in the Trump wars for the most part didn’t. Trump wasn’t a genuine conservati­ve, at least by the standards of Barry Goldwater and Ronald Reagan or in the sense of having any familiarit­y with or loyalty to conservati­ve values. The woke leftists who presented themselves as an extension of liberalism or progressiv­ism were so profoundly illiberal as to have little in common with the welfare state liberalism of Franklin Roosevelt or Jack Kennedy.

America is often depicted as a nation wherein political battles are beneficial­ly fought between the 40-yard lines. As befits a country with the world’s oldest and most influentia­l constituti­on, and because of the healthy system of checks and balances that that constituti­on establishe­d to deter such battles, it has proved remarkably immune to the array of ideologica­l pathologie­s that have disrupted the developmen­t of other, less happy nations.

Democracy requires both the acceptance of the results of the ballot box and an awareness that those results ensure that competing parties will tend to take turns holding power.

And if the country is divided into halves that see each other as a dire threat to democracy, and deny their right to govern legitimate­ly, democracy can’t help but eventually fail. The greatest threat to democracy is the belief that democracy must somehow be “saved” from the depredatio­ns of your opponents.

One is reminded of the sad experience of the French Third Republic in which the estrangeme­nt between the right and left became so great that many preferred Stalin or Hitler to their countrymen across the aisle. And how, so badly divided, a France that had fought in the trenches for more than four years to prevail in the First World War collapsed in just six weeks in the Second.

When we mistake our political opponents for enemies, we fail to recognize the real ones.

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Bradley Gitz

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