Las Vegas Review-Journal

Addiction to rage tears America at the seams Charles Blow

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It is truly a confoundin­g time to be alive, to be an American. We are watching as a president of the United States openly lies, fabricates and exaggerate­s while two-fifths of the population cheers him for it. He spurns our allies and embraces our adversarie­s, and people shrug.

He, his congressio­nal allies and his propaganda arm are waging open warfare on the Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion in an effort to tarnish it before its inquiry into connection­s between the Trump campaign, family and associates and Russia can be made public.

He is a racist who disparages black and brown people, whether they be immigrants, Muslims, people from Haiti and Africa, Barack Obama, the mayor of San Juan or Maxine Waters. People equivocate about it and excuse it.

He is attacking the press in the most aggressive of terms so that what they reveal about him will be viewed with skepticism.

He is attempting to weaken our institutio­ns, our protocols and convention­s, our faith in the truth, our sense of honor and our respect for the rule of law.

And somehow, many Americans, even those disgusted by what they see, have resigned themselves to this new reality.

In fact, Trump’s poll numbers had been inching up before he created a humanitari­an disaster at the border by separating children from their parents.

I guess this is how empires begin to fall. It isn’t necessaril­y one dramatic moment, but the incessant monotony of assaults on normalcy that slowly shift the ground beneath you, reorientin­g what is proper and preferable, what is outrageous and what is acceptable.

Every day in the Trump era, one could start a sentence with “Never before ...” and end it in astonishme­nt and exclamatio­n. But that has a cumulative effect of erosion. The constancy of the individual outrages reduces the psychic significan­ce of the collective.

Trump is exhausting our mental capacity for indignatio­n. This does not help Trump in the eyes of most Americans, to be sure. The Resistance remains strong and will likely have an impressive showing in the November elections.

But, along the margins, where both support for Trump and objections to him are soft, his tactics may have greater impact.

Not to mention the fact that those tactics keep his base riled and ready. Trump is like a drug dealer who has addicted his followers to fear and rage and keeps supplying it in constant doses. His supporters have become rage-junkies for whom he can do no wrong.

Let’s be clear about the demographi­cs of this base: While the overwhelmi­ng majority of blacks and Hispanics have an unfavorabl­e view of Trump, just as many white people have a favorable view of him as have an unfavorabl­e view of him, according to a Suffolk University/usa Today poll conducted last month.

Part of that is undoubtedl­y due to the increasing­ly racialized nature of our partisansh­ip, but it is also because Trump has positioned himself as a white power president.

One of the things his supporters like is the very thing that others detest: His unapologet­ic, unabashed crusade to fight off all efforts at racial and ethnic inclusion. They may not articulate it as such, but that is the nature of Trump’s policies: Promising to build a wall, disparagin­g Mexicans, separating immigrant families, the Muslim ban, decreasing even legal migration, denigratin­g protesting football players.

Trump has vented an American racial anxiety, giving it power and a perch, giving it permission to be vocal and even violent.

Indeed, these are all parts of what fuels opposition to Trump.

The Suffolk University/usa Today poll asked people who disapprove of Trump to put in their own words why they don’t support him. These were some of their top responses: Liar/dishonest/corrupt: 12 percent.

Doing a poor job: 9 percent.

The way he treats people/bully/jerk/disrespect­ful: 8 percent.

Disagree with his views/stand on issues: 8 percent.

Lack of morals/not a good person/poor character: 7 percent

Racist/hate: 6 percent.

But no amount of moralizing from Trump’s opposition will affect the fervor of his supporters. Quite the opposite: Nothing quickens the pulse and induces the delight of conservati­ves more than the consternat­ion of liberals. They would let the whole country collapse for the pleasure of spite.

And this is where we are now: at a standoff. The Trump apparatus is entrenched, and each day burrows ever deeper into the core of what made America greater, better, different: its slow but steady arc toward more inclusion, equality, openness. Only two things seem capable of offering relief: he elections this year and in 2020, or something damning from the Russian meddling investigat­ion.

Last week, an exasperate­d Rep. Trey Gowdy, R-S.C., lashed out at Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein, saying, “Whatever you got, finish it the hell up, because this country is being torn apart.”

But that’s like blaming the doctor for your illness. The investigat­ors aren’t tearing the country apart. They are trying to protect and save it.

Trump and his defense machine — including members of Congress — are tearing it apart.

Trump-addicted acolytes are tearing it apart.

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