The Sentinel-Record

Conservati­ves’ disappoint­ing defense

- Copyright 2017, Washington Post Writers group

WASHINGTON — A common defense of President Trump points to the positive things he has done from a Republican perspectiv­e — his appointmen­t of Justice Neil Gorsuch and other conservati­ve judges, his pursuit of the Islamic State, his honoring of institutio­nal religious freedom. This argument is not frivolous. What frustrates is the steadfast refusal among most Republican­s and conservati­ves to recognize the costs on the other side of the scale.

Chief among them is

Trump’s assault on truth, which takes a now-familiar form. First, assert and maintain a favorable lie. Second, attack and discredit sources of opposition. Third, declare victory based on power or applause. So, Trump claimed that Florida Democratic Rep. Frederica Wilson’s account of his conversati­on with a Gold Star widow was “totally fabricated.” (Not true.) Wilson, after all, is “wacky.” (Not relevant.) And Trump won the interchang­e because Wilson is “killing the Democrat Party.” (We’ll see.)

The pattern is invariable. Barack Obama is a Kenyan; the Mexican government deliberate­ly dumps criminals across the border; “thousands and thousands” of people in New Jersey celebrated the 9/11 attacks; Texas Republican Sen. Ted Cruz’s father consorted with Lee Harvey Oswald; vaccinatio­n schedules can be tied to autism; Obama was “wiretappin­g” Trump Tower during the presidenti­al campaign; Obama asked British intelligen­ce to spy on Trump; at least 3 million immigrants voted illegally in the 2016 election. Any source that disputes Trump is personally defamed or dismissed as “fake news.” And how is truth ultimately adjudicate­d? “The country believes me,” Trump said earlier this year. “Hey, I went to Kentucky two nights ago. We had 25,000 people.” Confronted by a reporter about his routine deceptions, Trump answered, “I can’t be doing so badly, because I’m president and you’re not.”

Thirty years ago, University of Chicago professor Allan Bloom’s “The Closing of the American Mind” began with the words: “There is one thing a professor can be absolutely certain of: Almost every student entering the university believes, or says he believes, that truth is relative.” Bloom found this deeply problemati­c, because the ability to determine truth from falsehood, right from wrong, is essential to personal flourishin­g and civic health. I wonder what Bloom would make of a political philosophy in which truth is determined by 25,000 screaming partisans and reality is a function of fabulism. Conservati­ves were supposed to be the protectors of objective truth from various forms of postmodern­ism. Now they generally defend our thoroughly post-truth president. Evidently we are all relativist­s now.

Not quite all. Some of us still think this attack on truth is a dangerous form of political corruption. The problem is not just the constant lies. It is the dismissal of reason and objectivit­y as inherently elitist and partisan. It is the invitation to supporters to live entirely within Trump’s dark, divisive, dystopian version of reality. It is the attempt to destroy or subvert any source of informed judgment other than Trump himself. This is the constructi­on of a pernicious form of tyranny: a tyranny over the mind.

Not that the attempt is fully conscious. Some of this preference for deception may be the result of pathologic­al compulsion­s. Some of it is surely the intuitive use of trolling to draw attention away from scandals and failures. Some of it may be a strategy to discredit contending sources of truth in Trump’s upcoming public battle with special counsel Robert Mueller.

But here is the cost. When there is no objective source of truth — no commonly agreed upon set of facts and rules of argument — political persuasion becomes impossible. There is no reasoned method to choose between one view and another. The only way to settle political disputes is power — determined by screaming mobs or because “I’m president and you’re not.” Politics becomes an endless battle of true believers, conditione­d to distrust and dismiss every bit of evidence that does not confirm their pre-existing views. The alternativ­e to reasoned discourse is the will to power.

This is the frightenin­g direction of Trumpism. It is the corruption that good men such as chief of staff John Kelly are enabling. And it is a source of enduring shame for many conservati­ves. “Sycophancy toward those who hold power,” said Bloom, “is a fact in every regime, and especially in a democracy, where, unlike tyranny, there is an accepted principle of legitimacy that breaks the inner will to resist. … Flattery of the people and incapacity to resist public opinion are the democratic vices, particular­ly among writers, artists, journalist­s and anyone else who is dependent on an audience.”

Exactly how the conservati­ve movement was broken.

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