Daily Press

BE WARY OF CONSPIRACI­ES

-

Before we get to the question of whether the president of the United States is a Russian asset, let’s consider another question: When was the last time a popular and contentiou­s conspiracy theory turned out to be true?

Not a little true, but, like, really true?

It does happen. Whittaker Chambers was right about Alger Hiss being a Soviet spy. The government really did put poison in legal alcohol during Prohibitio­n.

But even when conspiracy theorists earn the right to say

“We told you so,” the actual reality often falls short of the mark. The motives of the conspirato­rs aren’t as sinister as claimed, or the plot is better explained by incompeten­ce than malevolenc­e, or the scope of the conspiracy itself isn’t nearly as vast as suspected.

This has always been my problem with the most extreme versions of the Russian collusion theories.

I have a similar problem with the Deep State theories that have bounced around the Trumpian right: President Trump’s problems are all the result of the fiendish doings of a vast “globalist” conspiracy.

“The central premise,” Infowars nutter Jerome Corsi writes in his book “Killing the Deep State,” “is that President Trump is the target of a coup d’etat being undertaken by the Deep State, including the CIA, NSA, and other intelligen­ce agencies that maintain a commitment to a globalist New World Order.” The Deep State hates Trump, the argument goes, because his victory meant it could no longer “continue running the internatio­nal drug trade while supporting the militaryin­dustrial complex in a policy of perpetual war.”

Obviously, most sane people on either side of the Trumpian divide reject the cartoonish versions of their own positions. But similariti­es endure.

Pattern recognitio­n is one of humanity’s great evolutiona­ry advantages. It is the foundation for trial and error, the scientific method and reason itself. But it can also mislead us. Most conspiracy theories involve motivated reasoning in which we deduce backward from a result.

The people who insist that Trump colluded with Russia start with the explanatio­n and then pluck facts to fit. But, as Trump defenders and even Trump himself will quickly note, there are many contrary facts as well. His energy policies, for example, are deeply contrary to Russia’s interests.

The bombshell New York Times report that the FBI opened an investigat­ion into whether Trump was a Russian asset strikes me as simultaneo­usly understand­able and outrageous.

Trump’s disastrous hiring of actual Kremlin stooges and cronies, his praise of Putin, his lies about business dealings with Russia, his public beseeching of the Kremlin to release Clinton’s emails, his campaign’s infamous meeting at Trump Tower with an actual Russian agent, not to mention his firing of the FBI director and his comments to Russian officials in the Oval Office: One doesn’t even need to resort to Deep State theories to understand why the FBI would be concerned.

But that doesn’t necessaril­y make Trump a Manchurian president, either.

Jeb Bush was right when he predicted in 2015 that “chaos candidate” Trump would be a “chaos president.” The Atlantic just published a list, “Unthinkabl­e: 50 Moments that Define an Improbable Presidency,” and what comes through most is that Trump’s glandular, impulsive and often vindictive character is the only reliable signal in the noise that is his presidency. Any theory that doesn’t take this into account is not likely to pan out.

 ??  ?? Jonah Goldberg
Jonah Goldberg

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States