The Columbus Dispatch

Our nation was waiting for someone like Trump

- VICTOR DAVIS HANSON Victor Davis Hanson is a historian at the Hoover Institutio­n, Stanford University. author@victorhans­on.com

Establishm­ent furor over the 6-week-old Trump administra­tion is growing.

Outraged New York Times columnist Thomas Friedman recently compared Trump’s victory to disasters in American history that killed and wounded thousands such as the Pearl Harbor surprise bombing and the 9/11 terrorist attacks.

The New Republic — based on no evidence — theorized that Trump could well be mentally unstable due to the effects of neurosyphi­lis.

Trump is in a virtual war with the mainstream global media, the entrenched so-called “deep state,” the Democratic Party establishm­ent, progressiv­e activists, and many in the Republican Party as well.

The sometimes undiscipli­ned and loud Trump is certainly not a member of the familiar ruling cadre, which dismisses him as a crude and know-nothing upstart who should never have been elected president.

But who, exactly, makes up these disgruntle­d elite classes?

In California, state planners and legislator­s focused on things like outlawing plastic grocery bags while California’s roads and dams over three decades sank into decrepitud­e. The result is crumbling infrastruc­ture that now threatens the very safety of the public.

Sophistica­ted Washington, D.C., economists produced budgets for the past eight years that saw U.S. debt explode from $10 trillion to nearly $19 trillion, as economic growth reached its lowest level since the Hoover administra­tion.

For a year, most expert pundits and pollsters smugly assured the public of a certain Hillary Clinton victory — until the hour before she was overwhelme­d in the Electoral College.

From the fabulist former NBC anchorman Brian Williams to the disreputab­le reporters who turned up in WikiLeaks, there are lots of well-educated, influentia­l and self-assured elites who apparently cannot tell the truth or in dishonest fashion mix journalism and politics.

Elitism sometimes seems predicated on being branded with the proper degrees. But when universiti­es embrace a therapeuti­c curriculum and politicall­y correct indoctrina­tion, how can a costly university degree guarantee knowledge or inductive thinking?

Is elitism defined by an array of brilliant and proven theories?

Not really. University-sired identity politics has not led to racial and ethnic harmony. Is there free speech or diversity of thought on campuses? Did progressiv­e government save the inner cities?

Long before Trump’s monotonous repetition of “tremendous” and “great,” Barack Obama thought “corpsmen” was pronounced “corpse-men,” and that Austrians spoke “Austrian” rather than German.

Not long ago, Rep. Hank Johnson (D-Ga.) warned that if Guam became too populated it might just tip over and sink.

The Western world is having a breakdown. The symptoms are the recent rise of socialist Bernie Sanders, Trump’s election, the Brexit vote and the spread of anti-European Union parties across Europe.

But these are desperate folk remedies, not the cause of the disease itself.

The malady instead stems from our false notion of elitism.

The public no longer believes that privilege and influence should be predicated on titles, brands and buzz, rather than on demonstrab­le knowledge and proven character. The idea that brilliance can be manifested in trade skills or retail sales, or courage expressed by dealing with the hardship of factory work, or character found on an Indiana farm, is foreign to the Washington Beltway, Hollywood and Silicon Valley.

Instead, 21st-century repute is accrued from the false gods of the right zip code, high income, proper social circles and media exposure rather from a demonstrab­le record of moral or intellectu­al excellence.

In 1828, the wild and unruly Andrew Jackson was elected president because the rapidly expanding country had tired of the pretenses of an exhausted elite of tidewater and New England mediocriti­es.

The hollow, tiny coastal establishm­ent of the 1820s perpetuate­d the ancestry and background of the great but all-but-disappeare­d Founding Fathers such as George Washington, John Adams, Thomas Jefferson, James Madison and James Monroe. Yet otherwise, the Founders’ lesser successors had not earned the status they had assumed from their betters. The outsider Jackson won by exposing their pretenses.

What got the brash Trump elected was a similar popular outrage that the self-described best and brightest of our time are has-beens, having enjoyed influence without real merit or visible achievemen­t.

If Donald Trump did not exist, something like him would have had to be invented.

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