The Intellectual Case for Trump II:
Trump is the Culture Warrior we Need
The Right of the ‘Young Fogies’
The culture wars
permitted the Right to be taken over by what Jeffrey Hart—Richard Nixon
speechwriter, sometime National
Review editor, and all-around conservative giant—described as
“young fogies.” Hart describes the phenomenon in an essay titled “The
Intelligent Woman’s Guide to a Modern American Conservatism,” in which he
envisions as a dialogue between himself and a younger woman of the era.
Here is Hart’s warning: A
lot of my students are not sold on conservatism. They think conservatives are
preppies who are against sex. In some visible cases, the main content of
‘conservatism’ seems to be a refusal of experience. We have more than our share
of young fogies. I could name some names, but what the hell. In my view, young
fogie American conservatives…place an altogether disproportionate emphasis on
sex and sex-related moral questions. Some conservatives appear to confuse Victorian
morality with the Western tradition, and even with Christianity.
Hart wrote those words
in 1982, when candidates like Ronald Reagan were still winning young voters.
But the “young fogie-ism” Hart warned against was already becoming a
significant portion of the Republican brand, one that extended through the
anti-video game, anti-rap, anti-sex, anti-sideboob, anti-violence handwringing
that became an integral part of the Republican persona over the next two
decades.
Trump is many things,
but a fogie he is not. On the surface, Trump’s gold-plated lifestyle is nothing
like the old Hollywood-style glamour of the Reagan White House. But for an era
where most Americans have moved far beyond the culture wars of the past, where
reality stars are our new tastemakers and Kim Kardashian is an icon mothers
encourage their daughters to emulate, he offers an aspirational vision of
wealth and accomplishment that appeals to the same combination of glitz and
celebrity.
The
Left Turns the Market Against the Right
Obsessing over the lost
culture wars of the past is an error for the Right. But the real problem is
that even if the Right hasn’t moved on from its previous losses, the Left has moved on from its
previous victories. They remain focused on advancing their vision and building
on their victories, to the point of eradicating any opposition from the public
square. As a result, the character of the Left has fundamentally changed in a
way that today’s Right seems quite incapable of grasping. The old Left cast itself as transgressors against mainstream
morality. This Left enforces and controls mainstream morality.
Hannah Arendt once
quipped that the fiercest revolutionary becomes a devoted conservative after
the revolution. This is certainly true of the Left, which has, since its
culture war victories, co-opted much of the dogma of earlier conservatives and
poisoned it. The old Left cast itself as transgressors against mainstream
morality. This Left enforces and controls mainstream morality. The old Left
championed transgressive free speech. This Left despises it.
Most importantly, the
old Left cast itself as outside of capitalism. This Left is thoroughly
corporatist, and only occasionally pretends otherwise. As a result,
conservatives have stood by, oblivious and helpless, as the Left began to turn
all our best weapons—especially the free market—against us.
This brings us to a
second point: the inadequacy of the institutional Right at anticipating and
explaining free markets. Conservatives and libertarians have been warning of
capitalism cannibalizing itself since at least 1942, when Austrian economist
Joseph Schumpeter opened his book “Capitalism, Socialism, and Democracy” with
disturbing news for his free market-sympathetic peers.
“I felt it my duty to
take, and to inflict upon the reader, considerable trouble in order to lead up
effectively to my paradoxical conclusion: capitalism is being killed by its
achievements,” Schumpeter wrote. Much later on in the book, he observed even
more cuttingly that “capitalism, inevitably and by virtue of the very logic its
civilization creates, educates and subsidizes a vested interest in social
unrest.”
Cultural Neutrality Is Not Possible
Schumpeter was right
then, and he is distressingly right now. The cancer of leftism has spread
through capitalism even further than it had in 1942. The general assumption of
the American people in the aftermath of the financial crisis and the collapse
and bailouts of Wall Street is that they were witnessing failures of
capitalism, and the Right has done little to correct this impression. A certain species of capitalism might actually drive
political correctness.
Trump’s brazenness in
admitting to past acts of cronyism is another aspect that would, for any other
politician, spell his doom. Instead, it has fostered a greater degree of trust
from his supporters. This is because Trump alone seems to understand that
capitalism has weaknesses at
all, having been a capitalist himself. The greatest of those
is the fact that capitalism—and its defenders—assume it can operate from a
position of cultural neutrality. It can’t.
In the latest season of
“South Park,” the titular town is overrun with advertisements
masquerading as human beings: soulless robots who use gentrification and
political correctness (“mental gentrification,” the show wryly notes) to
eliminate actual human beings from
the area. This idea that a certain species of capitalism might actually drive
political correctness is daring and interesting, and relatively unremarked upon
by those on the Right today.
The Left Treats Race and Sex as
Brands
One of the key tactics
of advertisers is to make consumers feel their life is missing something
without whatever product the advertiser is selling. If you look at ads that
attempt to showcase the difference between, say, data packages from different
cell phone carriers, you’ll often see the competition depicted as holding back
their customers from the awesome data package they could have because of greed,
technological incompetence, or some other abstraction that, of course, the advertised carrier
doesn’t suffer from.
The Left treats race and sex as
brands, operating with messaging and tactics that are more than just organizing
techniques.
Once someone buys a
product, you want them to feel allegiance to it, a degree of brand loyalty that
can sometimes resemble political tribalism (see Apple). The aim is to make
customers believe that someone who consumes that particular product belongs to a community of
other buyers, who just happen to be a particularly desirable community to be a
part of!
When you distill it down
to its essence, the worst forms of modern leftist politics play on all of these
same tactics, playing down the ramifications of policy agendas to speak to a
much deeper and emotional desire to be a good person.
Did you vote for Barack
Obama because you wanted to feel good about yourself, but still feel life’s
missing something? Vote for Bernie Sanders, and he’ll deliver on the promise to
give you everything you need. Not getting the wage you could be getting? It’s
the patriarchy, so switch carriers and join our feminist army for Hillary
instead.
The Left treats race and
sex as brands, operating with messaging and tactics that are more than just
organizing techniques: they’re a brilliant technique to capture someone without
the insight to see through the pitch. The Left has realized it can succeed by
creating cultural turf wars among different demographics as a substitute for a
policy agenda that speaks to their real needs.
The Political Equivalent of Gawker
In this, they break from
the past in many respects. Bill Clinton himself revealed how significant this
shift was when he challenged Black Lives Matter. Clinton was advancing a policy
argument in defense of his approach to crime in the 1990s, in the face of
protesters who would hear none of it. His arguments were based on the facts,
where the BLM protesters’ signs were based on the equivalent of brand loyalty
to a cultural movement. No matter how correct Clinton’s case was, it inevitably
fell on deaf ears. They have turned a capitalist tactic
on the culture that sustains it.
The point is that the
post-culture war Left has not laid down their arms. Instead, they have become
the political equivalent of Gawker: a divisive industry seeking cultural
flashpoints to exploit and highlight, devoted to manufacturing mutual hate for
their own benefit. They thrive on the click-war hate that pits groups
against each other.
It is not enough that
women face challenges within a post-feminist society—they must be told that
half the country is participating in a war on their priorities. In an atomized
culture, breaking down people to the elements of ethnicity, sex, and gender is
the Left’s go-to method of redefining society according to their priorities.
This is a key point that
cannot be ignored. Because of the modern Left’s sophisticated use of
advertising techniques, they have done something with their hatemongering that
the Left of the past could only dream of: they have made it profitable. In so
doing, they have turned a capitalist tactic on the culture that sustains it,
and thus, on itself.
The Right Needs a New Cultural
Vision
The Right must fight
back against that. Yes, free markets remain the best economic system ever
created, and a necessary precondition for a free society, but not a sufficient
one. Does this mean the state has to get involved? Not necessarily.
Conservatives could use another weapon to limit the spread of this kind of
poison, and that’s culture.
Conservatives could use another
weapon to limit the spread of this kind of poison, and that’s culture.
Unfortunately, what
little of a cultural vision we possess on the Right is so dated as to be
largely hokey and irrelevant to the experience of Americans today. Because this
new Left has become the dominant culture, the Right is obliged to form a
counterculture. But countercultures are no place for young fogies.
Countercultures shoot sacred cows, scandalize “respectable” norms, and
generally wreak havoc for the sake of breaking down the hypocrisy and weakness
of the dominant culture. By and large, it’s still the young fogies who run the
show, and expecting them to create a counterculture, let alone a counterculture
that produces actual art, is ludicrous.
The Right doesn’t have
to conjure up its own art from scratch. It can and occasionally has co-opted
modern entertainment as well. After all, don’t films like Christopher Nolan’s
“Batman” series make the most powerful statement about the tension between
chaos and civilization since John Ford? Don’t
Nietzschean fairy tales like “Breaking Bad,” “House of Cards,” or even “True
Detective,” not to mention most video games, utterly brush aside the Left’s
fantasies about Rousseauistic, universal human goodness? Well, yes—but once
again, Hart’s warning looms large, and fogie-ism rears its head.
An excellent example of
this is an article titled “A Counterproductive Alliance,”
discussing the increasing friendliness to right-wing
ideas among video game fans after the #Gamergate controversy. The gist of the
article can be summed up as: “How will
we maintain our air of moral superiority if people show up to CPAC in costumes instead ofblazers and bowties?” Never mind
that #Gamergate and movements like it were the most successful backlash against
political correctness: for some “conservatives,” sayingyes to potential allies was too much to bear if it
meant hobnobbing with the sorts of people who’ve never read a Bible or owned a
varsity jacket.
Beat Dominant Culture at Its Own
Game
This leaves the Right in
a vulnerable and very unenviable spot: the most anachronistic elements of
right-wing politics have rendered us too unimaginative to create a
counterculture of our own, and too snobbish to appropriate the elements of the
dominant culture that could serve as building blocks.
Pray some Prometheus comes along
who’s willing to steal fire from his fellow cultural elites to give to the
Right’s forgotten constituencies.
What’s a conservative
who wants to stop culture, and thus politics, from being dragged to the far
Left do? Answer: He or she has to hope that some part of mainstream culture
co-opts the Right. Pray, in other words, that some Prometheus comes along who’s
willing to steal fire from his fellow cultural elites to give to the Right’s
forgotten constituencies, even if it annoys their more refined leaders.
Perhaps, say, some
titanic elite figure who knows leftist pop culture’s weaknesses from the
inside, and is willing to lose his cozy insider status to go at it like a
wrecking ball? You know, the sort of person with enough cultural cachet to turn
an episode of “Saturday Night Life” into an hour-long infomercial for his
political vision, rather than a source of endless sneering gags about
Republicans? The kind of person who can get away with barking orders at MSNBC
hosts? That kind of person?
Oh look, it’s Donald Trump.
Trump, alone among the 2016 Republican candidates, has been willing to seize
the banner of the Right in the current culture
war, and plant it straight in the backs of his fallen leftist antagonists.
Trump did this the way countercultural warriors are supposed to win fights: he
beat the dominant culture at its own game by rejecting their assumptions about
what was allowed.
Hoisted on Their Own Petards
Compared to Trump at his
most mocking and satirical, Gawker is tame. Compared to Trump at his most daring
and impetuous, even the most ruthless of Hollywood’s antiheroes look peevish.
Compared to Trump’s seemingly oblivious moments
of benevolence, Upworthy looks mawkish and
saccharine. Trump has made destroying the young fogies on the Right and Left the greatest thing
on TV.
What Ronald Reagan and Trump have in
common is obvious: an incredible capacity to use the media to captivate the
American people.
If the leaders of the
Right are scared of Trump because he will say anything; the Left is scared of
Trump precisely because he will say
anything. He does not play by the rules, and that makes him less predictable
and more dangerous. What Ronald Reagan and Trump have in common is obvious: an
incredible capacity to use the media to captivate the American people. One
learned this in Hollywood, the other in reality TV, but both deployed this
skill to great effect.
There is, of course, a
big difference, as well: everyone knows Reagan cast himself as a sunny, heroic
figure.
Trump, on the other
hand, is taking his cues from his time as a pro-wrestling heel personality,
i.e., a comically larger-than-life villain. But there’s a neat thing about
villains, or at least well-done ones: they get to show where people’s ideas of
good and evil fall flat. Trump does this brilliantly to the Left. He has taken
the humiliating mockery that the media has trained so effectively on “hicks,”
Christians, and Republicans, and turned it round to expose the smug, mostly
leftist Babbits and young fogies of the Acela Corridor as no less ridiculous.
That’s a good start for
someone who wants to make America great again, rather than letting America
succumb to its eventual, leftist-driven death by a thousand clicks.
Mytheos
Holt is a contributor to The Federalist and a senior fellow at the Institute
for Liberty. Yes, Mytheos is his real name.
http://thefederalist.com/2016/04/20/the-intellectual-case-for-trump-ii-trump-is-the-culture-warrior-we-need/#.VxesnlU-Ju0.twitter
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