Trump’s
rise due to fear, society breakdown: Chomsky
Trump’s
rise due to fear, society breakdown: Chomsky
US
Republican presidential front-runner Donald Trump’s surprising rise
in politics is attributable to “fear” and a “breakdown of
society,” says renowned scholar Noam Chomsky.
“Fear,
along with the breakdown of society during the neoliberal period,”
gave rise to Donald Trump, says Noam Chomsky.
24
February, 2016
Trump
emerged victorious in Tuesday night’s Nevada caucuses, his third
win out of the four contests so far held for the Republican Party’s
nomination.
After
his second-place finish in Iowa caucuses, the billionaire has swiped
the floor with his rivals in New Hampshire, South Carolina and
Nevada, enjoying double-digit margins.
“Fear,
along with the breakdown of society during the neoliberal period,”
Chomsky said in an interview with AlterNet published on Tuesday, when
asked why Trump is on a winning streak. “People feel isolated,
helpless, victim of powerful forces that they do not understand and
cannot influence.”
Donald
Trump speaks at the Treasure Island Hotel in Las Vegas, Nevada,
February 23, 2016. (AFP photo)
The
MIT professor and intellectual pointed to the political environment
that has allowed the New York businessman to flourish, comparing it
to the 1930s, when the US was engulfed by the Great Depression.
“Objectively,
poverty and suffering were far greater, but even among poor working
people and the unemployed, there was a sense of hope that is lacking
now, in large part because of the growth of a militant labor movement
and also the existence of political organizations outside the
mainstream,” the academic explained.
Chomsky
refused to predict who he thought would make it to the
White House.
“I
can express hopes and fears, but not predictions,” he said.
Chomsky
is known to have contributed to Democratic contender Bernie Sanders’
campaigns in the past. However, he said he would “absolutely”
vote for Hillary Clinton over the eventual Republican nominee if
he lived in a swing state, where the two major political parties have
similar levels of support among voters and can’t secure that
state's Electoral College votes.
Last
month, Chomsky praised Sanders but said he didn’t have “much of a
chance” due to “our system of mainly bought elections.”
Clinton
narrowly defeated Sanders in the Nevada caucuses on Saturday.
The
former secretary of state had lost the New Hampshire primary to
Sanders but won the caucuses in Iowa by a razor-thin margin
Psst. America is already fascist.
How the US Went Fascist: Mass Media Make Excuses for Trump Voters
Juan Cole
Donald
Trump is interviewed by CNN's Wolf Blitzer for The
Situation Room.
(Photo by Regine Mahaux/Getty Images)
The
rise of Donald Trump to the presumptive Republican standard bearer
for president in 2016 is an indictment of, and a profound danger to,
the American republic.
The
Founding Fathers were afraid of the excitability of the voters and
their vulnerability to the appeal of demagogues. That is the reason
for a Senate (which was originally appointed), intended to check
those notorious hotheads in Congress, who are elected from districts
every two years.
But
it isn’t only the checks and balances in government that are
necessary to keep the republic. It is the Fourth Estate, i.e. the
press, it is the country’s leaders and it is the general public who
stand between the republic and the rise of a Mussolini.
The
notables have been shown to be useless. Donald Trump should have been
kicked out of the Republican Party the moment he began talking about
violating the Constitution. The first time he hinted about assaulting
the journalists covering his rallies, he should have been shown the
door. When he openly advocated torture (“worse than
waterboarding”), he should have been ushered away. When he began
speaking of closing houses of worship, he should have been expelled.
He has solemnly pledged to violate the First, Fourth and Eighth
Amendments of the Constitution, at the least. If someone’s platform
is unconstitutional, it boggles the mind that a major American party
would put him or her up for president. How can he take the oath of
office with a straight face? The party leaders were afraid he’d
mount a third-party campaign. But who knows how that would have
turned out? Someone with power needs to say that Trump is
unacceptable and to define him out of respectable politics, the same
way David Duke is treated (Trump routinely retweets Duke
fellow-travellers).
Then
there is the mass media. As Amy Goodman has pointed out, corporate
television has routinely pumped Trump into our living rooms. They
have virtually blacked out Bernie Sanders. Trump seems to have
connived to have 10 or 15 minutes at 7:20 every evening on the
magazine shows. Chris Matthews of Hardball obligingly
cut away to Il Duce II’s rants and gave away his show to him on a
nightly basis.
Not
long ago, extremely powerful television personalities and
sportscasters were abruptly fired for saying things less offensive
than Trump’s bromides. Don Imus was history for abusive language
toward women basketball players. But Trump’s strident attack on
Megyn Kelly as a menstruating harridan was just allowed to pass.
Jimmy “the Greek” Snyder was fired by CBS for saying
African-Americans were ‘bred’ to be better athletes. But Trump
issued a blanket characterization of undocumented Mexican labor
migrants as rapists, thieves and drug dealers. Of course this
allegation is untrue.
I
watched the Nevada caucus coverage on MSNBC and was appalled at the
discourse. One reporter tried to assure us that Trump voters were not
actually voting for racism and bullying politics, they were just
upset. But polling in South Carolina demonstrated thatTrump
voters were significantly to the right of most Republicans on some
issues.
In South Carolina, 38 percent of Trump voters wished the South had
won the Civil War, presumably suggesting that they regretted the end
of slavery.
Another
MSNBC reporter helpfully explained that Trump voters feel that
“political correctness” has gone too far. But what does Trump
mean by “political correctness”? He means sexism and racism. So
what is really being said is that Trump supporters resent that sexist
and racist discourse and policies have been banned from the public
sphere. There is ample proof that Trump’s use of “political
correctness” identifies it with sexist and racist remarks and
actions.
Yet
another asserted that “some of” Trump’s positions “are not
that extreme.” Exhibit A was his praise for Planned Parenthood. But
he wants to outlaw abortion, i.e. overturn the current law of the
land, which is extreme. (A majority of Americans support the right to
choose, so he is in a minority).
Chris
Matthews explained to us that people hoped he would do something for
the country rather than for the government.
But
Trump has made it very clear that he is not interested in a
significant proportion of the people in the country. He is a white
nationalist, and his message is that he will stand up for white
Christian people against the Chinese, the Mexicans and the Muslims.
Just as Adolph Hitler hoped for an alliance with Anglo-Saxon Britain
on racial grounds (much preferring it to the less white Italy), the
only foreign leader Trump likes is the “white” Vladimir Putin.
That he won the evangelical vote again in Nevada is helpful for us in
seeing that American evangelicalism itself is in some part a form of
white male chauvinist nationalism and only secondarily about
religion.
By
the way, the idea that Trump won the Latino vote in Nevada is
nonsense. In one of a number of fine interventions at MSNBC, Lawrence
O’Donnell pointed out that something on the order of 1,800 Latinos
voted in the Nevada GOP caucuses, of whom perhaps 800 voted for
Trump, i.e. 44 percent of this tiny group. Trump lost the vote of
even this small group of hard right Latinos, since 56 percent of them
voted for someone else.
There
are 800,000 Latinos in the state of Nevada (pop. 2.8 million). In
2012, 70 percent of Latinos voted for Barack Obama, while Mitt Romney
got 25 percent.
My guess is that Trump can’t do as well among them
as Romney did.
It
has been a dreadful performance by the press and by party leaders.
They are speaking in such a way as to naturalize the creepy, weird
and completely un-American positions Trump has taken.
This
is how the dictators came to power in the 1920s and 1930s. Good
people remained silent or acquiesced. People expressed hope that
something good would come of it. Mussolini would wring the laziness
out of Italy and make the trains run on time.
When
Benjamin Franklin was asked by a lady after the Constitutional
Convention what sort of government the US had, he said, “A
Republic, Madame, if you can keep it.”
You
have to wonder if we can keep it.
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