From
Carolyn Baker, Donald Trump is an integral part of the collapse of the United States of America
The
Serpent And The Dove: Wisdom For Navigating The Future
Carolyn
Baker
21
November, 2016
At
this moment, much of the America and the world finds itself in a
profound state of shock and even disbelief as a result of the
election of Donald Trump to the Presidency of the United States. Few
would conclude that this has been a ‘normal’ election or that
Trump is a ‘normal’ President Elect. In fact, ‘normal’ is
precisely what Trump abhors and what he was determined to eradicate
by running for the office and winning.
Unequivocally,
we recognize that millions of people in the United States were
hurting on a variety of levels and ached for change. They have been
disenchanted with, and often devastated by, the old guard—neoliberal,
globalist policies that shafted them and declared the wellbeing of
corporations sacrosanct. Thus a candidate who promised that he would
make the demise of that system his personal mission in life was
deliciously irresistible.
We
also understand that due to the protracted dumbing down of the
culture, that is, the deconstruction of education in the United
States, a clear analysis of issues was not within the grasp of the
average American unless they exerted an effort to educate themselves
accordingly. And even if they were to do so, what would be in it for
them? As Gary Younge notes in his “How
Trump Took Middle America” article, “When people feel the
system is broken, they vote for whoever promises to smash it.”
Their vote for Trump was a cry for help, but at the same time,
similar to the frantic tantruming of a toddler, flailing with rage.
Sadly,
it is just a matter of time until the disaffected wake up and realize
the extent to which they have been conned.
As Paul Waldman’s Washington Post article states, “The greatest
trick Donald Trump pulled was convincing voters he’d be
‘anti-establishment.’ Well, maybe not the greatest trick. But in
a campaign full of cons, it has to rank close to the top. This was
near the heart of Trump’s appeal to the disaffected and
disempowered: Send me to Washington, and that ‘establishment’
you’ve been hearing so much about? We’ll blow it up, send it
packing, punch it right in the face, and when it’s over the
government will finally be working for you again. And the people who
voted for Trump bought it. After all, he’s no politician, right?
He’s an outsider, a glass-breaker, a guy who can cut out the bull
and get things done. Right? But the idea that he would do this was
based on a profound misunderstanding of what the establishment
actually is, and who Donald Trump is.”
Sister
Simone Campbell, executive director of the Catholic social justice
lobby, Network, writes in her article, “America
Must Allow Its Heart To Break Before It Can Heal:”
As I traveled around the country in advance of the election, I heard stories from so many people. Among them were two white middle-aged men who were avid Trump supporters. They felt that though they had worked hard, they had not prospered the way they expected to. They also saw that their children were having even more difficulty than they were. These men feel betrayed by the “American Dream,” and if you scratch the surface, a bit ashamed that they have not “measured up.” It now seems this shame fueled a blazing anger that is at the heart of Trump’s electoral victory — but the anger is misdirected, and it will become increasingly toxic unless we can find a way to engage in conversation across the political chasm.
This anger and vulnerability is the result of an economy shaped by “trickle-down economics,” which privileges the already wealthy at the expense of those in the middle and at the bottom. These Republican policies betrayed our people. But rather than holding the politicians who passed these policies accountable, or turning their blame to the people who voted these politicians into office, some Americans instead blame the “other” — immigrants, women, people of color, Democrats.
Nevertheless,
we believe that Donald Trump is a far more dangerous example of
proto-fascism than merely a triumphant proponent of populism. An
enormous and terrifying aspect of America’s dumbing down has been
the adulteration of its educational system in all disciplines,
particularly with regard to the study of history. As a former
professor of history and psychology in numerous colleges in recent
years, I was appalled by the resemblance of US history textbooks with
People Magazine, which like most entertainment driven media, were
designed to distract, rather than educate.
Few
Americans under the age of 50 have a grasp of fascism or the history
of fascist movements in modern history. Hitler and the
holocaust mesmerize the culture with horror, yet a fundamental
understanding of fascist ideology is absent. We believe that the
election of Donald Trump, surrounded as it is by the primacy of
corporate capitalism, emboldened by Tea Party ideology, mindlessly
sanctioned by an uninformed electorate, and mirrored in numerous
neo-fascist movements around the world, is a watershed moment in
American history—in fact, the ideal combination of ingredients that
is likely to result in a full-fledged fascist American state.
Oxford
Professor James
McDougall in his article “No,
This Isn’t The 1930s, But Yes, This Is Fascism,” with
reference to the election of Donald Trump writes:
This is a new fascism, or at least near-fascism, and the centre right is dangerously underestimating its potential, exactly as it did 80 years ago. Then, it was conservative anti-communists who believed they could tame and control the extremist fringe. Now, it is mainstream conservatives, facing little electoral challenge from a left in disarray. They fear the drift of their own voters to more muscular, anti-immigrant demagogues on the right. They accordingly espouse the right’s priorities and accommodate its hate speech. They reassure everyone that they have things under control even as the post-Cold War neoliberal order, like the war-damaged bourgeois golden age last century, sinks under them.
The risk, at least for the West, is not a new world war, but merely a poisoned public life, a democracy reduced to the tyranny of tiny majorities who find emotional satisfaction in a violent, resentful rhetoric while their narrowly-elected leaders strip away their rights and persecute their neighbours.
How
then shall those who understand the rise of fascist movements and
their devastating consequences respond? Facing the likelihood of
limitations on the freedom of our expression, freedom to protest, and
even freedom of movement, what recourse do we have? We suggest three
crucial responses to the current moment.
Reconnection
Initially,
we wanted to use the word “Reconciliation” as the first response,
but we reconsidered. “I just saw President-elect Trump with
President Obama in the White House and it gave me hope,” said Oprah
Winfrey. And MSNBC anchor,Chris
Matthews, shrieking in his near-falsetto screech, “I’m just
determined to find an optimistic note here. There’s got to be a
pony in this crap pile.” In other words, we must move toward
reconciliation and hope. But both statements by Winfrey and Matthews
reveal an irrational rush to provide an unearned uplift to the
situation—a compulsion that seems to characterize American culture
with its institutionalized, cheerful optimism. In fact, authentic
exultation is not born from ignoring the horror of any situation but
from suffering it clearly without surrendering faith in the
mysterious movement of the sacred. The utterances of Oprah and Chris
Matthews are the very reason we feel compelled to redefine
reconciliation. Their vision of unearned uplift brings to the
situation a fake medicine in the name of healing that masks, for a
time, the symptoms, and so prevents a cure.
Attempts
at reconciliation are important, but we need to be very cautious
because the word “reconciliation” is not stringent enough. The
notion of reconciliation can easily continue the kind of comatose,
fake inclusiveness that makes us vulnerable to deceit. The wise words
of Jesus come to mind in which he counsels his followers to be wise
as serpents and harmless as doves. In the current situation, we must
beware of New Age soppiness and “let’s love him no matter what”
sentimentality. There is no authentic reconciliation without
authentic discernment and without the other opening their arms.
Naomi
Wolf outlines in “Fascist
America: In Ten Easy Steps,” the progression of fascism for
which on many levels, the stage has already been set. As the
malignancy of fascism advances, it usually does so gradually and
seemingly harmoniously. Lacking the wisdom of serpents, the innocent
revel in reconciliation while chanting, “let’s at least give them
a chance.”
As
Professor McDougall notes, “The spread of fascism in the 1920s was
significantly aided by the fact that liberals and mainstream
conservatives failed to take it seriously. Instead, they accommodated
and normalised it. The centre right is doing the same today. Brexit,
Trump and the far right ascendant across Europe indicate that talk of
a right-wing
revolutionary moment is not exaggerated. And the French
presidential election could be next on the calendar.”
CNN
Republican commentator, Ana Navarro writes that “It’s
hard to give Trump a chance when he staffs his White House with
racists.” Comedian Dave Chappelle recently stated on Saturday
Night Live that he was willing to give Donald Trump a
chance, but he asked that Trump give him a chance as well. Only in
this kind of scenario can authentic reconciliation occur.
For
this reason, we prefer using the word Reconnection as the first
response we must make toward the rise of fascism, and this
reconnection is not even primarily focused on the adversary.
Reconciliation grounded in discernment can only occur when we are
deeply connected with the sacred self, with Earth, and with our
trusted allies. Likewise, we must be willing to dialog with people of
very different political perspectives. Michael Moore has brilliantly
modeled this for us in his pre-election movie, “Trumpland”
in which he skillfully gathered Trump and Clinton supporters, along
with undecided voters, to discuss their concerns with authenticity
and heart. When we stand on the ground of our own integrated
empowerment, we become increasingly discerning and capable of bearing
witness to the entire landscape before us, not merely observing the
desirable qualities of the adversary that we selectively choose to
perceive.
Resistance
In
“Autocracy:
Rules For Survival,” author Masha Gessen who lived in
autocracies most of her life learned a few rules for salvaging one’s
sanity and self-respect:
Rule
#1: Believe
the autocrat. “He
means what he says. For all the admiration Trump has expressed for
Putin, the two men are very different; if anything, there is even
more reason to listen to everything Trump has said. He has no
political establishment into which to fold himself following the
campaign, and therefore no reason to shed his campaign rhetoric.”
Rule
#2: Do
not be taken in by small signs of normality.
“Panic can be neutralized by falsely reassuring words about how the
world as we know it has not ended. It is a fact that the world did
not end on November 8 nor at any previous time in history. Yet
history has seen many catastrophes, and most of them unfolded over
time. That time included periods of relative calm.”
Rule
#3: Institutions
will not save you. “Of
course, the United States has much stronger institutions than Germany
did in the 1930s, or Russia does today. Both Clinton and Obama in
their speeches stressed the importance and strength of these
institutions. The problem, however, is that many of these
institutions are enshrined in political culture rather than in law,
and all of them—including the ones enshrined in law—depend on the
good faith of all actors to fulfill their purpose and uphold the
Constitution.”
Rule
#4: Be
outraged.
“If you follow Rule #1 and believe what the autocrat-elect is
saying, you will not be surprised. But in the face of the impulse to
normalize, it is essential to maintain one’s capacity for shock.
This will lead people to call you unreasonable and hysterical, and to
accuse you of overreacting. It is no fun to be the only hysterical
person in the room. Prepare yourself.”
Rule
#5: Don’t
make compromises.
“In an autocracy, politics as the art of the possible is in fact
utterly amoral. Those who argue for cooperation will make the case,
much as President Obama did in his speech, that cooperation is
essential for the future. They will be willfully ignoring the
corrupting touch of autocracy, from which the future must be
protected.”
Rule
#6: Remember
the future. “Nothing
lasts forever. Donald Trump certainly will not, and Trumpism, to the
extent that it is centered on Trump’s persona, will not either.”
We must resist
because the consequences of twenty-first century fascism are
unimaginably horrific. Unlike Germany’s fascism of the 1930s, we
possess today nuclear weapons, biological weapons, massive
surveillance infrastructures, a gargantuan military industrial
complex controlled by Dark
Money, and a servile media. We have never had fascism on Earth in
this context.
On
the one hand, we cannot and must not reconcile with the forces of
evil, and at the same time, any violent resistance will be used to
justify brutal retaliation. Hitler gave us the map. This is why
non-violent resistance is so important.
While
it is important to resist through external activism, it is equally
important to resist through soul-searching inner activism. To this
day, Andrew and Carolyn continue their journeys of reconnection and
resistance with parents who could not be more opposed to us on issues
of social justice. Andrew’s parents served the British Empire in
the South of India and believed that Empire was humanity’s
salvation. Carolyn grew up in a fundamentalist Christian home where
racism, use of the “N” word, and a rabid belief in American
exceptionalism were sacrosanct. Both of us have experienced
significant reconciliations with family, but it has come with a
price. For all of our adult lives we have struggled with the
question: How can our parents be good people at heart, yet be so
hypocritical? We have been and remain today in the fiery crucible of
healing with our parents which compels us to practice love,
compassion, and forgiveness. Knowing our parents’ stories and their
trauma helps us makes sense of their behavior, but we have come to
understand on a bone-marrow level why so many people refuse to work
on their own trauma. We have for many years experienced the wrenching
toil of that work, but also the grace and glorious healing that can
occur if one is willing to do it.
With
or without the election of Donald Trump, the human species is
annihilating planet Earth. Catastrophic climate change now has a life
of its own, and is being accelerated by the madness of humans who
refuse to acknowledge its reality.
Business
as usual is completely over.
The
resistance of which we speak is spiritual warriorhood, and in no way
will it guarantee a return to business as usual because there is no
business as usual to return to. Both Gandhi and Martin Luther
King, Jr. were wise as serpents and harmless as doves which was the
source of their incomprehensible power. Likewise, the Dalai Lama has
taught non-violent resistance among Tibetans in order to avoid a
bloodbath.
In
this moment, the world is witnessing an unprecedented example of
spiritual warriorhood in the civil disobedience at the Standing Rock
Sioux Reservation in North Dakota.
In
a powerful article, Melissa Hellman reveals what
civil disobedience Standing Rock teaches us. We would add to her
observations these important realities:
- Resistance is bolstered in our divine identity that resists the seduction of the darkness in ourselves and in the temptation and lies that a proto-fascist system might throw at us. Resistance at Standing Rock is a spiritual and moral act as well as an environmental and political act.
- As we see at Standing Rock, resistance is being defined as rioting, destruction of property, and in many cases, “terrorism.” It requires enormous courage and an unwillingness to compromise.
- We can be part of an organized mass movement of non-violent protest grounded in the deepest spiritual principles of compassion, modeled on Martin Luther King, Jr, the Dalai Lama, Gandhi, and Polish labor activist, Lech Walesa. Such a resistance that holds a high moral ground is blessed by invisible powers and has an extraordinary capacity to shift the situation.
The
sacred leader or sacred activist is a warrior/midwife.
The warrior defends the eternal laws of justice and compassion with
courage, passion, stamina, and radical discernment. A midwife evolves
and enacts the strategic canniness, patience, and inclusiveness to
implement and birth the eternal laws of justice and compassion in
reality. We are using the words warrior/midwife because
what is required is a marriage of the sacred masculine and the sacred
feminine. Being one or the other is not sufficient; suffusing both
will give us the power, wisdom, and strength to go forward.
This
requires three marriages
of opposites to take place in the core of our being.
- We must marry a profound realization of our inner divine identity with the selfless acceptance of our particular historical mission in time. Self-realization without shouldering the mission in time leads to passivity. Shouldering our mission in time without self-realization threatens us with burnout, hysteria, unhelpful rage, and lack of strategic understanding and wisdom.
- We must marry a radical faith in the innate goodness of humanity, which is a divine gift and the unanimous testimony of all the mystical traditions, with a respectful and shrewd acknowledgement of the potentially devastating power, brilliance, and seductiveness of the dark forces that are active and of the susceptibility of human nature to them. Radical faith in innate goodness on its own leads to idiot compassion in the face of systemic evil and is characterized by the New Age which has rotted the foundations of true sacred defiance. However, acknowledgement of the power of evil and the power of its seductiveness without faith in human goodness can lead to terrible despair and to becoming at worst unconscious agents of the dark which longs for humanity to despair of itself. Only a marriage between these two can provide us with the strength, stamina and canniness that accepts our divine nature and works from that divine nature on the fragility, complexity, brokenness and susceptibility to seduction of our human nature.
- We must marry profound urgency grounded in acknowledgement of the desperate nature of our situation in all levels of the world with the mysterious peace and patience born out of a radical surrender to the intelligence of divine wisdom and divine love. Profound urgency without patience and inner peace will result in actions that the dark powers will use to justify destruction. Cultivation of patience and peace without the inner fire of urgency will result in a fatal inability to act when necessary and a stupor that is justified in fake spiritual terms. If you just develop peace, patience, and surrender without being prepared to act from the urgent side of yourself, you will become a quietist who does not know that divine love requires wise action.
- As warrior/midwife we need to combine a capacity for heartbreak with a radical commitment to cultivating joy as our essential nature and the source of energy. If all you respond to is heartbreak you’ll be paralyzed, and if you try to cultivate joy without the heartbreak, you will be fed counterfeit joy. Jesus warned that false prophets can assume the form of angels. Comfortable happiness is readily available in a fascist state. Thus, we must discern the “morphine drip” of happiness from radical, subversive joy that makes us patient and guided revolutionaries of love.
Of
course it is too early to fully imagine what a full-scale Trump
Presidency might look like, but there are disturbing, early warning
signs that could be harbingers of a destructive and powerful fascism
such as we have described above. What is most important to remember
is that the potential for a more deadly fascism now exists, and when
we add to this climate chaos, the annihilation of the planet is
entirely possible and unimaginably probable.
Resilience
We
can safely assume that our future holds a significant degree of
violence as those who have unequivocally relied on their government
and the conventional values of working hard and playing by the rules
to redeem them, discover the extent to which they have been deceived.
Add to this, deception, dispossession, and you have a powder keg of
rage which if turned upon oneself becomes suicidal and if turned upon
others, becomes socially volatile or even homicidal.
Rather
than running from the room screaming with our hair on fire, let’s
use this incredibly teachable moment to learn some of the painful
realities and profound existential lessons that this Presidential
election is attempting to teach us about resilience.
- Industrial civilization and the paradigm at its core—a paradigm of disconnection from ourselves, from each other, and from Earth—is being shredded before our eyes, and there is no “fixing” it. It’s done, and perhaps we’re done as a species. Nevertheless, let’s get on with service, Sacred Activism, and a recommitment to deep inner work.
- In order to get on with it we must dump our denial and delusion and look squarely in the face of the sobering data not only regarding the state of our culture, but the life-support status of our dying planet. In a recent story from Cosmos Magazine, we learn that “Sea urchins flip inside out to become an adult.” The story continues by noting that, “The tiny babies spend their early life searching the vast depths of the ocean for a suitable home. But once they find one, they undergo an incredible transformation.” It is now time to “flip our consciousness” inside out and become the adults that our catastrophic predicament is demanding us to be. We are going to be tested mightily—perhaps beyond anything we can now imagine within the next four years and perhaps longer.
- How do we grow up to respond to the crisis? After facing the full extent of it, we allow ourselves to grieve. We sob, we cry, we rage, we wail and scream and allow animal noises to erupt from our bodies now wracked with remorse and regret. Yes, we have colluded in creating this crisis, but it’s not enough to beat ourselves up. We must recognize that without grieving, it doesn’t matter one whit what we do or don’t do in response to the crisis because grief is love, and if we don’t allow our hearts to be shattered with grief, we will never touch the depths of love that are required for us to navigate the consequences of humankind’s deranged choices. Choosing separation instead of love is what got us where we are, and above all else, our predicament is demanding radical heartbreak and astringent love and relentless reconnection with self, others, and Earth.
- Commit to understanding and doing shadow work. For nearly four hundred years, the United States has not dealt with the shadow of slavery. It has not dealt with the shadow of Native American genocide, now revisiting us at Standing Rock. Nor has it dealt with being the first nation to use nuclear weapons at Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Nor has it recognized its repugnant imperialism and its obsessive proselytizing of the globe with corporate capitalism. Donald Trump is a shadow magnet, and like a poultice applied to an infected wound, he has drawn out the toxicity of our culture for all to behold. Many resources abound for doing shadow work. One resource is Carolyn’s book Dark Gold: The Human Shadow And The Global Crisis. Most importantly when working with the shadow, we must remember that not looking at it will not diminish it but only increase its power until it has our undivided attention. A Trump Presidency is but one example.
- The culture will become increasingly divided. Terrified, hurting people will continue to “other” their fellow humans and the ecosystems. Anger will deepen. Violence will become epidemic. If we are not doing grief work and shadow work, we will become enveloped in vengeance and retaliation, so well modeled for us by our new President. In order to become whole, as opposed to further divided, we must, and I mean must, create safe circles of connection and community with each other. Anyone who attempts to navigate the crisis on his/her own or just with “me and mine,” will not and cannot.
- At the same time that we face the crisis squarely, engage in grief work, shadow work, and create safe circles of community and support, we must regularly bathe in joy and beauty. In order to do so, it is essential to recognize the difference between circumstantial happiness and the permanent core of joy which lives within us. It may seem strange that humans need guidance in how to experience joy, but in a lifeless, flatline culture, we do. For this reason, we wrote our newly-released bookReturn To Joy—a toolkit for creating and sharing joy as the ultimate essence of our existence, and we chose not to release it until after the election because we knew its message would be needed then more than ever, no matter who won.
There
can be no authentic reconnection, no powerful resistance, and no
long-lasting resilience without all three being grounded in a radical
return to joy as our essential nature. Only through that return to
joy will we find the energy to reconnect, the power to resist, and
the strength to remain resilient come what may.
Andrew Harvey and Carolyn Baker are co-authors of the newly released book Return To Joy as well as numerous other titles related to the global crisis.
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