James
Howard Kunstler
20
August, 2018
Who
doesn’t want to think that they are a good human being? That they
are a person of good intentions, clear conscience, fair-minded,
generous, loving, and merciful? On the other hand, who wants to be a
loser?
The
current political predicament in the USA has America’s winners
turned losers and the consequent pain of that flip-flop has propelled
the new designated losers into a fury of moral indignation. The
deplorable Trump insurgents were supposed to be put in their place on
November 8, 2016 — stuffed back into their reeking WalMarts — but
instead, their champion with his gold-plated hair-do presides over
the nation in the house where Lincoln, The Roosevelts, and Hillary
lived. “Winning…!” as the new president likes to tweet.
What
a revoltin’ development, as Chester A. Riley used to say on “The
Life of Riley” TV show back in 1955, when America was great (at
least that’s the theory). Riley was an original deplorable before
the concept even emerged from the murk of early pop culture. He
worked in an aircraft factory somewhere in southern California, which
only a few decades prior was the mecca of an earlier generations of
losers: the Oakies and other Dust Bowl refugees who went west to pick
fruit or get into the movies.
Chester
A. Riley supported a family on that job as a wing-riveter. All the
male characters in the series had been through the Second World War,
but were so far removed from the horror that the audience never heard
about it. That was the point: to forget all that gore and get down
with the new crazes for backyard barbeque, seeing the USA in your
Chevrolet, enjoying that healthful pack of Lucky Strikes in the
valley of the Jolly Green Giant… double your pleasure, double your
fun… and away go troubles down the drain….
As
Tom Wolfe pointed out eons ago, the most overlooked feature of
post-war American life was the way that the old US peasantry found
themselves living higher on the hog than Louis the XVI and his court
at Versailles. Hot and cold running water, all the deliciously
engineered Betty Crocker cake you could eat, painless dentistry, and
Yankees away games on Channel 11, with Pabst Blue Ribbon by the case!
By 1960 or so, along came color TV and air-conditioning, and in
places like Atlanta, St. Louis, and Little Rock, you barely had to go
outside anymore, thank God! No more heat stroke, hookworm, or
chiggers.
It
was a helluva lot better than earlier peasant classes had it, for
sure, but let’s face it: it was kind of a low-grade nirvana. And a
couple of generations beyond “The Life of Riley” the whole thing
has fallen apart. There are few hands-on jobs that allow a man to
support a family. And what would we even mean by that? Stick the
women back in kitchen and the laundry room? What a waste of human
capital (even for socialists who oppose capital). The odd thing is
that there is increasingly little for this class of people to do
besides stand near the door of the WalMart, and if the vaunted tech
entrepreneurs of this land have their way with robotics, you can be
sure there would be less than nothing for them to do… except crawl
off and die quietly, without leaving an odoriferous mess.
What
political commentator has failed to notice that the supposed savior
of this peasant class is himself a sort of shabby version of Louis
XVI, with his gilded toilet seats, brand-name pomp, and complex hair?
A happy peasantry needs a good king, and that is the role Mr. Trump
seems to have cast himself in. I assume that he wants very earnestly
to be considered a good person, though all his efforts to demonstrate
that have been startlingly clumsy and mostly ineffective.
The
one thing he has truly accomplished is driving his opponents in the
overclass out of their gourds with loathing and resentment. (The
term, overclass was minted, I believe by the excellent essayist
Michael Lind.) It’s a wonderfully inclusive term in that it
describes basically everyone who is not in the underclass — that
now-dreadful realm of tattooed diabetics moiling in the war memorial
auditoriums and minor league ball parks for their hero and leader to
descend like Deus ex Machina in the presidential helicopter to remind
them how much they’re winning.
Meanwhile,
the class of former winners-turned-losers — the Silicon Valley
executives, the Hollywood movers and shakers, the Brooklyn Hipsters,
the Ivy League faculties, the Deep State guideline writers, the
K-Street consultants, the yoga ladies of Fairfield County,
Connecticut, the acolytes of Oprah Winfrey and Elizabeth Warren —
resort to righteous litigation in their crusade to restore the proper
order of rule in this land. When they come to power, the shining city
will be at hand….
I
kind of doubt it. The truth is, all current winners and losers are
living in the shadow of a financial system that doesn’t really work
anymore, because it doesn’t represent the reality of wealth that is
no longer there. The consolation, perhaps, is that there will be
plenty for all those who survive the collapse of that system to do
when the time comes. But it will be in a disposition of things and of
power that we can’t possibly recognize from where we stand these
days.
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