"Democrats are fueled by hate, anger, intolerance, and violence. Thank God for Republican sanity, civility and tolerance. Democrats will rue the day they brought assassination, lawfare, banning presidential candidates, and anti-American politics to the forefront."Email from a Trump-supporter this week
I learn by hearing from Trump supporters.
My correspondent writes that Republicans are sane, civil and tolerant, in contrast to Democrats.
In the view of Trump supporters, they are the little guys and victims in the great national political drama. The entire culture -- the "establishment" -- consisting of the global economy, the mainstream news, TV and Hollywood, the system of education top to bottom, plus the levers of government -- the whole shebang -- are part of Democratic-controlled groupthink.
That establishment groupthink oppression is bi-partisan, which is why Trump needed to make a wholesale change in the GOP. I attended a GOP convention in New Hampshire in October of 2023, when the GOP nomination was up for grabs. I saw all the candidates up close and listened to a broad set of GOP activists. Theoretically, candidates like Mike Pence, Nikki Haley, and Chris Christie were viable alternatives to Trump -- Trump without the warts. Not so.
Pence is not an understudy to Trump. He was not the cleaned-up, noncriminal, non-graft, non-adulterous, non-insurrectionist, Christian version of Trump. Pence is the opposite of Trump.
Pence, along with Reagan, both Bush presidents, Dole, McCain, and Romney, are the old establishment, the America that isn't great, the one that paid unnecessary respect to the wrong people. The old GOP leaders accepted laws and norms. That defined "conservatism." Trump is different. Trump is a rebel. He smashes those laws and norms because they were tacitly part of the oppression. The old order didn't protect and reward normal White guys and their wives, good Christians.
Trump is stomping on the symbols and policies of the old order. Stop wind and solar projects. Erase monuments to civil rights. Fire Black leaders in government, the military, and the universities. Cancel medical research grants. Question vaccinations. Stop the slow-motion, checks-and-balances process-dominated government. The establishment respected the wrong people: foreigners and immigrants. It respected diversity, and "diversity" is just part of the groupthink that benefits everyone except people like my correspondent.
Isn't Trump a world-class provocateur, a name-calling, divisive leader? Isn't he the prime example of un-civil intolerance? In a Trump-supporter's mind, not at all. He didn't really summon people to D.C. to overturn an election and incite a violent riot. He didn't really grope women, defame women, lie to banks, pay hush money, take papers home and hide them and lie about hiding them, or conspire to replace electors with fake ones. Those things didn't happen. People say that only because he was being picked on by the establishment and its fake-media tool. Whatever he did was just self defense from the oppressors, not wrong, and therefore not real.
Republicans' sharp rejection of Mike Pence is the best "tell." Pence is a "good boy." Trump opposes the good boys. And since the good boys are oppressors, Trump is sane, civil, and tolerant when resisting them.
Are things really that terrible and oppressive for my correspondent? Where's the beef?
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From the 1976 movie "Network": "I don't have to tell you things are bad. Everyone knows things are bad. . . . I'm mad as hell and I'mnot going to take it anymore." |
He does have a grievance. He is a White male from rural southern Oregon. A backwater. The world is passing these places by. They vote bright red. It isn't just Hillary Clinton who called him deplorable. Modern sensibilities about who is a legitimate, respected American are changing out from under him. The world is passing him by, too.
[Note: I had a guest post last week from Alan DeBoer, a local businessman, former mayor and state senator, and civic philanthropist. With help from ChatGPT, he wrote describing resentment of elites that he thought explained populist Trumpism. But, to avoid confusion or conflation of the two posts, let me note that the correspondent I quote today is not Alan DeBoer.]
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