The
Real Face of Washington (and America)
Thank You, Donald Trump
By Tom Engelhardt
January 03, 2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- "Tom
Dispatch" -
Know thyself. It was what
came to mind in the wake of Donald Trump’s victory and
my own puzzling reaction to it. And while that familiar
phrase just popped into my head, I had no idea it was so
ancient, or Greek, or for that matter a Delphic maxim
inscribed in the forecourt of the Temple of Apollo
according to the Greek writer Pausanias (whom I'd never
heard of until I read his name in
Wikipedia). Think of that as my own triple helix of
ignorance extending back to... well, my birth in a very
different America 72 years ago.
Anyway,
the simple point is that I didn’t know myself half as
well as I imagined. And I can thank Donald Trump for
reminding me of that essential truth. Of course, we can
never know what’s really going on inside the heads of
all those other people out there on this curious planet
of ours, but ourselves as strangers? I guess if I were
inscribing something in the forecourt of my own Delphic
temple right now, it might be:
Who knows me? (Not me.)
Consider this
my little introduction to a mystery I stumbled upon in
the early morning hours of our recent election night
that hasn't left my mind since. I simply couldn’t
accept that Donald Trump had won. Not him. Not in this
country. Not possible. Not in a million years.
Mind you,
during the campaign I had
written about Trump repeatedly, always leaving open
the possibility that, in the disturbed (and disturbing)
America of 2016, he could indeed beat Hillary Clinton.
That was a conclusion I lost when, in the final few
weeks of the campaign, like so many others, I got hooked
on the polls and the pundits who went with them. (Doh!)
In the wake of
the election, however, it wasn’t shock based on
pollsters’ errors that got to me. It was something else
that only slowly dawned on me. Somewhere deep inside, I
simply didn’t believe that, of all countries on this
planet, the United States could elect a narcissistic,
celeb billionaire who was also, in the style of Italy’s
Silvio Berlusconi, a right-wing “populist” and
incipient autocrat.
Plenty of irony
lurked in that conviction, which outlasted the election
and so reality itself. In these years, I’ve
written critically of the way just about every
American politician
but Donald Trump has felt obligated to insist that
this is an “exceptional” or “indispensable” nation, “the
greatest country” on the planet, not to speak of in
history. (And throw in as well the claim of recent
presidents and so many others that the U.S. military
represents the “greatest fighting force” in that
history.) President Obama, Marco Rubio, Jeb Bush, John
McCain -- it didn’t matter. Every one of them was a
dutiful or enthusiastic American exceptionalist. As for
Trump’s opponent, Hillary Clinton, she hit the trifecta
plus one in a
speech she gave to the American Legion’s national
convention during the campaign. In it, she referred to
the United States as “the greatest country on Earth,”
“an exceptional nation,” and “the indispensable nation”
that, of course, possessed “the greatest military” ever.
(“My friends, we are so lucky to be Americans. It is an
extraordinary blessing.”) Only Trump, with his "make
America great again," slogan seemed to
admit to something else, something like American
decline.
Post-election,
here was the shock for me: it turned out that I, too,
was an American exceptionalist. I deeply believed that
our country was simply too special for The Donald, and
so his victory sent me on an unexpected journey back
into the world of my childhood and youth, back into the
1950s and early 1960s when (despite the Soviet Union)
the U.S. really did stand alone on the planet in so many
ways. Of course, in those years, no one had to say such
things. All those greatests, exceptionals,
and indispensables were then dispensable and
the recent political tic of insisting on them so
publicly undoubtedly reflects a defensiveness that’s a
sign of something slipping.
Obviously, in
those bedrock years of American power and strength and
wealth and drive and dynamism (and McCarthyism, and
segregation, and racism, and smog, and...), the very
years that Donald Trump now
yearns to bring back, I took in that feeling of
American specialness in ways too deep to grasp. Which
was why, decades later, when I least expected it, I
couldn’t shake the feeling that it couldn’t happen
here. In actuality, the rise to power of Trumpian
figures -- Rodrigo Duterte in the Philippines,
Viktor Orban in Hungary, Recep Tayyip Erdogan in
Turkey, Vladimir Putin in Russia -- has been a
dime-a-dozen event elsewhere and now looks to be a
global trend. It’s just that I associated such rises
with unexceptional, largely tinpot countries or ones
truly down on their luck.
So it’s taken
me a few hard weeks to come to grips with my own
exceptionalist soul and face just how Donald Trump could
-- indeed did -- happen here.
It Can
Happen Here
So how did it
happen here?
Let’s face it:
Donald Trump was no freak of nature. He only arrived on
the scene and took the Electoral College (if not the
popular vote) because our American world had been
prepared for him in so many ways. As I see it, at least
five major shifts in American life and politics helped
lay the groundwork for the rise of Trumpism:
* The
Coming of a 1% Economy and the 1% Politics That Goes
With It: A singular reality of this century has
been the way inequality became
embedded in American life, and how so much money was
swept ever upwards into the coffers of 1% profiteers.
Meanwhile, a
yawning gap grew between the basic salaries of CEOs
and those of ordinary workers. In these years, as I’m
hardly the first to point out, the country entered a
new gilded age. In other words, it was already a
Mar-a-Lago moment before The Donald threw his hair into
the ring.
Without the
arrival of casino capitalism on a massive scale (at
which The Donald himself proved something of
a bust), Trumpism would have been inconceivable.
And if, in its
Citizens United decision of 2010, the
Supreme Court hadn’t thrown open the political doors
quite so welcomingly to that 1% crew, how likely was it
that a billionaire celebrity would have run for
president or become a favorite among the white working
class?
Looked at a
certain way, Donald Trump deserves credit for stamping
the true face of twenty-first-century American
plutocracy on Washington by selecting
mainly billionaires and
multimillionaires to head the various departments
and agencies of his future government. After all,
doesn’t it seem reasonable that a 1% economy, a 1%
society, and a 1% politics should produce a 1%
government? Think of what Trump has so visibly done as
American democracy’s version of truth in advertising.
And of course, if billionaires hadn’t
multiplied like rabbits in this era, he wouldn’t
have had the necessary pool of plutocrats to choose
from.
Something
similar might be said of his choice of so many
retired generals and other figures with significant
military backgrounds (ranging from
West Point graduates to a
former Navy SEAL) for key “civilian” positions in
his government. Think of that, too, as a
truth-in-advertising moment leading directly to the
second shift in American society.
* The
Coming of Permanent War and an Ever More Militarized
State and Society: Can there be any question that,
in the 15-plus years since 9/11, what was originally
called the "Global War on Terror" has become a permanent
war across the Greater Middle East and Africa (with
collateral damage from
Europe to the Philippines)? In those years,
staggering sums of money -- beyond what any other
country or even
collection of countries could imagine spending --
has poured into the U.S. military and the arms industry
that undergirds it and
monopolizes the global trade in weaponry. In the
process, Washington became a war capital and the
president, as Michelle Obama indicated recently when
talking about Trump’s victory with Oprah Winfrey,
became, above all, the commander in chief. (“It is
important for the health of this nation,” she told
Winfrey, “that we support the commander in chief.”) The
president’s role in wartime had, of course, always been
as commander in chief, but now that’s the position many
of us vote for (and even newspapers
endorse), and since war is so permanently embedded
in the American way of life, Donald Trump is guaranteed
to remain that for his full term.
And the role
has expanded strikingly in these years, as the White
House gained
the power to make war in just about any fashion it
chose without significant reference to Congress. The
president now has
his own air force of drone assassins to
dispatch more or less anywhere on the planet to take
out more or less anyone. At the same time, cocooned
inside the U.S. military, an elite, secretive second
military, the Special Operations forces, has been
expanding its
personnel,
budget, and operations endlessly and its most
secretive element, the Joint Special Operations Command,
might even be thought of as the president’s
private army.
Meanwhile, the
weaponry and advanced technology with which this country
has been fighting its never-ending (and
remarkably unsuccessful) conflicts abroad -- from
Predator drones to the
Stingray that mimics a cell phone
tower and so gets nearby phones to connect to it --
began migrating home, as America’s
borders and police forces were militarized. The
police have been
supplied with
weaponry and
other equipment directly off the battlefields of
Iraq and Afghanistan, while veterans from those wars
have joined the growing set of
SWAT teams, the domestic version of special-ops
teams, that are now a must-have for police departments
nationwide.
It’s no
coincidence that Trump and his generals are eager to
pump up a supposedly “depleted”
U.S. military with yet more funds or, given the history
of these years, that he appointed so many retired
generals from our losing wars to key “civilian”
positions atop that military and the national security
state. As with his billionaires, in a decisive fashion,
Trump is stamping the real face of twenty-first-century
America on Washington.
* The Rise
of the National Security State: In these years, a
similar process has been underway in relation to the
national security state.
Vast sums of money have flowed into the country’s
17 intelligence outfits (and their
secret black budgets), into the Department of
Homeland Security, and the like. (Before 9/11,
Americans might have associated that word “homeland”
with Nazi Germany or the Soviet Union, but never with
this country.) In these years,
new agencies were launched and
elaborate headquarters and
other complexes built for parts of that state within
a state to the tune of billions of dollars. At the same
time, it was “privatized,” its doors thrown open to the
contract employees of a parade of
warrior corporations. And, of course, the National
Security Agency created a
global surveillance apparatus so all-encompassing
that it left the fantasies of the totalitarian regimes
of the twentieth century in the dust.
As the national
security state rose in Washington amid an enveloping
shroud of secrecy (and the fierce
hounding or prosecution of any whistleblower), it
became the de facto
fourth branch of government. Under the
circumstances, don’t think of it as a happenstance that
the 2016 election might have been settled 11 days early
thanks to FBI Director James Comey’s intervention in the
race, which represented a historical first for the
national security state. Argue as you will over
how crucial Comey’s interference was to the final
vote tallies, it certainly caught the mood of the new
era that had been birthed in Washington long before
Donald Trump’s victory. Nor should you consider it a
happenstance that possibly the closest military figure
to the new commander in chief is his national security
adviser, retired Lieutenant General Michael Flynn, who
ran the Defense Intelligence Agency until forced out
by the Obama administration. No matter
the arguments Trump may have with the CIA or other
agencies, they will be crucial to his rule (once
brought to heel by his appointees).
Those
billionaires, generals, and national security chieftains
had already been deeply embedded in our American world
before Trump made his run. They will now be part and
parcel of his world going forward. The fourth shift in
the landscape is ongoing, not yet fully
institutionalized, and harder to pin down.
* The
Coming of the One-Party State: Thanks to the
political developments of these years, and a man with
obvious autocratic tendencies entering the Oval Office,
it’s possible to begin to imagine an American version of
a one-party state emerging from the shell of our former
democratic system. After all, the Republicans already
control the House of Representatives (in more or less
perpetuity, thanks to
gerrymandering), the Senate, the White House, and
assumedly in the years to come the
Supreme Court. They
also control a
record 33 out of 50 governorships, have tied a
record by taking 68 out of the 98 state legislative
chambers, and have broken another by gaining control of
33 out of 50 full legislatures. In addition, as the
North Carolina legislature has recently
shown, the urge among state Republicans to give
themselves new, extra-democratic, extra-legal powers (as
well as a longer term Republican drive to
restrict the ballot in various ways, claiming
nonexistent voter fraud) should be considered a sign
of the direction in which we could be headed in a future
embattled Trumpist country.
In addition,
for years the Democratic Party saw its various
traditional bases of support weaken, wither, or in the
recent election simply
opt for a candidate competing for the party’s
nomination who wasn’t even a Democrat. Until the recent
election loss, however, it was at least a large,
functioning political bureaucracy. Today, no one knows
quite what it is. It’s clear, however, that one of
America’s two dominant political parties is in a state
of disarray and remarkable weakness. Meanwhile, the
other, the Republican Party, assumedly the future base
for that Trumpian one-party state, is in its own
disheveled condition, a party of apparatchiks and
ideologues in Washington and embattled factions in the
provinces.
In many
ways, the incipient collapse of the two-party system in
a flood of 1% money cleared the path for Trump’s
victory. Unlike the previous three shifts in American
life, however, this one is hardly in place yet.
Instead, the sense of party chaos and weakness so
crucial to the rise of Donald Trump still holds, and the
same sense of chaos might be said to apply to the fifth
shift I want to mention.
* The
Coming of the New Media Moment:
Among the things that prepared the way
for Trump, who could leave out the crumbling of the
classic newspaper/TV world of news? In
these years, it lost much of its traditional
advertising base, was bypassed by social media, and the
TV part of it found itself in an endless hunt for
eyeballs to glue, normally via 24/7 “news” events,
eternally blown out of proportion but easy to cover in a
nonstop way by shrinking news staffs. As an
alternative, there was the search for anything or anyone
(preferably of the celebrity variety) that the public
couldn’t help staring at, including a
celebrity-turned-politician-turned-provocateur with the
world’s canniest sense of what the media
so desperately needed: him. It may have seemed that
Trump inaugurated our new media moment by becoming the
first meister-elect of tweet and the shout-out
master of that universe, but in reality he merely
grasped the nature of our new, chaotic media moment and
ran with it.
Unexceptional Billionaires and Dispensable Generals
Let’s add a
final point to the other five: Donald Trump will inherit
a country that has been hollowed out by the new
realities that made him a success and allowed him to
sweep to what, to many experts, looked like an
improbable victory. He will inherit a country that is
ever less special, a nation that, as Trump himself has
pointed out, has an increasingly third-worldish
transportation system (not
a single mile of high-speed rail and airports that
have seen better days), an infrastructure that has been
drastically
debased, and an everyday economy that offers lesser
jobs to ever more of his countrymen. It will be an
America whose destructive power only grows but whose
ability to translate that into anything approaching
victory eternally recedes.
With its
unexceptional billionaires, its dispensable generals,
its less than great national security officials, its
dreary politicians, and its media moguls in search of
the passing buck, it’s likely to be a combustible
country in ways that will seem increasingly familiar to
so many elsewhere on this planet, and increasingly
strange to the young Tom Engelhardt who still lives
inside me.
It’s this
America that will tumble into the debatably small but
none-too-gentle hands of Donald Trump on January 20th.
Tom
Engelhardt is a co-founder of the
American Empire Project and the author
of The United States of Fear as well as a
history of the Cold War,
The End of Victory Culture. He is a fellow of
the
Nation Institute and runs
TomDispatch.com. His latest book is
Shadow Government: Surveillance, Secret Wars, and a
Global Security State in a Single-Superpower World.
Follow TomDispatch on
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Time They’ll Come to Count the Dead, and Tom
Engelhardt's latest book,
Shadow Government: Surveillance, Secret Wars, and a
Global Security State in a Single-Superpower World.
Copyright 2017
Tom Engelhardt
The views
expressed in this article are the author's own and do
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