There’s Nothing Funny About a Donald
Trump Rally
At a rally on board an aircraft carrier,
the true character of Donald Trump’s
presidential campaign is apparent –
fascism with a cartoon face.
By Laurie Penny
December 17, 2015 "Information
Clearing House"
-
It’s a warm December night in South
Carolina and we’re about to see Donald
Trump speak on a ship that goes nowhere.
We’ve been waiting for an hour and a
half in a line that snakes around the
car-park of the USS Yorktown,
an aircraft carrier that Team Trump has
rented out for tonight’s rally. The
billionaire tycoon is a frontrunner for
the Republican nomination in next year’s
presidential elections, and his
followers are fanatical.
Trump has not even been selected as the
nominee and already he is dominating
political conversation in the US at
every level. He is lambasted by the
liberal press and idolised by the right.
In November, two young men were heard to
yell “Trump 2016!” before opening fire
at a Black Lives Matter protest in
Minneapolis, injuring three people. A
presidential campaign slogan as
punctuation to attempted murder wasn’t
enough to prompt cross-party calls for
Trump to leave the race. What he’s about
to say tonight will change all of that.
Trump has already promised to build a
wall to keep out Mexican immigrants, who
he says are “rapists”, and to force all
Muslims to register to prove that they
are not terrorists; he gleefully mocks
black people, women and, most of all,
the mainstream press that hangs on his
every outrageous statement. His
followers love him not in spite of his
cartoonish fat-cat persona but because
of it. His platform is nationalist,
militaristic and soaked in the language
of big business. The usually cautious
American liberal media has called him a
fascist. I’m here to see if they are
right.
The evening breeze is cool and the
merchandise stands are everywhere,
hawking slogan badges in the
near-religious hush. “Bomb The Hell out
of Isis”, says one; “Hillary for Prison”
is another. Trump’s campaign is still
treated as a joke by the media, but
nobody here is laughing. These, as one
T-shirt for sale declares, are “pro-God,
Pro-Gun, Pro-Life Americans”, and they
are sick of being laughed at.
I’ve come to this rally with an American
activist friend, and we both fretted
about what to wear. We thought our dark
hoodies and travel-worn jeans might
identify us as outsiders. We hadn’t
considered the more horrifying
possibility that we wouldn’t stand out
at all. There are all sorts of people
here: dazed teenagers in tie-dye beach
sweaters and preppy college students;
scruffy peroxide-blonde chain-smokers
and wealthy couples in smart suits;
raddled veterans in flak jackets and
sweet old ladies whose cardigans match
their jewellery. They have only one
thing in common: they are overwhelmingly
white. Ninety-nine per cent of this
rally is white. Out of a crowd of
thousands, we count eight people of
colour, half of whom are members of the
media. One young well-dressed black man
walks up and down the line waving a
Trump banner and asking everyone if
they’re excited. He is immediately
surrounded by police and questioned as a
suspected protester.
My
friend and I, meanwhile, walk straight
through the two rounds of security
checks and the metal detector. My friend
actually has the word “sedition”
tattooed on his knuckles. It’s OK. He’s
white.
The bridge over the water to the USS
Yorktown, a tourist attraction that
includes a genuine “Vietnam Experience”,
is in shadow. An American flag flutters
at half mast; it’s Pearl Harbour Day,
and Trump is keen to woo the military
vote. My friend asks if I remember the
last lines of Joseph Conrad’s most
famous novel. I call them up on my
phone, which has not been confiscated:
“The offing was barred by a black bank
of clouds, and the tranquil waterway
leading to the uttermost ends of the
earth flowed sombre under an overcast
sky – seemed to lead into the heart of
an immense darkness.”
The aircraft carrier is an enormous hulk
of metal menacing the sunset. Inside,
everything that isn’t a gun or a flag
has a picture of a gun or a flag on it.
Cheesy rock music pounds under the
floodlights. The room is already packed;
we have to push through to the back to
find standing room. Despite the police,
this is a private event, as the
organisers make clear. The crowd is
encouraged to surround any suspected
troublemakers and point them out by
yelling Trump’s name.
A
preacher is led onto the stage to say a
prayer for the soul of America, which
has experienced ‘a decline in morals
over the last seven years’, presumably
since a Black man was elected
president. Then we have to put our
hands on our hearts and recite the
Pledge of Allegiance. Next up is a woman
dressed as a disco ball who gives a
terrifyingly nasal rendition of “The
Star-Spangled Banner”. Feet are
stamping. The excitement is building.
Then, finally, Donald Trump arrives, to
the strains of Twisted Sister’s anthem
“We’re Not Gonna Take It”, and two
thousand people shouting “Trump, Trump,
Trump!” like a herd of angry elephants.
He announces that he’s going to say
something that isn’t “very politically
correct. But I don’t care”. The crowd
stamps and cheers. They hate political
correctness.
In
fact, Trump spends the first ten minutes
reading off his polling numbers, but the
crowd still doesn’t care.
***
This is the first unspoken truth about
Trump: for all his bombast, he is barely
articulate. His speech consists of
half-sentences and unfinished
declarations that leave his rapt
audience hanging over a chasm of ugly
assumptions. “We’re going to make our
military so strong,” he yells, “so
powerful, so great, that. . .” He trails
off, leaving the crowd to fill in the
blank with howls of “USA! USA! USA!”
Then a lone woman’s voice calls out from
the back of the room: “Black Lives
Matter!”
Immediately, the crowd turns on the
interloper, pointing and screaming. “Be
gentle,” says Trump, smirking, as she is
ushered out by police. He knows what
he’s saying. Protesters have been beaten
and choked at Trump rallies before, and
the man himself has told media that they
“had it coming”.
Later, I meet this woman in the car
park. Her name is Mary Smith, and she’s
24. “I had people get up to me, get
right in my face, saying go kill
yourself, you don’t belong here, you
should go die,” she says, “But I’m glad
I did what I did.”
“That person had a very weak voice,”
Trump says, as the hubbub dies down.
Everyone laughs. Nobody here likes
weakness. Weakness is for women, and in
this room they worship a male god.
Hillary Clinton – whose name cannot be
spoken without a chorus of boos – has
“no strength, no stamina”, according to
Trump.
Strength, particularly his own, will be
a major theme of the evening. It does
not matter that Trump has never done
military service, nor that he once
opposed military intervention in the
Middle East: today he is standing on an
aircraft carrier flanked by veterans in
uniform, and calling, in effect for
all-out war on otherness at home and
abroad. That, along with his
“unbelievable wealth”, is what matters
to this dogma of weaponised capitalism,
red in tooth and tape. Trump has
promised to “make America Great Again”.
But “great” does not mean “good”.
Trump’s people love free speech, but
they hate journalists. There’s a reason
most of the reporters are behind a
safety rail tonight. “Seventy-five per
cent of the mainstream media,” he
assures us, are “absolute scum” who want
to “surrender the constitution”. The
crowd boos. A bleached-blonde lady to my
right is practically spitting. “Tell the
truth or go home!” she hollers over my
shoulder at the press standing behind
the safety rail.
Right now, I want to do both.
***
After some customary bashing of his
Republican rivals, who are all weak and
stupid, we get on to the meat of the
matter: Muslims and what to do about
them. Trump’s theme is the recent murder
of three people in San Bernadino,
California, by two killers of Muslim
descent. He conveniently avoids the fact
that almost all of the hundreds of mass
shootings in America this year alone
have been perpetrated by white men. Nor,
more pertinently, does he mention the
deadliest hate crime in decades on
American soil, in June 2015, when white
supremacist Dylann Roof murdered 12
people at the Emmanuel African Methodist
Episcopal Church in Charleston, just
over the water. That’s not the kind of
terrorism Donald Trump’s followers care
about.
“We have to look at mosques,” says
Trump. “We have no choice. Something is
happening in there. We have to be
strong. Don’t worry about profiling.”
Then comes the money quote. “Donald J
Trump is calling for a total and
complete shutdown of Muslims entering
the United States.” Thunderous applause.
This is what we’ve all been waiting for.
He’s done it again: he’s said something
so outrageous that nobody else would
dare to go there, which means he must be
telling the truth.
This is the second unspoken paradox of
Trump’s campaign: by lying through his
teeth, he has managed to persuade
thousands of people that he is the one
truth- teller in American politics. He
may or may not believe the xenophobic
race-baiting he peddles, but his
audiences certainly do. This campaign is
giving hundreds of thousands of
Americans permission to be nakedly
racist and unabashedly xenophobic. It’s
not about truth. It’s about power.
There is not a jot of irony in this
room. Donald J Trump is not a comedian.
He takes himself entirely seriously.
Nobody who did not take themselves
seriously would talk about themselves in
the third person. If he’s a clown, he’s
the sort that stalks the pages of pulp
horror, cackling and covered in other
people’s blood. And for the record, yes,
this is a frightening place to be. I am
frightened, and not just in a broad,
theoretical sense, for the future of the
United States and everyone who lives in
its shadow , but in an immediate sense.
I am afraid for myself and my friend, in
this room, right now.
“We’re losing a lot of people to the
internet,” Trump is saying. “We’re going
to have to talk about shutting that
internet down in some way.” More cheers
from a crowd that, less than an hour
ago, was screaming its support for the
right to free speech.
***
Whether or not Donald Trump becomes
president is, at this stage, beside the
point. A Trump presidency looks about as
likely as – well, actually, it looks
about as likely as a victory for Hitler
looked in 1924, when Weimar Germany
considered the Nazis a joke, albeit one
that Jews, gay people and gypsies could
already see wasn’t funny. But democracy
does not begin and end at the ballot
box. Donald Trump has shifted the
conversation about race, immigration,
healthcare, abortion and national
security sharply to the right, and in
the process made the rest of the
Republican Party look sane.
This may well be his most dangerous
legacy. In the days after the rally,
Congress suspends the US Visa Waiver
Programme for foreign nationals who have
visited Syria, Iraq, Iran or Sudan. It’s
not quite Trump’s blanket proposal to
ban all Muslims, but there is a strong
family resemblance.
“There is unbelievable love in these
rooms,” says Trump to a crowd that has
just agreed to bar people from the
country on the basis of religion and
shut down the internet. He finishes with
some rambling platitudes and then it’s
time to go home. He does not take
questions. Asking questions is a sign of
weakness, and weakness is practically
un-American.
“I
like what Trump has to say," says
14-year old Jared, one of many excited
young men in the audience. “He’s going
to kick out the illegals, build a bigger
wall to keep them out. They’re taking
our jobs and our tax money and that’s
just not right."
Not all of the kids are convinced,
though. “It’s a bunch of bullshit,” says
15-year old Katie, a school pupil from
Mount Pleasant. “He isn’t fit to be a
politician in this day and age.”
“We support Bernie Sanders,” says her
friend Lauren, also 15. The pair has
identical brown bangs and finishes each
other’s sentences. “There was a CNN
article calling Trump a fascist,” says
Lauren, “And the things we just saw just
clearly point out that he is.”
Were they scared? “A little bit, yeah.”
Lauren looks at Katie. “I mean, Katie’s
my girlfriend, so, yeah. That scared
us.” “But we wanted to broaden our
horizons and become more intelligent on
politics,” says Katie. “So you know –
whatever it takes.”
This is bravery. Not falling at the feet
of the first strong man who promises to
“protect” you from the spectres he’s
conjured out of the darkest part of your
country’s collective id.
That’s what Donald Trump is: America’s
id personified, complete with spray-tan,
extemporising a neofascist playbook from
pulpits paid for with real estate money.
He’s a brutal punchline to a joke that
was never funny in the first place.
People have been laughing at Donald
Trump for 20 years and he still has that
hair. It’s too late for laughter. Trump
is selling fascism with a cartoon face.
It is the only type of fascism that was
ever going to sell in America.
Laurie Penny is a
contributing editor to the
New Statesman. She is
the author of five books, most
recently
Unspeakable Things.
©
2015 The New Statesman