Donald Trump’s Fascism and His Appeasers
By
Pierre Tristam
June 13, 2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "FlagerLive"
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“It can’t happen here? My friends, it
is happening here.” So says New
York Mayor Fiorello LaGuardia near the
end of the “The Plot Against America,”
the Philip Roth novel from 12 years ago
that re-imagines American history if the
isolationist, Hitler-sympathizing
anti-Semite Charles Lindbergh had become
president instead of Franklin Roosevelt.
And so “the right-wing saboteurs of
democracy–the so-called patriots and the
so-called Christians” of the Republican
right, Roth writes, make their march
“under the sign of the cross and the
flag.”
“It Can’t Happen Here” was the title of
Sinclair Lewis’s 1935 novel that
imagined a fascist senator who beats
Roosevelt to the presidency on a promise
to, you guessed it, make America great
again: “To you and you only I look for
help to make America a proud, rich land
again,” the imaginary Buzz Windrip tells
a crowd that includes his paramilitary
“Minute Men,” who beat up dissenters and
open fire on them. (The paramilitary
vigilantes who still “patrol” the
Mexican-American border on this side of
paradise also call themselves
the Minutemen.)
The two books are somewhat fictional.
Only somewhat, because they draw on a
strain of either violent or repressive
impulses that, like the roils of magma
under a volcano, have always been
present in America’s political culture,
at times more overtly than others. The
years of the Alien and Sedition Acts in
the early republic, the KKK, the Red
Scare, Roosevelt’s internment of
Japanese-Americans in World War II, the
John Birch Society—whose founder thought
Eisenhower was a “dedicated, conscious
agent of the Communist
conspiracy”—McCarthyism, the more
muddled racism of the tea party movement
and now Trumpism, its more fascist
mutant, are all part of that toxic
lineage.
If
the poison has always been around, it’s
never been enough to poison the entire
country. Sinclair Lewis himself thought
America too strong a democracy to allow
a fascist take-over. He’s right, for
now. Donald Trump isn’t going to win in
November. By then the hordes of Bernie
Sanders supporters who are making
Hillary Clinton’s negative numbers look
almost as bad as Trump’s will have
fallen in line.
As
unappealing as Clinton can seem,
especially if you tune in to the
hysterics of reactionary propaganda—the
same machine that managed to turn John
Kerry’s war heroics into treachery and
Ronald Reagan’s administration,
the most corrupt since Ulysses Grant’s,
into a paragon of conservative
values—she’s in a league of her own.
Comparing her in any way to Trump isn’t
apples and oranges, two quite evolved
fruits. It’s more like comparing a human
being to a single-cell organism to, with
Trump’s single cell defined by one
thing: his vengeful racism.
Two things struck me about the
Republican reaction to Trump declaring
Judge Gonzalo Curiel unfit to preside
over his case for being “Mexican.” The
first is that even as people like House
Speaker Paul Ryan call it “the textbook
definition of a racist comment,”
they are standing by Trump. As Bill
Kristol, editor of the Weekly Standard,
tweeted, “Official position of the
Republican Party: Trump is an
inexcusable bigot, and Trump must be our
next president.” (Kristol is leading a
campaign to dump Trump and draft Mitt
Romney again.)
Appeals to bigotry have never been far
from national campaigns: Al Smith was
demolished for his Catholicism in 1928,
John Kennedy almost was in 1960, Nixon
and the first Bush couldn’t have been
elected without coded appeals to
prejudices against blacks, McCain and
Romney couldn’t anymore do the same with
Obama and get away with it so they did
the next-best thing, calling him a
terrorist sympathizer, a foreigner, a
Muslim. But the appeals were
more tactical than central to
campaigns, rather like paying tribute to
a base of barnacle Republicans whose
bigotry is as encrusted as their
dependable votes. In Trump’s case,
racism is the overriding allure, the
buxom gravity center of his
says-it-like-it-is charisma. His
supporters deny it. They have to, like
drunks who haven’t yet owned up to
12-stepping. But take away the racism,
the Mexican-bashing, the dehumanizing of
immigrants, the insults to a world of
Muslims, the ultra-nationalism, and
there’s not much left beside the
Mussolini-like jabbing jaw and that
hair, the only thing on Trump’s body
that defies gravity, his imagination
included.
The second thing that struck me was that
even as a few Republicans denounced
Trump over his Curiel insult, it was
only then that Trump was assailed for
exhibiting textbook racism. But he’s
been exhibiting it in worse ways since
the day he announced his candidacy, when
he compared Mexicans to rapists and
criminals, and since went on to propose
closing the borders to all Muslims.
I don’t know how that’s not the textbook
definition not just of racism, but of
fascism. As Robert Paxton, author of
“The Anatomy of Fascism” put it in
an interview about Trump in
February, “the use of ethnic stereotypes
and exploitation of fear of foreigners
is directly out of a fascist’s recipe
book.”
But even the media has betrayed a
double-standard in its treatment of
Trump in its handling the Curiel attacks
as opposed to slurs on immigrants and
Muslims. The difference is that Curiel
is American. Trump’s attacks on Mexicans
and Muslims were directed at people
either beyond the borders or beneath
American citizenship. The racism, in
other words, is not Trump’s alone, or
his supporters’. Even the media is
playing into the caste of narratives,
which shows to what extent the culture
has become either inured to the
unacceptable or willing to make its
accommodations with it. Ryan did: he
calls Trump’s racism “unacceptable,” yet
he accepts it.
That’s ultimately the danger of Trump’s
candidacy—not that he will win, but that
even in losing, he is corroding that
buffer against the unacceptable. He is
making what Roth in “The Plot Against
America” called “the unfolding of the
unforeseen” possible.
Trump will fade. Trumpism may not. And
the longer the Republican establishment
is
willing to appease him—to make its
Munich with him—as a better alternative
to Clinton, the more it legitimizes his
racism as an acceptable American value
at the very moment when white America is
fading to minority status.
It
can’t happen here? My friends, Trump or
no Trump, it is happening here.