On Barbarians and Deplorables

Sure, they might have been unsophisticated, but they were decent, unspoiled, freedom-loving people. When the time came, under the improbable leadership of a man with strong connections in the enemy camp, they rose up and annihilated the cruel, arrogant global elitist oppressors. They regained their freedom and lived happily ever after.

Is it the Germans under Arminius or American reactionaries under Trump? You decide.

Did Trump Turn America Left?

Ross Douthat examines the thesis that Trump made progressives out of appalled centrists and finds it incomplete. Is he right?

Yes. To cite four examples:

  1. On immigration, Trump’s first signature issue, there is no doubt that he galvanized moderate public opinion against him. He can therefore take “credit” for a significant shift in sentiment in favor of refugees.
  2. For racial equity issues, on the other hand, the turning point came with the GOP’s appalling response to the election of Barack Obama. BLM had its origins in the Obama era. Trump threw salt in the wound, but he didn’t create it.
  3. Realistically speaking, the development of the concepts of cancel culture and wokeness had little to do with Trump. These are ideas that are tied to millennials, left-wing intellectuals, and the internet, not Trump.
  4. Millennial concerns about climate change and student debt similarly predate Trump. He just intensified them.

The bottom line is that the center has moved left partly due to circumstances beyond the control of any one individual (legitimate concerns about inequality and the adequacy of the welfare state; the pandemic; the availability of more or less free money) and partly due to the threat Trump and his party present to the workings of American liberal democracy. Centrists aren’t going to worry about the woke left as long as the Trump right appears to support the Orban Option.

Fascism with American Characteristics: Religion

If you’re Franco, and you lead a country that is culturally dominated by a state church, dealing with religious issues is relatively easy: you simply enforce the existing monopoly. Putin’s relationship with the Orthodox Church has some of the same characteristics. Mussolini made a deal with the Pope. But America has religious pluralism in its DNA. What would an American fascist government do?

Religious tests would be a key component of any American fascist regime, but it would have to allow for some diversity. In all likelihood, instead of creating a new state church, the regime would have to create a list of religious groups that it considered to be adequately respectable and obedient for the purpose of enforcing the test. New, unreliable churches and existing left-leaning organizations would be banned. Nevertheless, there would be some competition and some freedom of choice permitted, as in the Third Reich.

The most difficult question for the regime would revolve around the treatment of the Jews. Given that some Jewish groups are extremely conservative, but most are not, there would be some debate on this point. In the end, the intense antipathy felt by most reactionaries towards the Jews would probably prevail, so Judaism in its entirety would be banned.

A Limerick on McCarthy

For the GOP leader named Kevin

Herding all of those cats isn’t heaven.

His struggle with Liz

Is just part of the biz.

Is she running to be 47?

Fascism with American Characteristics: Federalism

Reactionary thought in America is typically associated with states’ rights. Fascism, on the other hand, by definition involves a direct tie between the country’s leader and the nation as a whole. If the GOP takes power and successfully implements the Orban Option, how would this contradiction be resolved?

There would be a substantial degree of decentralization. Slightly reformed red state governments could be relied upon to impose and enforce the religious and racial tests that would be at the heart of the new regime, while censorship would be handled at the national level. But what about the blue states?

The military would have to be purged and used as an occupying force, but that, by itself, would not be enough to run the blue states. Local collaborators, mostly from rural areas, would have to be recruited. Finally, talented reactionaries would have to be mobilized in red states in large numbers, carefully organized, and sent to the blue states to run state and local governments and crush any remaining opposition.

Think of carpetbaggers, only in reverse.

On the Politics of Pure Populism (3)

Assume that the Biden boom is still in full swing in 2024. Do the Republicans respond by nominating someone (e.g., Josh Hawley) with a similar populist agenda and fight the election purely on culture and identity issues?

I doubt it. The GOP would effectively be conceding that regressive tax cuts and deregulation aren’t always the answer, and that not every election is a rerun of 1980. The rank and file might already accept that, but the intellectual and institutional leadership does not, and probably never will.

Inertia is a powerful thing. My guess is that it will take at least two election cycles to put an end to the enduring image of Reagan and morning in America within the GOP.

On the Politics of Pure Populism (2)

This is far from a given, but assume that the Biden economy is a roaring success. How will the GOP respond?

Here are the choices:

  1. Whine about the deficit and how we’re burdening our grandchildren.
  2. Ramp up the culture wars to 11.
  3. Engage in vandalism and hostage taking. Demand massive spending cuts in exchange for voting to keep the government open and increasing the debt ceiling. Stick to your guns when Biden refuses and see if he blinks.
  4. Pick a presidential candidate with a genuinely populist economic agenda similar to Biden’s in 2024, and fight the election on cultural/identity issues.

#1 and #2 are a given; they’re already doing that. I will address #4 in my next post. The one you should be really concerned about is #3. That issue will come up in a few months. My prediction is that the base will be pushing for a showdown over the debt limit, and that the possibility of default will dominate the political discussion for weeks, if not months.

On the Politics of Pure Populism (1)

Inspired by the performance of our economy in 2019, the availability of cheap money, the persistence of inequality, the structural issues exposed by the pandemic, and the fear of the Orban Option in 2024, Biden has staked his political future on an attempt to grow the welfare state at the expense of the wealthy. This isn’t socialism; it is pure populism, as opposed to the faux variety offered by Trump and the GOP.

While this program has a sound basis in economics, it is based primarily on a bet about the electorate. It raises two questions:

  1. Will a significant number of reactionary white workers eschew identity politics and vote their economic self-interest if the economy is roaring and wages are rising in 2024?
  2. Will Biden lose the votes of affluent blue-leaning professionals with his tax increases and potential losses in the markets?

The math is simple: the increased reactionary worker vote has to exceed the decreased blue professional vote for this gamble to succeed.

What is the prognosis? I’m cautiously optimistic, but nobody knows for sure.

How will the GOP respond? I’ll discuss that in my next post.

On Scott and Systemic Racism

Following Nikki Haley, Tim Scott argues that America is not a racist country. It would be easy to dismiss his comments as an opportunistic effort by “Uncle Tim” to suck up to his party’s base for self-interested reasons. It may even be true. However, let’s evaluate his opinion on its merits and see where it goes.

I will start with three propositions on which all parties to the debate should be able to agree:

  1. Black people were enslaved prior to 1863 and subjected to ferocious and wide-ranging legal discrimination until the middle 1960s.
  2. There are no government regulations anywhere in the country today which facially discriminate against black people.
  3. By any indicator you care to name–wealth, unemployment, incarceration, education, drug use, and violent deaths, just to name a few–black people are significantly worse off than white people today.

The obvious question to ask a member of the GOP, such as Scott, is why #3 is the case. For a Democrat, the answer is easy: it is the lingering effects of #1, in addition to some ongoing racism today. That argument is both logical and factually plausible. Some Republicans might privately think that the correct answer is that “black people are worse off because they are inherently inferior,” but, in spite of their frequent harangues about PC, they know they cannot say such a thing in public. The Democratic response is also unacceptable, because it makes the case for affirmative action. The GOP member is consequently driven to take the position that decades of poor social policy driven by the Democrats have caused the problem. If you could just take the hammock of dependency away and force black people to stand on their feet without assistance, the inequality problem would disappear.

This is the Paul Ryan argument. It has no basis in logic or experience. The American safety net (at least pre-Biden) is about as far from a comfortable hammock as you can get, and the GOP has already had numerous opportunities to implement its position over the past several decades. Was there any improvement? None that I can see.

The bottom line is that the overwhelming evidence indicates that there is still plenty of as-applied racism in this country, and that the vestiges of hundreds of years of discrimination cannot be disposed of quickly. You don’t have to be woke to see that.

May Day! May Day!

Yesterday, we packed up our car and made the long drive to our North Carolina mountain home. Spring is in full swing here, as opposed to Florida, which only has the wet and dry seasons.

It occurred to me this morning that part of the emotional appeal of Easter is the fact that it takes place during the spring; the theme of death and resurrection is manifested in the natural world at just the right time. But what happens in the Southern Hemisphere? Would Easter have the same meaning in the fall?

I would think not.

On the Biden Plan and Medicare for More

The principal ideological battle in the 2020 primaries was between Medicare for All and Medicare for More. Biden vigorously defended the latter as being more affordable and politically feasible. His families plan, however, rejects Medicare for More in favor of increased Obamacare subsidies. The left is predictably annoyed. What is going on here?

Reality and politics have intruded, as usual. The medical interest groups so strongly opposed to M4A also object, if less vigorously, to M4M. The GOP is also waiting to pounce on anything that looks like a structural change to health care. The medical groups, on the other hand, have no reason whatsoever to campaign against additional subsidies, and it will be hard for Republicans to oppose a bill that doesn’t change the structure of health care–it just makes it more affordable, even for older, more affluent people who typically vote for the GOP out of self-interest.

Given the magnitude of the threat that today’s GOP presents to our political system, you can understand why Biden puts politics ahead of policy. It may not be brave, but it is definitely prudent.

On the Reactionary Tour

According to Politico, Matt Gaetz and Marjorie Taylor Greene are going on tour together to hunt RINOs and liberals! The tour, as is only fitting, opens at The Villages.

It sounds like one of those summer tours featuring two aging classic rock groups. It’s perfect! My only question is, who has to be the opening act?

On Rebuttable Presumptions

When a politician you admire is accused of wrongdoing, there is a natural inclination to initially deflect or dismiss the allegations. It is effectively a presumption of innocence for your side.

For centrists and most leftists, the presumption is rebuttable. If evidence accumulates that the allegations are true, you accept that conclusion and take a position as to what constitutes an appropriate remedy.

If you’re a reactionary, however, the opposite is true. The more compelling the case, the more you dig in and blame the “deep state” and the MSM for maligning your hero. Hence, Tucker Carlson on Matt Gaetz.

On New Wine and Old Bottles

The results in elections in Florida and elsewhere suggest that Americans generally support positions held by Democrats, but do not trust Democrats to deliver them properly, typically due to identity politics. Biden and his agenda, however, poll very well. What accounts for the difference?

As Andrew Yang once noted, making ambitious positions sound moderate is Biden’s superpower. Another way to put it is that Americans feel more comfortable with new wine when it comes in old bottles. Particularly, of course, when the bottle is white.