Timothy Snyder, a historian at Yale University, specializes in the history of fascism, wrote a powerful essay about Trump and his Insurrection for the New York Times. It is called “The American Abyss.” Snyder is the author of the best-selling book On Tyranny: Twenty Lessons from the Twentieth Century. I urge you to subscribe to the New York Times so you can read this essay and see the powerful photographs taken by photographs from the newspaper.
In this essay, he writes:
When Donald Trump stood before his followers on Jan. 6 and urged them to march on the United States Capitol, he was doing what he had always done. He never took electoral democracy seriously nor accepted the legitimacy of its American version.
Even when he won, in 2016, he insisted that the election was fraudulent — that millions of false votes were cast for his opponent. In 2020, in the knowledge that he was trailing Joseph R. Biden in the polls, he spent months claiming that the presidential election would be rigged and signaling that he would not accept the results if they did not favor him. He wrongly claimed on Election Day that he had won and then steadily hardened his rhetoric: With time, his victory became a historic landslide and the various conspiracies that denied it ever more sophisticated and implausible.
People believed him, which is not at all surprising. It takes a tremendous amount of work to educate citizens to resist the powerful pull of believing what they already believe, or what others around them believe, or what would make sense of their own previous choices. Plato noted a particular risk for tyrants: that they would be surrounded in the end by yes-men and enablers. Aristotle worried that, in a democracy, a wealthy and talented demagogue could all too easily master the minds of the populace. Aware of these risks and others, the framers of the Constitution instituted a system of checks and balances. The point was not simply to ensure that no one branch of government dominated the others but also to anchor in institutions different points of view.
In this sense, the responsibility for Trump’s push to overturn an election must be shared by a very large number of Republican members of Congress. Rather than contradict Trump from the beginning, they allowed his electoral fiction to flourish. They had different reasons for doing so. One group of Republicans is concerned above all with gaming the system to maintain power, taking full advantage of constitutional obscurities, gerrymandering and dark money to win elections with a minority of motivated voters. They have no interest in the collapse of the peculiar form of representation that allows their minority party disproportionate control of government. The most important among them, Mitch McConnell, indulged Trump’s lie while making no comment on its consequences.
Yet other Republicans saw the situation differently: They might actually break the system and have power without democracy. The split between these two groups, the gamers and the breakers, became sharply visible on Dec. 30, when Senator Josh Hawley announced that he would support Trump’s challenge by questioning the validity of the electoral votes on Jan. 6. Ted Cruz then promised his own support, joined by about 10 other senators. More than a hundred Republican representatives took the same position. For many, this seemed like nothing more than a show: challenges to states’ electoral votes would force delays and floor votes but would not affect the outcome.
Yet for Congress to traduce its basic functions had a price. An elected institution that opposes elections is inviting its own overthrow. Members of Congress who sustained the president’s lie, despite the available and unambiguous evidence, betrayed their constitutional mission. Making his fictions the basis of congressional action gave them flesh. Now Trump could demand that senators and congressmen bow to his will. He could place personal responsibility upon Mike Pence, in charge of the formal proceedings, to pervert them. And on Jan. 6, he directed his followers to exert pressure on these elected representatives, which they proceeded to do: storming the Capitol building, searching for people to punish, ransacking the place.
Of course this did make a kind of sense: If the election really had been stolen, as senators and congressmen were themselves suggesting, then how could Congress be allowed to move forward? For some Republicans, the invasion of the Capitol must have been a shock, or even a lesson. For the breakers, however, it may have been a taste of the future. Afterward, eight senators and more than 100 representatives voted for the lie that had forced them to flee their chambers.
Post-truth is pre-fascism, and Trump has been our post-truth president. When we give up on truth, we concede power to those with the wealth and charisma to create spectacle in its place. Without agreement about some basic facts, citizens cannot form the civil society that would allow them to defend themselves. If we lose the institutions that produce facts that are pertinent to us, then we tend to wallow in attractive abstractions and fictions. Truth defends itself particularly poorly when there is not very much of it around, and the era of Trump — like the era of Vladimir Putin in Russia — is one of the decline of local news. Social media is no substitute: It supercharges the mental habits by which we seek emotional stimulation and comfort, which means losing the distinction between what feels true and what actually is true.
Post-truth wears away the rule of law and invites a regime of myth. These last four years, scholars have discussed the legitimacy and value of invoking fascism in reference to Trumpian propaganda. One comfortable position has been to label any such effort as a direct comparison and then to treat such comparisons as taboo. More productively, the philosopher Jason Stanley has treated fascism as a phenomenon, as a series of patterns that can be observed not only in interwar Europe but beyond it.
My own view is that greater knowledge of the past, fascist or otherwise, allows us to notice and conceptualize elements of the present that we might otherwise disregard and to think more broadly about future possibilities. It was clear to me in October that Trump’s behavior presaged a coup, and I said so in print; this is not because the present repeats the past, but because the past enlightens the present.
Like historical fascist leaders, Trump has presented himself as the single source of truth. His use of the term “fake news” echoed the Nazi smear Lügenpresse (“lying press”); like the Nazis, he referred to reporters as “enemies of the people.” Like Adolf Hitler, he came to power at a moment when the conventional press had taken a beating; the financial crisis of 2008 did to American newspapers what the Great Depression did to German ones. The Nazis thought that they could use radio to replace the old pluralism of the newspaper; Trump tried to do the same with Twitter.
Thanks to technological capacity and personal talent, Donald Trump lied at a pace perhaps unmatched by any other leader in history. For the most part these were small lies, and their main effect was cumulative. To believe in all of them was to accept the authority of a single man, because to believe in all of them was to disbelieve everything else. Once such personal authority was established, the president could treat everyone else as the liars; he even had the power to turn someone from a trusted adviser into a dishonest scoundrel with a single tweet. Yet so long as he was unable to enforce some truly big lie, some fantasy that created an alternative reality where people could live and die, his pre-fascism fell short of the thing itself.
Some of his lies were, admittedly, medium-size: that he was a successful businessman; that Russia did not support him in 2016; that Barack Obama was born in Kenya. Such medium-size lies were the standard fare of aspiring authoritarians in the 21st century. In Poland the right-wing party built a martyrdom cult around assigning blame to political rivals for an airplane crash that killed the nation’s president. Hungary’s Viktor Orban blames a vanishingly small number of Muslim refugees for his country’s problems. But such claims were not quite big lies; they stretched but did not rend what Hannah Arendt called “the fabric of factuality.”
One historical big lie discussed by Arendt is Joseph Stalin’s explanation of starvation in Soviet Ukraine in 1932-33. The state had collectivized agriculture, then applied a series of punitive measures to Ukraine that ensured millions would die. Yet the official line was that the starving were provocateurs, agents of Western powers who hated socialism so much they were killing themselves. A still grander fiction, in Arendt’s account, is Hitlerian anti-Semitism: the claims that Jews ran the world, Jews were responsible for ideas that poisoned German minds, Jews stabbed Germany in the back during the First World War. Intriguingly, Arendt thought big lies work only in lonely minds; their coherence substitutes for experience and companionship.
In November 2020, reaching millions of lonely minds through social media, Trump told a lie that was dangerously ambitious: that he had won an election that in fact he had lost. This lie was big in every pertinent respect: not as big as “Jews run the world,” but big enough. The significance of the matter at hand was great: the right to rule the most powerful country in the world and the efficacy and trustworthiness of its succession procedures. The level of mendacity was profound. The claim was not only wrong, but it was also made in bad faith, amid unreliable sources. It challenged not just evidence but logic: Just how could (and why would) an election have been rigged against a Republican president but not against Republican senators and representatives? Trump had to speak, absurdly, of a “Rigged (for President) Election.”
The force of a big lie resides in its demand that many other things must be believed or disbelieved. To make sense of a world in which the 2020 presidential election was stolen requires distrust not only of reporters and of experts but also of local, state and federal government institutions, from poll workers to elected officials, Homeland Security and all the way to the Supreme Court. It brings with it, of necessity, a conspiracy theory: Imagine all the people who must have been in on such a plot and all the people who would have had to work on the cover-up.
Trump’s electoral fiction floats free of verifiable reality. It is defended not so much by facts as by claims that someone else has made some claims. The sensibility is that something must be wrong because I feel it to be wrong, and I know others feel the same way. When political leaders such as Ted Cruz or Jim Jordan spoke like this, what they meant was: You believe my lies, which compels me to repeat them. Social media provides an infinity of apparent evidence for any conviction, especially one seemingly held by a president.
On the surface, a conspiracy theory makes its victim look strong: It sees Trump as resisting the Democrats, the Republicans, the Deep State, the pedophiles, the Satanists. More profoundly, however, it inverts the position of the strong and the weak. Trump’s focus on alleged “irregularities” and “contested states” comes down to cities where Black people live and vote. At bottom, the fantasy of fraud is that of a crime committed by Black people against white people.
It’s not just that electoral fraud by African-Americans against Donald Trump never happened. It is that it is the very opposite of what happened, in 2020 and in every American election. As always, Black people waited longer than others to vote and were more likely to have their votes challenged. They were more likely to be suffering or dying from Covid-19, and less likely to be able to take time away from work. The historical protection of their right to vote has been removed by the Supreme Court’s 2013 ruling in Shelby County v. Holder, and states have rushed to pass measures of a kind that historically reduce voting by the poor and communities of color.
The claim that Trump was denied a win by fraud is a big lie not just because it mauls logic, misdescribes the present and demands belief in a conspiracy. It is a big lie, fundamentally, because it reverses the moral field of American politics and the basic structure of American history.
When Senator Ted Cruz announced his intention to challenge the Electoral College vote, he invoked the Compromise of 1877, which resolved the presidential election of 1876. Commentators pointed out that this was no relevant precedent, since back then there really were serious voter irregularities and there really was a stalemate in Congress. For African-Americans, however, the seemingly gratuitous reference led somewhere else. The Compromise of 1877 — in which Rutherford B. Hayes would have the presidency, provided that he withdrew federal power from the South — was the very arrangement whereby African-Americans were driven from voting booths for the better part of a century. It was effectively the end of Reconstruction, the beginning of segregation, legal discrimination and Jim Crow. It is the original sin of American history in the post-slavery era, our closest brush with fascism so far.
If the reference seemed distant when Ted Cruz and 10 senatorial colleagues released their statement on Jan. 2, it was brought very close four days later, when Confederate flags were paraded through the Capitol.
Some things have changed since 1877, of course. Back then, it was the Republicans, or many of them, who supported racial equality; it was the Democrats, the party of the South, who wanted apartheid. It was the Democrats, back then, who called African-Americans’ votes fraudulent, and the Republicans who wanted them counted. This is now reversed. In the past half century, since the Civil Rights Act, Republicans have become a predominantly white party interested — as Trump openly declared — in keeping the number of voters, and particularly the number of Black voters, as low as possible. Yet the common thread remains. Watching white supremacists among the people storming the Capitol, it was easy to yield to the feeling that something pure had been violated. It might be better to see the episode as part of a long American argument about who deserves representation.
The Democrats, today, have become a coalition, one that does better than Republicans with female and nonwhite voters and collects votes from both labor unions and the college-educated. Yet it’s not quite right to contrast this coalition with a monolithic Republican Party. Right now, the Republican Party is a coalition of two types of people: those who would game the system (most of the politicians, some of the voters) and those who dream of breaking it (a few of the politicians, many of the voters). In January 2021, this was visible as the difference between those Republicans who defended the present system on the grounds that it favored them and those who tried to upend it.
In the four decades since the election of Ronald Reagan, Republicans have overcome the tension between the gamers and the breakers by governing in opposition to government, or by calling elections a revolution (the Tea Party), or by claiming to oppose elites. The breakers, in this arrangement, provide cover for the gamers, putting forth an ideology that distracts from the basic reality that government under Republicans is not made smaller but simply diverted to serve a handful of interests.
At first, Trump seemed like a threat to this balance. His lack of experience in politics and his open racism made him a very uncomfortable figure for the party; his habit of continually telling lies was initially found by prominent Republicans to be uncouth. Yet after he won the presidency, his particular skills as a breaker seemed to create a tremendous opportunity for the gamers. Led by the gamer in chief, McConnell, they secured hundreds of federal judges and tax cuts for the rich.
Trump was unlike other breakers in that he seemed to have no ideology. His objection to institutions was that they might constrain him personally. He intended to break the system to serve himself — and this is partly why he has failed. Trump is a charismatic politician and inspires devotion not only among voters but among a surprising number of lawmakers, but he has no vision that is greater than himself or what his admirers project upon him. In this respect his pre-fascism fell short of fascism: His vision never went further than a mirror. He arrived at a truly big lie not from any view of the world but from the reality that he might lose something.
Yet Trump never prepared a decisive blow. He lacked the support of the military, some of whose leaders he had alienated. (No true fascist would have made the mistake he did there, which was to openly love foreign dictators; supporters convinced that the enemy was at home might not mind, but those sworn to protect from enemies abroad did.) Trump’s secret police force, the men carrying out snatch operations in Portland, was violent but also small and ludicrous. Social media proved to be a blunt weapon: Trump could announce his intentions on Twitter, and white supremacists could plan their invasion of the Capitol on Facebook or Gab. But the president, for all his lawsuits and entreaties and threats to public officials, could not engineer a situation that ended with the right people doing the wrong thing. Trump could make some voters believe that he had won the 2020 election, but he was unable to bring institutions along with his big lie. And he could bring his supporters to Washington and send them on a rampage in the Capitol, but none appeared to have any very clear idea of how this was to work or what their presence would accomplish. It is hard to think of a comparable insurrectionary moment, when a building of great significance was seized, that involved so much milling around.
The lie outlasts the liar. The idea that Germany lost the First World War in 1918 because of a Jewish “stab in the back” was 15 years old when Hitler came to power. How will Trump’s myth of victimhood function in American life 15 years from now? And to whose benefit?
On Jan. 7, Trump called for a peaceful transition of power, implicitly conceding that his putsch had failed. Even then, though, he repeated and even amplified his electoral fiction: It was now a sacred cause for which people had sacrificed. Trump’s imagined stab in the back will live on chiefly thanks to its endorsement by members of Congress. In November and December 2020, Republicans repeated it, giving it a life it would not otherwise have had. In retrospect, it now seems as though the last shaky compromise between the gamers and the breakers was the idea that Trump should have every chance to prove that wrong had been done to him. That position implicitly endorsed the big lie for Trump supporters who were inclined to believe it. It failed to restrain Trump, whose big lie only grew bigger.
The breakers and the gamers then saw a different world ahead, where the big lie was either a treasure to be had or a danger to be avoided. The breakers had no choice but to rush to be first to claim to believe in it. Because the breakers Josh Hawley and Ted Cruz must compete to claim the brimstone and bile, the gamers were forced to reveal their own hand, and the division within the Republican coalition became visible on Jan. 6. The invasion of the Capitol only reinforced this division. To be sure, a few senators withdrew their objections, but Cruz and Hawley moved forward anyway, along with six other senators. More than 100 representatives doubled down on the big lie. Some, like Matt Gaetz, even added their own flourishes, such as the claim that the mob was led not by Trump’s supporters but by his opponents.
Trump is, for now, the martyr in chief, the high priest of the big lie. He is the leader of the breakers, at least in the minds of his supporters. By now, the gamers do not want Trump around. Discredited in his last weeks, he is useless; shorn of the obligations of the presidency, he will become embarrassing again, much as he was in 2015. Unable to provide cover for their gamesmanship, he will be irrelevant to their daily purposes. But the breakers have an even stronger reason to see Trump disappear: It is impossible to inherit from someone who is still around. Seizing Trump’s big lie might appear to be a gesture of support. In fact it expresses a wish for his political death. Transforming the myth from one about Trump to one about the nation will be easier when he is out of the way.
As Cruz and Hawley may learn, to tell the big lie is to be owned by it. Just because you have sold your soul does not mean that you have driven a hard bargain. Hawley shies from no level of hypocrisy; the son of a banker, educated at Stanford University and Yale Law School, he denounces elites. Insofar as Cruz was thought to have a principle, it was that of states’ rights, which Trump’s calls to action brazenly violated. A joint statement Cruz issued about the senators’ challenge to the vote nicely captured the post-truth aspect of the whole: It never alleged that there was fraud, only that there were allegations of fraud. Allegations of allegations, allegations all the way down.
The big lie requires commitment. When Republican gamers do not exhibit enough of that, Republican breakers call them “RINOs”: Republicans in name only. This term once suggested a lack of ideological commitment. It now means an unwillingness to throw away an election. The gamers, in response, close ranks around the Constitution and speak of principles and traditions. The breakers must all know (with the possible exception of the Alabama senator Tommy Tuberville) that they are participating in a sham, but they will have an audience of tens of millions who do not.
If Trump remains present in American political life, he will surely repeat his big lie incessantly. Hawley and Cruz and the other breakers share responsibility for where this leads. Cruz and Hawley seem to be running for president. Yet what does it mean to be a candidate for office and denounce voting? If you claim that the other side has cheated, and your supporters believe you, they will expect you to cheat yourself. By defending Trump’s big lie on Jan. 6, they set a precedent: A Republican presidential candidate who loses an election should be appointed anyway by Congress. Republicans in the future, at least breaker candidates for president, will presumably have a Plan A, to win and win, and a Plan B, to lose and win. No fraud is necessary; only allegations that there are allegations of fraud. Truth is to be replaced by spectacle, facts by faith.
Trump’s coup attempt of 2020-21, like other failed coup attempts, is a warning for those who care about the rule of law and a lesson for those who do not. His pre-fascism revealed a possibility for American politics. For a coup to work in 2024, the breakers will require something that Trump never quite had: an angry minority, organized for nationwide violence, ready to add intimidation to an election. Four years of amplifying a big lie just might get them this. To claim that the other side stole an election is to promise to steal one yourself. It is also to claim that the other side deserves to be punished.
Informed observers inside and outside government agree that right-wing white supremacism is the greatest terrorist threat to the United States. Gun sales in 2020 hit an astonishing high. History shows that political violence follows when prominent leaders of major political parties openly embrace paranoia.
Our big lie is typically American, wrapped in our odd electoral system, depending upon our particular traditions of racism. Yet our big lie is also structurally fascist, with its extreme mendacity, its conspiratorial thinking, its reversal of perpetrators and victims and its implication that the world is divided into us and them. To keep it going for four years courts terrorism and assassination.
When that violence comes, the breakers will have to react. If they embrace it, they become the fascist faction. The Republican Party will be divided, at least for a time. One can of course imagine a dismal reunification: A breaker candidate loses a narrow presidential election in November 2024 and cries fraud, the Republicans win both houses of Congress and rioters in the street, educated by four years of the big lie, demand what they see as justice. Would the gamers stand on principle if those were the circumstances of Jan. 6, 2025?
To be sure, this moment is also a chance. It is possible that a divided Republican Party might better serve American democracy; that the gamers, separated from the breakers, might start to think of policy as a way to win elections. It is very likely that the Biden-Harris administration will have an easier first few months than expected; perhaps obstructionism will give way, at least among a few Republicans and for a short time, to a moment of self-questioning. Politicians who want Trumpism to end have a simple way forward: Tell the truth about the election.
America will not survive the big lie just because a liar is separated from power. It will need a thoughtful repluralization of media and a commitment to facts as a public good. The racism structured into every aspect of the coup attempt is a call to heed our own history. Serious attention to the past helps us to see risks but also suggests future possibility. We cannot be a democratic republic if we tell lies about race, big or small. Democracy is not about minimizing the vote nor ignoring it, neither a matter of gaming nor of breaking a system, but of accepting the equality of others, heeding their voices and counting their votes.
Timothy Snyder is the Levin professor of history at Yale University and the author of histories of political atrocity including “Bloodlands” and “Black Earth,” as well as the book “On Tyranny,” on America’s turn toward authoritarianism. His most recent book is “Our Malady,” a memoir of his own near-fatal illness reflecting on the relationship between health and freedom. Ashley Gilbertson is an Australian photojournalist with the VII Photo Agency living in New York. Gilbertson has covered migration and conflict internationally for over 20 years.

Too many business types want k- 12 to be nothing more than a job training program!
LikeLike
Some of these radical right wing extremists believe that the proletariat need to be trained as good drones, and nothing more.
LikeLike
https://billmoyers.com/story/hcr01152021/
The World of the White House Falls to Pieces
LikeLike
Sheldon Adelson and his wife, like many other Trump supporters, understood “Government under Republicans is not made smaller but it is diverted to serve a handful of interests.”
I guess Snyder’s omission of religion in the discussion means he thinks the right wing religious voters are merely groomed to be more receptive to the lies of “gamers and breakers”. In a follow-up, it would be interesting to read Snyder introduce and project how religious support for the GOP plays out.
LikeLike
Linda Religious support certainly “plays out.” In religious language, we are suffering through an evil marriage . . . between the religious fanatical right, and oligarchical, neo-liberal political power seekers.
But as J. Hawley himself seems to understand, power manifests in the political arena, regardless of what religious or non-religious movements “play out” in that picture. What Hawley is inviting, unlike those with pretty-much purely oligarchical interests, and whether he knows it or not, is a retribalization of the United States around HIS warped IDEA of Christianity and, (of course) of the world.
A voice from history might say: No thanks . . . . been there, done that. CBK
LikeLike
Linda Religious support certainly “plays out.” In religious language, we are suffering through an evil marriage . . . between the religious fanatical right, and oligarchical, neo-liberal political power seekers.
But as J. Hawley himself seems to understand, power manifests in the political arena, regardless of what religious or non-religious movements “play out” in that picture. What Hawley is inviting, unlike those with pretty-much purely oligarchical interests, and whether he knows it or not, is a retribalization of the United States around HIS warped IDEA of Christianity and, (of course) of the world.
A voice from history might say: No thanks . . . . been there, done that. CBK
LikeLike
Timothy Snyder and Anne Appelbaum are historian/journalists whose works will be read for decades, hopefully describing a failed attack on democratic values, not burned by fascists
LikeLike
“For a coup to work in 2024”
Never say never, but, a coup in a modern urban/suburban world is just mutual assured destruction. The world stops. The engine seizes up. There is no restart. It just looks like hurricane Katrina where nothing functions anymore.
LikeLike
Former Sen. John C. Danforth who takes credit for getting Hawley elected (now regrets it)
has a center named to honor him, the Center on Religion and Politics. David Brooks, whose critics question the ethics of his personal relationships, is on the Center’s board.
LikeLike
To so many, the difference between facts and faith Snyder makes allusion to is a very difficult distinction. Used to accepting truth as constant and immutable, they assume what they have heard from their trusted authorities to have weight. This is true no matter which side of the present debate a citizen finds him or herself on. We all have to choose our sources of information. For educational issues, I feel like Diane Ravitch is a trusted authority concerning educational issues. I am less trusting of Strauss, but I cannot explain why.
In a similar way, my reactionary fried Joe only accepts certain information on certain internet sites. I happen to feel that my sources are better curators of truth than Joe’s, but I could no more persuade him of that than I could persuade a staunch atheist of the existence of a devine.
Perhaps this is the source of the frailty of self-government. It is much easier to convince yourself of a comfortable truth than one that loads you with responsibility. This is why we need a press that speaks truth and a political process that grants access to that press. Truth is often difficult to discern, especially when scientists are involved. Changing science opinions feel unsettling to a population used only to immutable truth. Suspicion of a dangerous “them” undermines democratic process. A failure to perform the duties of governing openly exaggerates the suspicion of distant “them.” Rural voters right now fear a growing dominance of an urban voter block. Long excluded from decision-making, black urban voters do not generally trust the motivations of rural voters. And on and on.
We have to find the transparency that satisfies all groups. Procedure that purges voter rolls of those who die or move need to be freed from the present doubt that comes with this procedure. The various ways of casting a ballot need to be understood and open.
Even with all that, false information about the process should be called out as such. Somehow there must be a way all can distinguish fact from fiction.
LikeLike
I mostly agree, but do not assign a large role here: “Changing science opinions feel unsettling to a population used only to immutable truth.”
Who/ how many are “used only to immutable truth”? Changing science/ tech is viewed positively by most. A deadly novel virus that changes daily has brought out this sort of reaction. It’s human: a sudden, rapidly-developing threat to health is going to bring out such attitudes in many. A sort of digging heels in while one adjusts. It plays a part in the “frailty of self-government” we’re seeing today, but I suspect it will recede when the crisis is past.
LikeLike
In August, David Brooks wrote about the value of a “high-minded debate” among Cotton, Hawley, Sasse and Rubio to define the nature of the Republican Party. Brooks described what each brought to the table. Summarizing, Hawley’s core belief is that middle class Americans have been betrayed by elites, Cotton is an uber-hawk on everything, Sasse thinks government’s job is to create a framework for ordered liberty and, Rubio bases his opinion on his religion’s vision of social teaching. Max Boot’s response to Brooks’ column, “The Party doesn’t deserve to have a future.”
LikeLike
Every Brooks piece should come with a Surgeon General-type warning about its hazards to intellectual health. I would never subject myself to reading his tripe and is the reason I haven’t watched a Friday edition of PBS Newshour since he’s been on.
LikeLike
Agree 100%.
Brooks is a pseudo intellectual who concocts something related to religious belief and affixes it as plaster veneer to his garbage thoughts to prettify them. The billionaires love what he peddles to the upper middle class.
LikeLike
Absolutely. I long ago decided not to bother to read any piece written by Brooks. He’s a weasel who applies sugar coating to really ugly right-wing ideas and actions. The sugar coating usually takes the form of fatuous, golly gee, aw shucks appeals to misapplied, cliched truisms. And speaking of cliches, he could hide behind a corkscrew. His writing and “thinking” is infuriating. Conservative apologetics in American Gothic Sunday Go to Meeting Dress. I’ve no stomach for it at all.
LikeLike
David Brooks was there when I debated Wendy Kopp in Aspen in 2011. I talked with him afterwards.
He had gotten my attention after writing about a “miracle school” that had “closed the achievement gap.”
I had debunked the miracle school claims, as well as TFA claims about miraculous results.
He wrote a nasty column in The NY Times excoriating me for my view that schools could not overcome poverty.
LikeLiked by 1 person
He’s a neoliberal true believer in the magic market.
LikeLike
Sadly true. However Brooks had an important role as straight man for the wise Mark Shields, and no doubt will do the same for Jonathan Capeheart.
LikeLike
All this true, but you must also keep an eye on Democrats. We are going Gaga over the win and how we beat Trump and Republicans. Social Democrats are pushing to rid the government of conservatives, but isn’t that the opposite of what Republicans were trying? So we switch from a possible fascist government to a socialist government! It’s just as bad! The Democrats feel they should have more control over everything. We need a balance of power and ideas in government to ensure a balance stays intact.
LikeLike
We don’t need a balance with fascists and Know-Nothings.
Biden is not a socialist. He is a centrist Democrat.
Trump wanted to destroy everything, including the Western Alliance.
He can’t leave fast enough.
LikeLike
“the means of production, distribution, and exchange should be owned or regulated by the community as a whole”
I seriously doubt corporate ownership is going anywhere.
Corporatism rules. I’m not sure that is a good thing, but Bernie and Cortez don’t stand a chance to take over that. Similarly, corporatism just threw the Trump cult out for threatening the smooth operation of business. I could be wrong, but we’ll see what is brand or advice is worth in six months.
LikeLike
I don’t know about you, but I’m not feeling very gaga about Biden + slim house majority + 50-50 senate– just relieved. Whatever air was in it was let out of balloon by contemplating 74million Trump voters, not to mention Jan 6.
What does ‘Social Democrats are pushing to rid the government of conservatives’ even mean? We’ve got at best a handful of Dems who might be called that if whisked to a Euro country where other factors allow social democracy.
And how are they trying to rid the govt of conservatives? Some actual conservatives would be a breath of fresh air compared to the poseurs whose only game is pumping big $ to 1% and puny tax-cuts to the 99%. You’d have to ‘get rid of’ most Reps. But if you’re referring to blatant insurrection-inciters, they deserve censure at a minimum.
As to how close we are to socialism, read a book.
LikeLike
“As to how close we are to socialism, read a book.”
Or spend a year in Western Europe—which is far from socialist, but one can recognize there the system promoted by so called progressives here.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Deeply disturbing.
LikeLike
Bravo! This piece nails it.
I have a couple things to add:
First, as every thinking person knows now, Trump suffers from a pathology: Malignant Narcissistic Personality Disorder. He never had much in the way of principles that guided his behavior–loyalty, honesty, duty, generosity, belief in the reciprocity of decency in interactions with others, for example. The closest he came to having principles–overarching, guiding beliefs, were related to the neediness inherit in his disorder. His racism has been one such long-held principle. This is the guy who decades ago was sued by the New York Attorney General for marking applications for the apartments he and his father rented out with a “C” for Colored, so that these people could be excluded. So, the extreme racist we all know, the Trump as Racist in Chief President, is the same guy he’s always been. The inferiority of people not like him is something he deeply believes in. Another belief that he has held for a long, long time is what Trump calls his “race horse theory” of people. Some, like him, have “great genes,” and others don’t. He has been making breathtakingly sexist comments about women as thoroughbreds for as long as he has been in the public eye. A couple things to note here: the racism and the eugenics take on genetics are both fundamental fascist principles. And they are both related to Trump’s narcissism–his extreme need for continual affirmation and praise. Beneath that, of course, is an extreme inferiority complex, probably related to having cold and distant parents. So, these fascist principles grew out of his disorder, and it was these–his Obama birtherism and his campaign against the Central Park 5–that first drew him to the attention of Bannon, Sessions, and Sessions’s aide, Stephen Miller, who saw in him someone to carry their white supremacist, anti-immigrant agenda forward and convinced him to run for President. Then, of course, Stephen “Goebbels” Miller became Trump’s Propaganda Minister and Rasputin in the now Whiter House, helping to craft his extreme anti-immigrant, anti-Muslim policies. Note that on the day before the Presidential election that Hitler lost, he gave a long, long speech. What were it’s themes? Immigrants are taking your jobs. We need to get tough on these immigrants. We need to make Germany great again.
It is tempting, because Trump is not a man of principle and is too stupid and ignorant to formulate anything like an ideology, to say that he is not a REAL fascist, that he happened to fall into this because of his disorder, because of the opportunity presented him by Bannon, Sessions, and Miller; because of their coaching of him. But a couple of comments about that: First, you are what you pretend to be, as Kurt Vonnegut wrote in his insightful novel about fascism, Mother Night. Second, CENTRAL to fascist ideology is the Cult of Personality. The state IS the glorious leader, Stalin, Mussolini, Kim-Jong-un. Each of these men ALSO had Trump’s profound need for constant reinforcement of his or her value, in the form of constant adulation, constant praise, absolute subservience. So, rule based on a cult of personality IS fascism. NOTHING ELSE MATTERS. EVERYONE AND EVERYTHING ELSE IS EXPENDABLE.
A few similarities between Trump’s actions and those of recognized fascists:
the cult of personality
the appeal to a mythical golden age to which the nation must return
blaming the fallen state of the nation upon an enemy within (this is “the big lie” of Hitler’s variety of fascism, and it’s Trump’s as well; in Orwell’s 1984, that enemy is Goldstein, subject of the two-minute hates)
the use a paramilitary thugs
the appeal to the most ignorant and uneducated
the claim to absolute authority
the massive rallies, occasions for adulation of the leader
the attack upon intellectuals
the attack on the media
the attack on truth
thought control via politicization of everything (what Trump did to the CDC he did to every other agency and department; think of his proposed nationalist curriculum
ultranationalism
the staging of military spectacles
the emphasis on monuments and monumental architecture
fabrication of huge movements of enemies within that have to be crushed (Democrats = Socialists; BLM protesters = Antifa; poor asylum seekers fleeing violence and hunger = rapists and murderers)
an appeal to a mythologized Volk–to the “real” people (Trump’s patriotic Americans)
the big lie (Trump has had several–the Russian and Ukraine investigations were hoaxes; coronavirus is a hoax; the news is all fake; Biden’s election win is fake)
summary firings of anyone who disagrees at all with the glorious leader
severing the dividing line between politics and the leader’s personal businesses (all Trump’s violations of the emolument clauses of the Constitution)
replacement of experts at the head of all government agencies or departments or ministries or whatever with political yes-men, sycophants, toadies (incomplete on Trump’s part through sheer incompetence)
If it quacks like a duck. . . .
LikeLike
And we need legislation that criminalizes hate speech that calls for or threatens VIOLENCE against people based on their race, religion, ethnicity, gender, occupation, gender identity, or sexual orientation.
LikeLike
Look for, after Trump’s failed Beer Hall Putsch, his Mein Kampf. Of course the book won’t be written by Trump. Trump is barely literate. It will be written by some hired goon like Stephen “Goebbels” Miller. And of course it won’t be Trump who returns in triumph after the first failure. It will be one of the many would-be Trumplings now vying to assume the mantle of Glorious Leader Who Shines More Orange than Does the Sun.
Only decisive action will stop this.
That’s the biggie: what’s to keep from happening what I am calling the Trumpling Scenario–a younger, more charismatic, more competent, actually interested, less lazy, less stupid, less ignorant, more articulate fascist a) picks up Trump’s base base, b) expands it, and c) immediately, on taking power, puts abjectly servile toadies at the head of every government agency or department that is an actual or potential vehicle for the exercise of violence? (As you may remember from Political Science 101, a government is partly defined by being an entity with a monopoly on certain varieties of violence.)
If we wimp out on our reactions to the Cuckoo Coup of 2021, then there will be nothing to stop this from happening. We might as well write out an invitation to some Cruz, some Hawley, some Governor DeSatan, to become our führer.
This is why Hawley and Cruz must be expelled from the Senate. This is why the insurrectionists must be charged with first-degree murder under the Felony Murder Principle, which says that if you are committing a felony, and someone dies in the course of that, you can arrested, tried, and convicted for first-degree murder.
If we don’t nip this in the bud now, woe be unto us. That would be breathtakingly stupid.
LikeLike
“Trump’s focus on alleged “irregularities” and “contested states” comes down to cities where Black people live and vote.
When I think about Atlanta, this certainly is true, but is the above statement really true about all the contested districts where law suits were filed?
LikeLike
His meritless lawsuits targeted urban districts. Almost all have large black populations, but not in Nevada and Arizona.
LikeLike
Cuz it wasn’t really about racism, it was about overturning electoral votes. But there was plenty of veiled verbiage inciting rural whites against urban blacks, to keep cultists onboard.
LikeLike
Is reverence for democracy taught in elementary schools anymore? Or is it all math and ELA?
LikeLike
I’m not sure it’s even taught in middle or high schools. And forget about “reverence.” What happened to learning about the structure of government and how government works?
LikeLike
Almost every state has a mandatory US government course in High School. Many have one in Middle School as well. And those requirements have been in place for many decades.
And, the materials for these course–the textbooks and online materials, are actually pretty good.
So, what’s the real problem? Here’s what I think it is: this stuff doesn’t stick because the kids taking the classes are developmentally ready for them. They don’t know enough of the world, of adult life, to see the relevance of any of this stuff to them, to what matters to them, which in High School is what other kids think of them and having whatever they think fun is. The government stuff seems to them remote. They learn it for the test. It goes in one ear and out the other.
It’s easy to blame the schools or blame the curriculum or blame the teachers. But very often, the real problem is something else. And it’s difficult to address. Here’s one idea that has occurred to me. I don’t know yet if it makes sense: POST High School mandatory service for our nation’s young people and civics instruction that caps that period of service or is incorporated into it.
LikeLike
I took government courses in middle school and high school. And I think those courses, combined with geography courses that seem to have vanished today, gave me a much better understanding of how federal, state, and local government works than most kids of the same age today seem to have. I don’t know why, but that’s my sense. BUT, to your point, I don’t think this stuff started to really click in my mind until much later, probably when I went to law school, where you are really forced to confront this stuff in detail. And it’s one of the few, maybe only, areas in which I continue to get smarter.
LikeLiked by 1 person
YES! Btw, the best government text I ever read, and in my work as a textbook editor, I read a lot of them, was one that approached the entire subject from a legal perspective. Really eye-opening stuff.
LikeLike
Hopefully this is not a material for K-8.
LikeLiked by 1 person
No, Mate. That was a text for a college-level Introduction to American Government class.
LikeLike
17 states require students to pass a citizenship exam in order to graduate. This could become a national requirement.
10 states have no separate civics coursework requirement, though civics/government is integrated into their social studies requirements.
Most states (31) have a semester-long course in high school.
9 states and DC have a year-long high-school course.
This is 2018 info from a study by the Center for American Progress.
LikeLike
Felix Frankfurter said teachers were “the priests” of our democracy. No longer.
LikeLike
I hope teachers don’t turn out to be priests of anything. Teaching is not preaching, at least it shouldn’t be, imo.
LikeLike
Bob, all religions know that early training is key for assuring future adherents. Elementary curriculum seems critical to me.
LikeLike
cx: are not developmentally ready for them
Another possibility is a government campaign of ongoing Civics education for adults, in the form of television spots and Internet channels, featuring appealing celebrities explaining the basics. Look at what the government did during World War II to educated ADULTS about fascism, wartime production, and so on.
American adults are woefully ignorant of really basic stuff about government, despite the fact that almost all of them who went to a public school had a government course. They weren’t ready for it when they got the instruction. That’s the problem we have to solve.
LikeLike
Bob, “this stuff doesn’t stick because the kids taking the classes are not developmentally ready for them.”
There is one avenue to this that’s relevant to age 11-18: the court system. Novels such as e.g. “To Kill A Mockingbird” appeal to a sense for equitable justice, what’s fair & not, that all kids relate to.
Believe me I was a barely-mediocre Soc Stud student, and ‘how a bill gets passed’ was boring as blancmange. But in junior high I covered ‘Youth Court’ for the school newspaper: it was some junior, honor/amateur court staffed by students, dealing with minor youthful infractions that didn’t need to go on anybody’s record. Sanctioned by town, guided by real lawyers & teachers. It still took years for me to develop interest in laws and history, but it grew out of an interest in fair treatment under the law.
LikeLike
In K-8?
LikeLike
Máté, I can’t tell if you are suggesting yes or no to this type of material in K-8, only that you are against “preaching/ reverence” which I assume means you see the danger in indoctrinating little ones with some kind of smarmy nationalistic fervor. I agree with that concern, although I think more sophisticated discussions of ours & others’ govtl systems should be introduced before high school– 7th grade seems a good time to me.
IMHO, K-6 social studies should focus on geography and history, starting with local & moving to regional/ state. My home state & the one I raised kids in are loaded with Native American & Revolutionary War history; that should be their main focus – always including structure of govt (as FLERP recommends). In many parts of the country you would have more emphasis on exploration/ Oregon Trail/ settling the West. In the South they will have to look slavery & Civil War in the eye from an early age, as their environment is imbued with it.
LikeLike
Diane, you’re quoted on p. 92 of E.D. Hirsch’s latest book, “How to Educate a Citizen”: “This curriculum of ‘me, my family, my school, my community’ now dominates the early grades in American public education. It contains no mythology, legends, biographies, hero tales or great events in the life of this nation or any other.” Alas!
LikeLike
Reverence is such a poor choice of word. Despots are revered by their adherents. Sports heroes are revered by their fans. Citizens in democratic republics should never revere their government. They should have a healthy skepticism that makes them understand the nature of civic virtue by constantly questioning their its legitimacy and representatives so that their allegiance is earned and never taken for granted. Reverence has no place a democratic republic.
LikeLike
Brain washing begins with reverence.
LikeLike
…questioning their ideas about its legitimacy…
LikeLike
“Let reverence for the laws be breathed by every American mother to the lisping babe that prattles on her lap –let it be taught in schools, in seminaries, and in colleges; let it be written in Primers, spelling books, and in Almanacs; –let it be preached from the pulpit, proclaimed in legislative halls, and enforced in courts of justice. And, in short, let it become the political religion of the nation; and let the old and the young, the rich and the poor, the grave and the gay, of all sexes and tongues, and colors, and conditions, sacrifice unceasingly upon its altars.” –Abraham Lincoln, Lyceum Address (1838)
LikeLike
And on another note, Alexander Navalny, who was poisoned by Putin and saved in Berlin, returned to Russia today and was arrested at the Moscow airport on arrival. Fascism lives and the Idiot wonders why he couldn’t get away with such brazen acts.
LikeLike
Well folks I didn’t see a whole lot on the article here (which I thought was brilliant). Here’s my 2cts:
I really like the way he worded this– substitute “students” for “citizens, and it spells out what teaching “critical thinking” entails: “…educate citizens to resist the powerful pull of believing what they already believe, or what others around them believe, or what would make sense of their own previous choices.”
LikeLike
And here’s 2 more cts:
Food for thought: “Intriguingly, Arendt thought big lies work only in lonely minds; their coherence substitutes for experience and companionship.” [“In November 2020, reaching millions of lonely minds through social media…]”
The context suggests Trump’s big lie could be spread successfully [perhaps only?] during the pandemic, with swaths of socially-distanced adults glued to radio/ TV/ social media. But “lonely minds” applies as well to those who see themselves as outliers, who must seek social support outside the norm. Here we encounter that peculiarly Republican/ conservative conviction that liberal elites are some norm eclipsing them. Clung to despite 40 years of big right-wing media, right through years when in control of presidency and both houses of congress [GWBush 4 of 8 years, Trump 2 of 4 years] (also Reagan had Rep Senate 6 of 8 yrs).
LikeLike
And– just to gild the above-posted lily [roll eyes], two more:
For those who scoff at reducing our politics to issues of racism, this is an eye-opener: “Trump’s focus on alleged “irregularities” and “contested states” comes down to cities where Black people live and vote. At bottom, the fantasy of fraud is that of a crime committed by Black people against white people.”
As Snyder says [and supports with detail], it “inverts the position of the strong and the weak.” This opens the conversation beyond racism. It sheds light on the peculiarity of Trump-followers (and many Republicans) feeling like disenfranchised underdogs. They see Trump as hounded and maligned by ‘the elites’ [Dems] since the day he took office. For them, anything he accomplished has been against tremendous odds, and it excuses every failure. The most virulent among them being white males, and rural people in general. “We’re not going to take it anymore” is the cry of the oppressed, not the advantaged. So is “we wuz robbed.” Their cynical leaders encourage a search for scapegoats to deflect attention from their betrayal of working and middle classes.
LikeLike
Reblogged this on David R. Taylor-Thoughts on Education.
LikeLike