The Useful Idiocy of Donald Trump
By Chris Hedges
The problem with Donald Trump is not that he is imbecilic
and inept—it is that he has surrendered total power to the oligarchic and
military elites. They get what they want. They do what they want. Although the
president is a one-man wrecking crew aimed at democratic norms and
institutions, although he has turned the United States into a laughingstock
around the globe, our national crisis is embodied not in Trump but the
corporate state’s now unfettered pillage.
Trump, who has no inclination or ability to govern, has
handed the machinery of government over to the bankers, corporate executives,
right-wing think tanks, intelligence chiefs and generals. They are eradicating
the few regulations and laws that inhibited a naked kleptocracy. They are
dynamiting the institutions, including the State Department, that served
interests other than corporate profit and are stacking the courts with
right-wing, corporate-controlled ideologues. Trump provides the daily
entertainment; the elites handle the business of looting, exploiting and
destroying.
Once democratic institutions are hollowed out, a process
begun before the election of Trump, despotism is inevitable. The press is
shackled. Corruption and theft take place on a massive scale. The rights and
needs of citizens are irrelevant. Dissent is criminalized. Militarized police
monitor, seize and detain Americans without probable cause. The rituals of
democracy become farce. This is the road we are traveling. It is a road that
leads to internal collapse and tyranny, and we are very far down it.
The elites’ moral and intellectual vacuum produced Trump.
They too are con artists. They are slicker than he at selling the lies and more
adept at disguising their greed through absurd ideologies such as neoliberalism
and globalization, but they belong to the same criminal class and share many of
the pathologies that characterize Trump. The grotesque visage of Trump is the
true face of politicians such as George W. Bush, Bill and Hillary Clinton and
Barack Obama. The Clintons and Obama, unlike Bush and Trump, are self-aware and
therefore cynical, but all lack a moral compass. As Michael Wolff writes in
“Fire and Fury: Inside the Trump White House,” the president has “no scruples.”
He lives “outside the rules” and is “contemptuous of them.” And this makes him
identical to those he has replaced, not different. “A close Trump friend who
was also a good Bill Clinton friend found them eerily similar—except that
Clinton had a respectable front and Trump did not,” Wolff writes.
Trump, backed by the most retrograde elements of corporate
capitalism, including Robert and Rebekah Mercer, Sheldon Adelson and Carl
Icahn, is the fool who prances at the front of our death march. As natural
resources become scarce and the wealth of the empire evaporates, a shackled
population will be forced to work harder for less. State revenues will be
squandered in grandiose projects and futile wars in an attempt to return the
empire to a mythical golden age. The decision to slash corporate tax rates for
the rich while increasing an already bloated military budget by $54 billion is
typical of decayed civilizations. Empires expand beyond their capacity to
sustain themselves and then go bankrupt. The Sumerian, Egyptian, Greek, Roman,
Mayan, Khmer, Ottoman and Austro-Hungarian empires all imploded in a similar
fashion. The lessons of history are clear. But the illiterate charlatans who
seize power in the dying days of empire know nothing of history. They are
driven by a primal and inchoate lust for wealth, one that is never satisfied no
matter how many billions they possess.
The elites in dying cultures turn everything into a
commodity. Human beings are commodities. The natural world is a commodity.
Government and democratic institutions are commodities. All are mined and
wrecked for profit. Nothing has an intrinsic value. Nothing is sacred. The
relentless and suicidal drive to accumulate greater and greater wealth by
destroying the systems that sustain life is idolatry. It ignores the biblical
injunction that idols always begin by demanding human sacrifice and end by
demanding self-sacrifice. The elites are not only building our funeral pyre,
they are building their own. The elites, lacking a vision beyond satiating
their own greed, revel in the intoxicating power to destroy. They confuse
destruction with creation. They are agents of what Sigmund Freud calls the
death instinct. They find in acts of national self-immolation a godlike power.
They denigrate empathy, intellectual curiosity, artistic expression and the
common good, virtues that sustain life. They celebrate a hyper-individualism
embodied in celebrity, wealth, hedonism, manipulation and the ability to
dominate others. They know nothing of the past. They do not think about the
future. Those around them are temporarily useful to their aims and must be
flattered and rewarded but in the end are ruthlessly cast aside. There is no
human connection. This emotional numbness lies at the core of Trump’s
personality.
“[Stephen] Bannon
described Trump as a simple machine,” Wolff writes. “The On switch was full of
flattery, the Off switch full of calumny. The flattery was dripping, slavish,
cast in ultimate superlatives, and entirely disconnected from reality:
so-and-so was the best, the most incredible, the ne plus ultra, the eternal.
The calumny was angry, bitter, resentful, ever a casting out and closing of the
iron door.”
The elites in a dying culture confuse what the economist
Karl Polanyi calls “real” and “fictitious” commodities. A commodity is a product
manufactured for sale. The ecosystem, labor and money, therefore, are not
commodities. Once these fictitious commodities are treated as real ones for
exploitation and manipulation, Polanyi writes, human society devours itself.
Workers become dehumanized cogs. Currency and trade are manipulated by
speculators, wreaking havoc with the economy and leading to financial collapse.
The natural world is turned into a toxic wasteland. The elites, as the society
breaks down, retreat into protected enclaves where they have access to security
and services denied to the wider population. They last longer than those
outside their gates, but the tsunami of destruction they orchestrate does not
spare them.
As long as Trump serves the interests of the elites he will
remain president. If, for some reason, he is unable to serve these interests he
will disappear. Wolff notes in the book that after his election there was “a
surprising and sudden business and Wall Street affinity for Trump.” He went on:
“An antiregulatory White House and the promise of tax reform outweighed the
prospect of disruptive tweeting and other forms of Trump chaos; besides, the
market had not stopped climbing since November 9, the day after the election.”
The Russia investigation—launched when Robert Mueller became
special counsel in May and which appears to be focused on money laundering,
fraud and shady business practices, things that have always characterized
Trump’s financial empire—is unlikely to unseat the president. He will not be
impeached for mental incompetence, over the emoluments clause or for
obstruction of justice, although he is guilty on all these counts. He is useful
to those who hold real power in the corporate state, however much they would
like to domesticate him.
Trump’s bizarre ramblings and behavior also serve a useful
purpose. They are a colorful diversion from the razing of democratic
institutions. As cable news networks feed us stories of his trysts with a porn
actress and outlandish tweets, the real work of the elites is being carried out
largely away from public view. The courts are stacked with Federalist Society
judges, the fossil fuel industry is plundering public lands and the coastlines
and ripping up regulations that protected us from its poisons, and the
Pentagon, given carte blanche, is engaged in an orgy of militarism with a
trillion-dollar-a-year budget and about 800 military bases in scores of
countries around the world.
Trump, as Wolff describes him in the book, is clueless about
what he has unleashed. He is uninterested in and bored by the complexities of
governance and policy. The faster Trump finds a member of the oligarchy or the
military to take a job off his hands the happier he becomes. This suits his
desires. It suits the desires of those who manage the corporate state. For the
president there is only one real concern, the tumultuous Trump White House
reality show and how it plays out on television. He is a creature solely
concerned with image, or more exactly his image. Nothing else matters.
“For each of his
enemies—and, actually, for each of his friends—the issue for him came down, in
many ways, to their personal press plan,” Wolff writes of the president. “Trump
assumed everybody wanted his or her fifteen minutes and that everybody had a
press strategy for when they got them. If you couldn’t get press directly for
yourself, you became a leaker. There was no happenstance news, in Trump’s view.
All news was manipulated and designed, planned and planted. All news was to
some extent fake—he understood that very well, because he himself had faked it
so many times in his career. This was why he had so naturally cottoned to the
‘fake news’ label. ‘I’ve made stuff up forever, and they always print it,’ he
bragged.”
Yes, the elites wish Trump would act more presidential. It
would help the brand. But all attempts by the elites to make Trump conform to
the outward norms embraced by most public officials have failed. Trump will not
be reformed by criticism from the establishment. Republican Sens. Jeff Flake of
Arizona and Bob Corker of Tennessee, who denounced Trump, saw their approval
ratings plummet and have decided not to run for re-election. Trump may have
public approval of only 39 percent overall, but among Republicans the figure is
78 percent. And I don’t think those numbers will decrease.
The inability of the political establishment and the press
to moderate or reform Trump’s egregious behavior is rooted in their loss of
credibility. The press, along with political and intellectual elites, spent
decades championing economic and political policies that solidified corporate
power and betrayed and impoverished American workers. The hypocrisy and
mendacity of the elites left them despised and distrusted by the victims of deindustrialization
and austerity programs. The attempt to restore civility to public discourse and
competency to political office is, therefore, fruitless. Liberal and
establishment institutions, including the leadership of the two main political
parties, academia and the press, squandered their moral authority. And the
dogged refusal by the elites to address the engine of discontent—social
inequality—ensures that they will remain ineffectual. They lay down the asphalt
for the buffoonery of Trump and the coming tyranny.
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