By Kevin D. Williamson
Tuesday, January 05, 2021
There is some truth to the cliché holding that liars
think everybody lies, that cheaters think everybody cheats, that thieves think
everybody else steals, etc. Understood as an emotional self-defense strategy,
that has a great deal of explanatory power: We may talk about having the “fear
of God” in us, but what people actually fear is social rejection, which is why
people with a paralyzing fear of public speaking are considered entirely normal
while people with an insistent terror of eternal damnation are judged fanatics
and crackpots. We tell our children that there is nowhere to hide in “But everybody else is doing it!” when
that isn’t quite true. A vice is not a problem — an unusual vice is a problem. An unusual
virtue, or an unusual practice of personal
discipline, can be an even bigger problem — ask someone who doesn’t drink how
often some interested party inquires, politely or not: “What’s wrong with you? Are you an alcoholic in
recovery? A Mormon? A moral scold? On a diet?” Subtext: “Are you implying that
there’s something wrong with me?”
Rugged individualists — that’s us.
Beyond the social consideration, the phenomenon that old
fraud Sigmund Freud called “projection,” a term and concept popularized by his
followers, offers a degree of moral exculpation as well. Business swindlers and
political hucksters are particularly prone to it, usually affecting a jaded,
man-of-the-world attitude: “I didn’t make
the rules!” or “That’s just how
business is done!” or “Politics
ain’t beanbag!” You know the type: They like to repeat a phony Sun Tzu
quote they read on Facebook and pretend to be a character from Glengarry Glen Ross, never having
actually read Sun Tzu or seen a David Mamet play. (They don’t know Mamet — they
know Alec Baldwin’s performance in a movie based on one of Mamet’s plays.) Or
maybe they’ll quote the lawyer from whom the president draws so much
inspiration, Roy Cohn: “I don’t care what the law is — tell me who the judge
is.”
This is the usual empty-headed law-of-the-jungle stuff:
familiar, tedious — and abandoned with a whimper the second a bigger dog comes
along.
And so it is no great surprise to find President Donald
Trump and cronies complaining about election fraud even as President Donald
Trump and his cronies were recorded in a telephone call attempting to suborn
election fraud, threatening the Georgia secretary of state — a Republican, note
— with criminal prosecution unless he should “find,” discovering by some black
art, enough votes to swing the state’s election Trump’s way.
I have on many occasions criticized the abuse of the word
coup in our politics, but that is
what this is: an attempted coup d’état
under color of law. It would be entirely appropriate today to impeach Trump a
second time and remove him from office before his term ends.
No one who has participated in this poisonous buffoonery
should ever hold office again. There was a time when there was a plausible if
sometimes self-serving rationale for working for the Trump administration —
that the president is a clueless poseur surrounded by crackpots and frauds, and
that he desperately needs good counsel from responsible adults. But the Trump
administration is not currently under the guiding influence of any such
responsible adults — and there simply is no defending what it is up to. This
cannot be excused or explained away.
Trump’s media cheerleaders, who like to call themselves constitutionalists and patriots, are no such thing. They are,
for the most part, profiteers who will justify anything if it helps them to
hold on to one point of audience share as they peddle their various blends of
snake oil. “Woe unto them that call evil good and justify the wicked for gain.”
There was never any reason to trust them in the first
place, but the events that have transpired since Election Day provide
superabundant reason to understand them as an impediment to the conservative
movement they purport to champion and a danger to the country they purport to
love. If history remembers them at all, it will be as grovelers and hustlers, holding
out for one last payday, a ride on Air Force One, or, in some cases, a
presidential pardon.
I suppose the conservative movement might have to build a
future without too much input from Lindsey Graham and Sean Hannity. The
republic will survive that loss, I am confident.
It is worth keeping in mind that the mess of pottage they
have received as their end of the bargain is pretty thin gruel. They mocked
Mitt Romney and John McCain as “gentlemen losers,” but very little of that
“winning” they talked about came to pass. The Trump administration is a
thoroughgoing failure on the president’s own terms: The administration has
managed to reorder worldwide trade relations — by witlessly facilitating the
creation of a new trade pact between China and the European Union, an alliance of
the world’s second- and third-largest economies at the expense of the one that
remains, for now, the largest. China is in a stronger geopolitical position
today than it was in 2016, and the United States is diminished. Trump focused
on the trade deficit, which is the wrong policy, but he can’t even get that
right: Our trade deficits are larger than ever. On immigration, there is no
big, beautiful wall paid for by Mexico, nor has there been any broad reform of
U.S. immigration law. The president spent the critical early days of the
coronavirus epidemic trying to tweet the virus into submission because he
feared a declining stock market would hurt his reelection chances. He has
uttered more lies himself than can be counted, and he sent his minions out to tell
countless more. He has dishonored, disfigured, and debased everything he has
touched. It has been a shameful spectacle.
So, no, not a Mitt Romney–style “gentleman loser.” Just a
regular loser, one who is too dim and too lame to understand that the “gentleman”
part isn’t the problem and never has been. The Republicans who were all too
willing to swap their honor for a little bit of political power have been, like
most people who have done business with Donald Trump over the years, ripped
off. And there is no moral-bankruptcy court in which to try to recover a
portion of their losses.
There are some Republicans who lament that the Trump
movement has transformed the Republican Party into a profit-oriented conspiracy
cult. Many Democrats insist that this is not the case and prefer to believe
that the Trump movement simply revealed
what the Republican Party already was and long had been. Whatever is at work
here, it isn’t ideology: Many of the worst Trump sycophants haven’t been
fire-eating conservatives but East Coast moderates such as Rudy Giuliani and
Chris Christie; unlike, say, Ted Cruz, Trump himself is not a product of
conservative institutions, and such conservative ideas as he has were acquired
the day before yesterday, when he jettisoned his prior enthusiasms (“I am very
pro-choice,” etc.) in his bid for the presidency. For my own part, I believe
that the Republican Party has been both mutilated and laid bare at the same
time. It will be a very long time before it can with a straight face once again
call itself the Party of Lincoln, though it may aspire to be that once again.
Party of Lincoln? The Republican Party would have to undergo the political
equivalent of one of those reality-television makeovers if it wanted to stand
so tall as to be the Party of Gerald Ford.
The modern Republican Party, whatever it was, is gone,
even if much of the staff and the incorporation papers remain.
The next question: What will be built on its ruins?
No comments:
Post a Comment