By Nick
Catoggio
Monday,
August 28, 2023
When Fulton County inmate P01135809’s mugshot was first released
last Thursday, a number of adjectives likely jumped into your mind. Dour.
Husky. Orange. Unless, of course, you host a show on Fox News. Then it made you
think of one word, and one word only:
That
wasn’t the only time Fox News’ new 8 p.m. guy reflected publicly on how, ahem,
“hard” Donald Trump looks in his new mugshot. He did it again after Joe Biden
mocked Trump by calling him a “handsome guy, wonderful guy” in response to a
question about the photo. “That’s the first time Biden’s told the truth,” Jesse Watters told his audience. “It’s a
handsome mugshot. My wife says he looks fierce. He looks hard.”
It’s
interesting that Watters reacted to the photo with admiration more than anger.
If ever there were a moment for the eternally aggrieved MAGA bloc to blow its
top, one would think the indignity of its hero being forced to pose for a
police mugshot would have been it.
Not so.
There wasn’t much anger about it on social media this weekend. Again, rather
the opposite.
Some
even spun the photo as a political asset, offering certainly-not-racist
speculation that voters in the “urban black community” will find an accused
criminal to be relatable, if not admirable.
The
irony, of course, is that it’s rural white communities (“real America!”) who’ll
find the mugshot appealing more so than urban black ones. Which is bad—but
also really odd given that those rural white communities are
part of a political movement that purports to represent law and order, no?
Glorifying
a mugshot is one of the most arresting countercultural signals a person can
send. To celebrate the image of an accused criminal is to challenge the
legitimacy of the system that’s accused him. Examples where that’s warranted
come to mind easily; imagine a T-shirt with a mugshot of Martin Luther King
Jr., for instance. A T-shirt with a mugshot of Donald Trump is … less
warranted, but no less countercultural for being so. The Fox News talking heads
and social media fanboys who have embraced his status as a criminal defendant
are indicting the culture that aims to hold him accountable as unjust.
… while
also holding themselves out as defenders of that culture against the lawless
leftist hordes.
Sometime
soon we’ll see a news photo from a Trump rally of an attendee wearing a mugshot
T-shirt while carrying a “thin blue line” flag, oblivious to the contradiction.
What should we make of that?
Can a
political movement be reactionary and countercultural?
***
I have a
bad habit of using the term “populism” as a catch-all to describe the
post-Trump right when its excesses are often more precisely captured by other
terms. Last week, Tom Nichols wrote this of Vivekmentum at the first Republican
primary debate: “The GOP has mutated from a political party into an angry,
unfocused, sometimes violent countercultural movement, whose members signal
tribal solidarity by hating whatever they think most of their fellow citizens
support. Ukraine? To hell with them! Government agencies? Disband them! Donald
Trump? Pardon him!”
The word
“countercultural” in that passage landed awkwardly for me, which may be a
function of my age. To a child of the late 20th century, “countercultural” will
forever mean hippies and their heirs among the utopian left. Even absent the
historical pedigree, “countercultural” fits uncomfortably with a party like the
GOP that skews older and whiter and disdains liberals for their comparative
irreligion and lack of patriotism. It’s darned strange to think of a movement
that one might charitably call “traditionalist” and less charitably
“reactionary” as countercultural.
Strange,
yet true.
Of
course it’s true, a
social conservative might say, marveling at my confusion. America’s educated
governing class supports abortion, gay rights, trans rights, and lax
immigration policies. If you’re pro-life, favor traditional marriage, think
there are two genders, and prefer tighter borders, you’re countercultural by
definition.
Right,
fine. But Nichols is getting at something deeper than policy preferences when
he uses the term “countercultural.”
He’s
talking about a spirit of contrarianism toward the establishment so entrenched
and consuming that it ends up losing its moral bearings. Traditionally,
countercultural movements come together to challenge particular ideas of the
governing class and end up challenging basic moral principles indiscriminately
just because the governing class holds them. Not everyone who opposed the war
in Vietnam was “countercultural,” for instance, but if you opposed the war and
then decamped to a commune, believing “free love” was the future—yeah, that’s
pretttttty countercultural.
A
movement isn’t “countercultural” in the way we’ve typically understood that
word until it begins to reject moral norms that the wider culture has
traditionally taken for granted. That’s confounding in the earlier example I
gave insofar as it’s the educated governing class, with its progressivism on
gay rights and abortion, that’s more quintessentially countercultural than the
social conservatives who oppose them. But it’s also why social conservatives
view those victories as such an affront, I think. It’s not just a matter of
finding the policies immoral or ill-advised, it’s a matter of countercultural
forces—hippies, basically!—having seized the reins of the culture. It feels
wrong.
A
movement circa 2016 that rejected the Republican establishment’s supposed
tolerance for “endless wars,” indifference to the collapse of America’s
manufacturing base, and appetite for cheap labor from across the border wasn’t
“countercultural” in the sense that we tend to think of that word. But a
movement that now celebrates its leaders as “gangsta” after they’ve
been arrested for crimes relating to a coup attempt?
Yeah,
that’s pretttttty countercultural.
This
right here? Also pretty countercultural.
It’s not
“countercultural” to worry that the U.S. is sending too much aid to Ukraine.
It’s incorrect, but one can believe in good faith that we’re hurting military
readiness and risking a conflict between Russia and NATO by shipping huge
stores of weapons to Kyiv.
But
treating the aggressor in a war of conquest as a victim of religious
persecution while they go about committing new and ever more creative war
crimes? Countercultural. In fact, there are few turns in American politics as
classically countercultural as apologetics for Russia. I grew up listening to
left-wing tankies defend a communist regime in Moscow as fighting the good
fight for global equality. Now I get to listen to right-wing tankies like
Tucker defend a fascist regime in Moscow as fighting the good fight for
Christianity—falsely, of course, in case the war crimes didn’t
already clue you into Russia’s sincerity.
One
might think that a reactionary movement preaching traditional norms to the
godless left would be less susceptible to countercultural moral confusion than
progressives are. If your shtick is God, country, and law and order, that should make
you somewhat more resistant to applauding a mugshot of your party’s leader as
“hard” or crying crocodile tears about the enemies of Christendom uniting
against mother Russia. To all appearances, it hasn’t.
If
anything, right-wing countercultural moral confusion looks more sinister at
this moment than its left-wing ancestors did because it’s reinforced by
religion. I recommend this short but essential social media
thread by an
exasperated pastor who can’t get through to his congregation that they’re
practicing idolatry by refusing to hold Trump accountable for anything. They
think they’re being good Christians by doing so, he says. Quote: “Support for
this bully is fully equated with doing the will of God.”
Forget
admiring his mugshot. If you’re giving up on Christianity because Jesus sounds more like a lib than
like Trump, that’s
about as countercultural as it’s possible to be. How did we land here?
***
I’ve
been kicking around theories about that for almost a year.
Last
September, in my second week on the job, I wrote about the importance of spite as an
influence in countercultural populism. That column was inspired by another Tucker
Carlson soundbite, in this case his unlikely eulogy for the late leader of the
Hells Angels. Outlaw bikers aren’t typically wistfully remembered by (formerly)
bowtied right-wing pundits, but Carlson had his reasons, I thought.
Specifically,
nudging his fans to identify with the Angels was his way of encouraging them to
question their assumptions about right and wrong. If you’re hoping to make the
American right safe for illiberalism, some basic beliefs about who the good
guys and bad guys are will need to be torn up by the roots. It’s because counterculturalism
leads to moral confusion that Tucker is keen to propagate it, I think.
And so I
predicted in the same column that, while Ron DeSantis was looking good in the
polls at the time, that could change if Trump ended up being indicted. A
spiteful party, blinded morally by its countercultural impulses, wouldn’t be
able to resist nominating him if the criminal justice establishment tried to
stop them: “Trump facing criminal charges really might lock up the nomination
for him (before he’s locked up himself).”
How does
that prediction look today?
In
April, a few days after Trump’s first indictment in Manhattan, I argued that
the blow to his electability would hurt him in the primary—if Republicans
were still a normal political party. But they aren’t.
I think Trump’s movement is revolutionary in nature and will accept
electoral defeats as the price of consolidating its power over the Republican
Party. His supporters don’t care about building majorities because they no
longer believe they can durably build them. Demographics and irreligion have
conspired against them to deliver Democrats a more or less permanent advantage.
And so Republicans have turned to nationalism, a system in which legitimacy
conveniently doesn’t derive from democracy. Under nationalism, the tribe that
rightfully rules isn’t the one that gets the most votes, it’s the tribe that
embodies the nation’s demographic and cultural heritage.
In
hindsight, “countercultural” might have been a better word than
“revolutionary.” Revolutions are political and aim to seize power whereas
countercultural movements are comfortable remaining in the minority. Win or
lose, they retain their identity as adversaries of the establishment. (Yes,
even when they take power and become the establishment themselves. Donald Trump
is a mega-rich celebrity former president and never once have his fans accused
him of being “establishment.”) In fact, insofar as losing feeds the sense of
grievance that led them to become a countercultural movement in the first
place, it’s arguably preferable.
There’s
another reason the right has taken a shine to countercultural politics: It’s
freeing. It can be downright thrilling. And it’s easy as hell relative to
building a consensus policy platform or, God forbid, governing.
It’s why
younger people have traditionally been sucked into countercultures more easily
than older ones. It’s not just that they’re less invested in the status quo
because they’re younger (although it’s partly that). It’s that they don’t have
much to contribute to solving complicated problems that they don’t yet
understand, so they revert to simplistic explanations of those problems that
rely heavily on accusations of moral corruption. All that’s needed to be part
of the movement is to muster righteous indignation at that corruption; once
you’ve got that down, the solutions are a detail.
That’s
what made Vivek “This isn’t that complicated,
guys” Ramaswamy the
countercultural candidate at last week’s debate. It’s also what makes Trump a
superb countercultural leader. He was long on moral outrage at the
establishment’s many failures in 2016, but never asked his fans to countenance
solutions any more complicated than “build the wall.” Meanwhile, he’s spent his
whole life flouting traditional norms—stay true to your wife, pay your debts,
tell the truth—yet has succeeded professionally about as much as a human being
could possibly succeed. If the defining trait of counterculturalism is moral
confusion, who better to lead a countercultural movement than a guy who’s done
everything the “wrong” way according to conventional morality and been rewarded
for it at every turn?
Imagine
how liberating it would be to live like that, doing anything you want and
paying no price (until you’re 77 years old). His fans imagine it all the time,
I suspect. No wonder they think he looks “hard” in his mugshot instead of
pathetic.
One more
nice thing about being ensconced in a counterculture is that it protects you
from having your beliefs challenged.
For instance, you and I both know that between the traditional advantage of incumbency, Trump’s abiding unpopularity, and the sheer political weight of four indictments, Joe Biden is the favorite to win next year despite his diminished state. Not a strong favorite, but certainly no worse than a coin flip. You and I know that. Members of the counterculture do not.
Looking
at that, is it any wonder that most (not all, most) political countercultures
fail to replace the dominant culture? They’re perpetually working off of bad
information because the goal isn’t to prevail so much as it is to reinforce the
correctness of their beliefs. A movement that was keen to win would look
soberly at Biden’s chances and choose a nominee based on a realistic assessment
of victory with Trump. A movement that simply wants to exult in its conviction
that The People are with them against the establishment—and will draw that
conclusion no matter what the election results actually look like—doesn’t need
to bother with such things.
The
danger of MAGA 3.0 in 2024 relative to MAGA 1.0 in 2016 is that its moral
confusion has plainly grown over time. Despite the movement having become more
dominant in Republican politics, it’s also become more countercultural in its
thinking. I don’t know what it will look like if America hands power to a
political bloc that’s trending toward greater radicalism rather than away. Let’s
maybe not find out.
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