By Nick Catoggio
Monday, January 27, 2025
In the great global debate over whether Elon Musk is a
Nazi, I’m of the position that he’s a spaz, not a Sieg-Heil-er.
When his right
arm shot up at one of Donald Trump’s inauguration
events last week, it looked to me more like an awkward wave than Dr. Strangelove reverting to
form.
I mean, if Elon believed in a master race, he probably
would have been on the other side of that H-1B
brouhaha a few weeks ago, no?
Still, intellectual humility requires one to remain
vigilant for the possibility of error. So when, on the eve of the 80th
anniversary of Auschwitz’s liberation, Musk beamed into a meeting of Germany’s
right-wing, populist Alternative für Deutschland (AfD) party to urge
them to stop feeling guilty about the Holocaust, I wondered if building a “doomsday machine” might
not be in his future after all.
“There is too much focus on past
guilt, and we need to move beyond that. Children should not be guilty of the
sins of their parents, let alone their great-grandparents,” Musk said, seeming
to reference the country’s history when the Nazis rose to power.
“You should be optimistic and
excited about a future for Germany,” said Musk, as the crowd applauded.
“There is too much focus on past guilt, and we need to
move beyond that.” If I had to summarize the ethos of modern right-wing
movements in one line, I would struggle to do better than that.
Coincidentally, the U.S. military also spent the weekend
moving beyond guilt—temporarily. After Donald Trump ordered a halt to federal
diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) programs, the Air Force removed training
courses that included videos
about the Tuskegee Airmen, America’s first black combat pilots.
And why not? Recruits, especially white recruits, can’t
feel “optimistic and excited” about their country if they’re being reminded of
the segregationist sins of their great-grandparents, right? Moving beyond guilt
means moving beyond the past.
Except it doesn’t in this case, it turns out. Following
an uproar, the Air Force quickly publicly
stated that material on the Tuskegee trailblazers
would still be taught. New Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth (yes,
really) personally announced on social media that the policy had been “immediately
reversed.” Some guilt over historical injustices is fine, it appears, and
possibly even necessary.
Cultural politics in the U.S. is essentially a running
argument over how guilty Americans should feel about being Americans and how
far they should be willing to go to “move beyond” that guilt. The right, under
Trump, is winning that argument.
And I think he’s prepared to take full advantage.
Collective responsibility.
Elon Musk is correct, of course, that one generation
should not be deemed guilty of the sins of another. No one should want to see
German Chancellor Olaf Scholz hauled off to the Hague to answer for the crimes
of the S.S.
But no one does want to see that, as far as I know. It’s
a red herring. In his address to the German far right, Musk conflated personal
responsibility with cultural responsibility.
Personal responsibility says “you, personally, committed
this sin and should pay for it.” Cultural responsibility says “you are capable
of committing this sin, as you belong to a culture in which it was once widely
and flagrantly committed, and that fact should inform your understanding of
your culture and yourself.”
German children should not be made to feel responsible
for the Holocaust. But they should be keenly aware of the fact that their
culture, within living memory, barfed up a government of degenerates so
depraved that it literally industrialized murder.
We all know the
Santayana quote about remembering the past and being
condemned to repeat it. Musk would do well to think on it a while. If your
condition for feeling “optimistic and excited” about Germany’s future is
everyone “moving beyond” Auschwitz, you’re not ready to move beyond Auschwitz.
In the United States, cultural disputes are typically a
clash between leftist insistence on collective responsibility and right-wing
insistence on individual responsibility. The left doesn’t want America “moving
beyond guilt” for the injustices of the past. They want Americans moving deeper
into guilt, believing that some of those injustices still haven’t been
properly reckoned with.
That’s all “wokeness” is at the end of the day, right?
Progressives intend to fully awaken the country to the historical sins
committed by the straight white male ruling class against minority groups and,
to whatever extent possible, to correct for them. Tearing down statues of
Confederates (and, er, Abraham
Lincoln), casually practicing reverse racial discrimination toward whites,
canceling those who resist normalizing transgenderism—they’re all facets of an
attack on “privilege,” the comparative advantages accrued from historical
injustices by those fortunate enough to have been spared from them.
In hindsight, it was probably inevitable that something
like Trumpism would arise in opposition.
That’s because America’s many downscale (and
not-so-downscale) whites don’t feel so “privileged.” And arguments about
collective responsibility are destined to be more divisive and embittering in
the U.S.—where racial prejudice remains a chronically hot topic—than they are
in Germany, where Nazism is defunct (for now!). “Wokeness” here at home is a
matter of some tribes accusing others of having abused them, placing the latter
in a defensive crouch and encouraging a sense of nostalgia for when their supposed
villainy wasn’t a recurring political hobby horse. The accused were destined to
lose patience eventually, particularly given the sense that no amount of
atonement will satisfy progressives.
Those who forget the past are doomed to repeat it—but so
too, perhaps, are those who dwell on the past too insistently, inciting a
backlash that brings to power a revanchist regime.
Leaning into postliberalism.
One way the right has responded to leftist indictments of
collective responsibility is by emphasizing individual responsibility.
Think of how, in 2020, conservatives answered progressive
claims that “black lives matter” with “all lives matter.” The left was making
the point that black lives have traditionally mattered less in America, such
that their value needs to be affirmatively stressed. The right countered by
insisting that each individual life has value regardless of color—which is
true, of course, but in context amounted to rejecting the allegation of wider
cultural prejudice.
Over the last few years, though, as the right has leaned
harder into postliberalism, their response to progressive cultural indictments
has shifted away from arguments about individual responsibility and toward
moving beyond guilt altogether, in Elon Musk’s words. If wokeness was a matter
of leftists insisting too much on collective responsibility, postliberalism is
a matter of the right insisting on too little.
On Monday, for instance, Pete Hegseth appeared before the
press for the first time as defense secretary and casually mentioned
“Fort Bragg” in his comments. There is no Fort Bragg;
as of October 2022, Fort Bragg is Fort Liberty. The name was changed because it
was, frankly, a scandal that a U.S. military base was named after a Confederate
general, Braxton Bragg. Bad enough that our country would honor a traitor, much
worse that it would honor one who fought for a slave regime.
If you want to be charitable, you might assume that
Hegseth simply forgot the name change. But I doubt that: Restoring Confederate
names to U.S. bases is a
priority for Trump, and of course Hegseth’s pet issue is undoing vestiges
of “wokeness” inside the military. Turning Fort Liberty back into Fort Bragg is
a matter of the postliberal right moving beyond guilt, I suspect, rejecting
outright the idea that vestiges of respect for the Confederacy that survived
until recently should be scrubbed from the civic landscape out of shame. There
is too much focus on past guilt, and we need to move beyond that.
Trump’s order restoring the name “Mount
McKinley” to Denali in Alaska can be understood the
same way. “Denali” is the Native American name, one that “honors
and preserves” the local culture. Because persecuting indigenous peoples is
one of America’s core cultural sins, gestures of deference to natives by the
U.S. government amount to small acts of contrition. Naturally Trump did away
with that in week one, to the dismay of local Alaskan officials. There is too much focus on past
guilt, and we need to move beyond that.
There are some political constraints on the right
in moving beyond guilt, obviously. The Air Force training on the Tuskegee
Airmen was quickly restored, I expect, because it might have antagonized some
of Trump’s new African American voters. (GOP Sen. Katie Britt accused the
officers who removed it of “malicious
compliance” with Trump’s order.) Restoring Confederate names to bases can
be rationalized—“it’s tradition!”—but memory-holing tributes to pioneering
black aviators that were already in place would have seemed like a deliberate
snub, an ominous start to the White House’s anti-DEI policy. I doubt we’ll see
Black History Month eliminated with the stroke of the presidential pen.
But Fort Bragg and Mount McKinley are surely coming back.
Why?
Boldness and its costs.
I think Trump’s project writ large is to move beyond all
forms of guilt in politics, to convince Americans that shame
of any sort amounts to weakness.
There’s probably a sincere “national greatness” component
to that in his mind, along the lines of what Musk told his German audience. A
country can’t do great things if its people are demoralized, and endlessly
revisiting its darkest chapters is destined to demoralize them. Some populists,
I’m sure, would say that’s the point of leftist “wokeness.” If you despise
America and wish to curtail its ambitions, remind Americans ad nauseam of
how much human suffering their ambitious forebears caused.
In a sense, Trumpism is the antidote to that. Instead of
having everything to apologize for, it asserts that the United States has nothing
to apologize for—except, of course, for having treated Donald Trump so very,
very unfairly.
Trump ultimately cares far less about what U.S. military
bases are called than he does weakening the constraints on his own power,
though, and moving beyond guilt over historical injustices indirectly serves
that purpose. Guilt and shame are important constraints on government action;
if you want a freer hand as ruler, convincing your subjects that those emotions
are vices rather than virtues is a nifty way to condition them to tolerate
executive action they might have blanched at before.
This is very obviously why AfD, the far-right
German party Musk addressed, was thrilled to hear him criticize lingering guilt
over the Holocaust. The AfD brain trust doesn’t give a fig in the abstract
about whether German voters still feel shame over Nazi atrocities. What they
care about is power, and the German electorate is unlikely to give power to a party
like theirs unless and until it moves beyond guilt
over Auschwitz.
Germans won’t be comfortable taking another chance on
authoritarian ruthlessness until they jettison their shame over World War II.
By encouraging them to do so, Elon and the AfD are attempting to boil frogs.
There’s no similarly huge cultural obstacle in Trump’s
path, but a country founded on limited government and separation of powers
obviously requires some softening up before it’ll be comfortable with an
authoritarian executive. One way to soften it up is to turn the left’s argument
about collective responsibility on its head: Yes, we all belong to a culture in
which certain historical sins were once widely and flagrantly committed, but
that period coincided with our rise to national greatness.
Trump won’t tell you that slavery was fine the way some
of his groyper admirers might, but he has plenty of nice things to say about
Robert E. Lee. He won’t claim that driving Native Americans off their land
was just, but he’s practicing his own
version of manifest destiny as I write this. He
wheezes endlessly about the
Gilded Age as a pinnacle of American success despite
the notorious corruption and concentration of wealth during the period.
America was better when it was bold, Trump means
to say in all of that, before the post-war liberal order forced everyone to
conform to a bunch of wimpy rules and norms. Our 19th-century
boldness inflicted real costs on vulnerable groups, and that’s unfortunate, but
it was an unavoidable consequence of bold men imposing their will and
establishing dominance over others.
It was, quite simply, the price of greatness. The United
States was a more dynamic, vibrant, formidable power when it understood that
and was less prone to feel ashamed of it.
So Trump is doing what he can to reduce the shame,
expecting that by doing so he’ll goose the public’s appreciation of great men
behaving boldly in the name of national greatness accordingly. He aims to reach
the point where, say, defying an adverse Supreme Court ruling on birthright
citizenship will be viewed by the masses not as an egregious usurpation of the
constitutional order but as a bold act of sanity to restore order to
America’s chaotic immigration rules.
He moved beyond guilt long ago, possibly before he left
the delivery room as a baby. Now he wants Americans to move with him.
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