By Kevin D. Williamson
Wednesday, April 02, 2025
“This isn’t what Americans voted for.”
Everybody says this when Donald Trump does something
stupid or awful. My friend Jonah Goldberg says it from time to time. John
Bolton said it on a recent edition of the Dispatch
Podcast.
With all due respect to my friends and colleagues and for
their desire to take a charitable view of their fellow citizens, and with
equally due contempt for Rolling
Stone et al.:
Baloney.
Americans are not stupid: Americans know damned good and
well that whom we’re voting for is what we’re voting for. We do
not have the excuse of ignorance or stupidity.
And Americans are not timid little weaklings pushed into
a corner by the big bad world and forced to turn to an erratic would-be caudillo
to protect us from … Canada and Denmark. On any given Monday morning, a
comfortable majority of the world’s 100 most valuable companies—and 30-odd of
the world’s 50 most valuable companies—are U.S. firms. (Saudi Aramco sneaks in
at No. 6, Taiwan Semiconductor at No. 9, and Tencent at No. 16; Europe doesn’t
show up until LVMH down at No. 27.) The United States has 4.2 percent of the
world’s population and 26 percent of the world’s economic output. The United
States has more military resources than the rest
of the top 10 players combined. The annual revenue of the 20 largest
U.S.-based companies easily
exceeds the GDP of any country except China or the United States itself.
Sweden, Ireland, and the United Arab Emirates are rich countries, and none has
an economy as large as Walmart’s annual revenue. If CVS were a country, it
would be a crappy country—but its economy would be larger than Egypt’s.
Our economy, already gigantic,
has been outperforming supposed peers for decades and currently is growing
at three
times the rate of the United Kingdom and more than twice as fast as those
of Canada, Switzerland, or France. We
have more
nuclear weapons ready to go than any other country in the world, more
people than any country except China and India. We have about 6 percent of the
world’s land but 30 percent of its wealth, more than all of Europe and Japan combined.
If the United States cannot afford to act like a decent
country, then no country can.
And perhaps that nihilism—the conviction that human
decency is too expensive—is what is at the heart of Trumpism and its
hold over both the Republican Party and a large enough share of the U.S.
population to win elections.
Trump was not elected to help people—economic
growth during the first Trump administration was exactly
the same as it was in the Obama years (please apply the usual caveats about
presidents and economic performance) and less than during the Biden,
George W. Bush, or Clinton administrations. American farmers were even reduced
to taking supplementary
federal handouts because Trump’s idiotic trade wars wrecked
their export markets. That isn’t what help looks like.
Trump was elected to hurt people.
The creed of cruelty is nearly universal among Trump
loyalists. Of course, they don’t put it that way, but ask them and they will
tell you the truth in spite of themselves: Trump was elected by people who
resent this or that group for its status, its wealth, its influence, its
political power, its class condescension, etc., and electing Trump—again—was a
way to get back at “them,” “the media,” “elites,” etc. Nobody voted for Trump
for policy reasons, because he has no policies, only tantrums. Nobody voted for
Trump for philosophical reasons, because he has no philosophy beyond, “I am
your retribution.” The excitable ladies and gentlemen over at The Daily
Wire sell “Leftist
Tears” mugs, and there’s a reason for that. The tears—of our fellow
Americans, wrongheaded though they may be in their politics—are what this is
all about. Forget policy—those tears are the deliverable, the only one
that really matters.
It is time—well past time—to stop making excuses for
Americans: for Americans’ cruelty, for Americans’ selfishness, for Americans’
childish insistence on being led by their resentment and by their lowest
instincts.
Trump did not trick Americans into electing him—there
never has been, and never could be, any question about what sort of man he is:
What else could you make of a thrice-married serial bankrupt borderline
illiterate fantasist who before the presidency was best known for having
appeared in a reality show franchise, a short string of pornographic films, and
however many pro-wrestling programs? What new depths are there to be plunged by
Donald Trump, who ended his last term in office with an attempted coup
d’état? From 2017 to 2021, the Trump administration offered a clown-car
parade of lying, lawlessness, incompetence, imbecility, corruption, cruelty,
kookery, cowardice, and so much whining that you’d think they’d be sick of
whining even though they weren’t. There was nobody eligible to vote in 2024 who
wasn’t walking the Earth in the first Trump administration.
This is what they voted for.
Of course Trump wants to imitate Vladimir Putin, with
Canada and/or Greenland and/or Panama as his Ukraine; of course he’s already talking
about a third term—if Xi Jinping can be president of China for life, then
Trump must at least be able to violate the constitutional limit on terms to
keep up; of course he is openly using his position to enrich his family and his
cronies through dodgy crypto nonsense—Putin is rumored to be possibly the
wealthiest man in the world and he didn’t get that way from savvy investments
in tech startups; of course Trump is locking people up without
any regard for due process or any other aspect of the law—that is how the
men he thinks of as his peers do it, and he himself is, let us not forget, a literal
criminal.
Elect a game show host, get a game show host. Elect a
criminal, get a criminal. Elect a coup plotter, get a coup plotter. And, as a
bonus, you also get an administration full of sycophants and henchmen who are
themselves criminals and coup plotters and others who are simply comfortable
working with criminals and coup- plotters and maybe prefer to do so. No amount
of Fox News bluster or National
Review turd-polishing is going to change that. Them’s the facts, as
plain and as visible as the sun.
Americans are not children. Americans are not mentally
disabled. Americans are whole and complete human beings, and, as voters, they
are morally culpable for the decisions they make—especially when they make that
decision twice.
And as Americans look out into the world—or look inward
with honest eyes—we may begin to appreciate that the fundamental problem isn’t
that our country is reviled under the current administration—the problem is
that it deserves to be.
As somebody wrote way back in May 2016: You
asked for this. And you got what you
asked for.
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