By Nathan Cofnas
Friday, April 04, 2025
Batya Ungar-Sargon is a self-identified Marxist who
supports Trump because he is waging “class warfare” and “tell[ing] Wall Street
to screw itself.” She looks forward to
Trump’s tariffs taking us back to the 70s because:
“Back in the 70s...the majority of the GDP in America was
in the middle class. That’s kind of like the golden era...when the economy was
really healthy, and working-class people felt that they could afford a
middle-class life. 25% of our economy was in manufacturing.”
The idea that the economy was better in ye olden days was
a message of Oliver Anthony’s viral song from
a couple years ago, “Rich Men North of Richmond.” According to Anthony, “your
dollar ain’t shit and it’s taxed to no end.” He also complained (somewhat
paradoxically) about “folks in the street [who] ain’t got nothin’ to eat” while
“the obese [are] milkin’ welfare.”
Two days ago, Trump’s tariffs came into effect. He called
this “liberation day” because (as I understand it) he believes the tariffs will
restore manufacturing in America and free us from the rest of the world that is
“ripping us off.”
The actual effect of the tariffs will be to halt the
American economic juggernaut, discredit the anti-woke movement, pave the way
for a left-wing populist like Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, stop the right’s
momentum in other countries, and bring an end to Pax Americana, which is
the masking tape holding the pieces of the world together.
Historically, the American right was better than the left
on economics. But as the Republican Party degenerated into a low-IQ cult of
personality, this was unsustainable. The benefits of free trade are
counterintuitive, and require a certain degree of intelligence to understand.
On average, people who believe in capitalism have higher
IQs. If you chase all the smart people away from your movement, your
economic policies will come to reflect the intuitions of below average people
who think that trade is inherently exploitative and only workers who make
physical objects add value. The base will demand that we return to a simpler
time when Americans worked in factories, life was easier to understand, and we
didn’t have so many vaccines.
Trump was elected largely because he was the anti-woke
candidate. His executive orders on DEI were a cause for celebration. But the
point of fighting DEI is to pave the way for something better—not merely to
attack leftists for its own sake. If we destroy America and go back to living
in caves, then we will have “won” the war on woke, but that’s not the kind of
victory that we should aspire to. The goal is to bring about a better world.
Here I will explain how MAGA communism is based on lies
and delusions, and everything is about to blow up in our faces. A reality-based
movement needs to accept the following facts:
·
until Trump came back the American economy was
better than ever
·
income inequality has not increased since the
1970s
·
taxes are paid mostly by the rich
·
people deny the aforementioned facts out of
ignorance and/or for political gain
·
mob rule by ignoramuses is not an effective
long-term strategy to fight wokism
American Is Rich
A hundred years ago, Charlie Chaplin made films where he
plays an industrious hobo who frantically
runs around looking for work so he can afford to buy a piece of bread. Many
people are under the impression that millions of Charlie Chaplins are running
around America unable to catch a break, but that there was a “golden age” in
the 70s when the average factory worker could afford a house, family, and car
on just his own income. In reality, there has been an explosion in wealth since
the 1970s. The kind of poverty that existed in the 70s—not to mention Charlie
Chaplin’s time—doesn’t exist anymore. If people feel poor, in most cases it’s
because their desires have become inflated along with their standard of living.
If you’re an able-bodied person and think you can’t afford to live the
lifestyle of a Detroit autoworker in 1975, it’s because you don’t want to live
like him, not because you can’t buy whatever he had and more.
There are a few methods to compare economic conditions
across time. Consider GDP per capita.
GDP measures the sum of goods and services produced by an
economy. It is equal to the sum of consumption spending (spending on new goods
and services), business investment, government spending, and exports minus
imports. (Imports are subtracted because GDP is a measure what is produced
by an economy.) To measure the strength of the economy relative to population
size, we can divide GDP by the number of people to get GDP per capita.
How do we compare GDP across time, say, in 1975 (the
height of the supposed golden age) vs. 2024 (the end of Biden’s presidency when
eggs became more expensive)? We could just run the calculation mentioned above.
But, due to inflation, this would overestimate growth. Suppose the economy
didn’t grow at all, but a dollar in 2024 was worth a tenth of what it was in
1975. GDP (or “nominal” GDP) will be ten times higher, although nothing
important actually happened.
How do you control for inflation? You compare how much it
cost to buy a basket of goods—e.g., an apple and a banana—in 1974 vs. 2024.
Suppose an apple and banana cost 20¢ each in 1974 and $1 each in 2024. To
adjust for inflation, you could multiply 1974 nominal GDP by 5 (to express it
in 2024 dollars) or divide 2024 GDP by 5 (to express it in 1974 dollars). In
practice, this can be misleading. Suppose there was a banana blight in 2022
that made the price of bananas jump to $2, so many banana eaters switched to
buying pears for $1. Your formula says people have gotten poorer after
adjusting for inflation, but they are still getting comparable fruits for what
is effectively the same amount of money. If you compare the price of many
goods, this should largely cancel out.
Real GDP per capita
in 2017 dollars in the first quarter of 1975 and 2024 was, respectively,
$27,690 and $67,981. That’s an increase of 146%.
This statistic, however, seriously underestimates how
much the economy has improved since 1975, in part because it doesn’t account
for differences in what you can buy. It’s not only iPhones, Wi-Fi, and
temperature-controlled water kettles. Apples are bigger and juicier. Cars and
airplanes are safer and cleaner. We have an unimaginable amount of choice, and
almost anything we want can be delivered overnight. Most of that isn’t captured
by comparing GDP.
When it comes to individual well-being, consumption is
more relevant than GDP. For the past 50 years consumption has been going up in
a straight line. In the first quarters of 1975 and 2024, real personal consumption
expenditures per capita (in 2017 dollars) were, respectively, $4,820 and
$9,951—an increase of more than twofold. This measures how much money people
actually spend on goods and services, adjusted for inflation.
We can look at another metric: “time price.” Human
Progress reports
how many hours the typical blue-collar worker has to put in to earn enough to
afford 75 finished goods ranging from a vacuum cleaner to gloves to jogging
shoes in 1979 vs. 2019. (This doesn’t account for the fact that the amount of
choice and quality of all these things is far superior today.) The time price
of everything fell by an average of 72.3%. So if a typical blue-collar worker
in 1979 had to work 1 hour to buy something, on average his counterpart in 2019
had to work 16 minutes 37 seconds. The only item whose time price increased was
a gold necklace, which rose by 3.1%.
![]() |
Source: Human Progress |
Economic progress isn’t driven primarily by Charlie
Chaplin screwing
in bolts in an assembly line faster than before. It’s driven by
technological progress and greater efficiency. Efficiency is a matter of the
distribution of effort and resources. The Wall Street fat cats who extend
credit, manage risk, and provide other financial services were instrumental in
that. A philosophy of “tell[ing] Wall Street to screw itself” so Americans can
return to factories is not going to lead to more wealth creation.
Across borders, people are more efficient at producing
different kinds of goods. Countries with cheaper labor have an advantage in
producing labor-intensive products like fabric. More educated countries can
produce advanced technology like cell phones. Then they trade fabric for cell
phones, and everyone gets something they want. Tariffs prevent free trade,
which will reduce wealth.
Recently, a video came
out of a man on the sidewalk in New York City eating a rat. The replies were
full of people blaming the cameraman for not buying the man a hot meal, as if
he had resorted to eating rats because there was no other food available. This
shows how delusional some people are about the nature of poverty in the United
States. I grew up in New York in the 90s and 2000s. High school students needed
to do community service for their college applications, so there was an army of
young people looking to do good deeds. Because everyone wanted to work in the
soup kitchens, only kids from the most politically well-connected families were
able to obtain one of these cushy spots. There simply weren’t enough poor
people to meet the demand of the do-gooders. And America has become a lot
richer since then. If the man eating a rat so desired, he could find rich
college-bound high school students to give him a bath in soup whenever he
wants. (That would make a great college application essay.) In reality, the
homeless problem in America (not just New York) is almost entirely a problem of
drugs and mental illness, which has little to do with the economy.
Rob Henderson was raised in foster homes, enlisted in the
military at age 17, went to Yale on the GI Bill, got a Ph.D. from Cambridge,
and became a successful writer.
He tells an
anecdote about his friend who worked part-time at Burger King, and
complained about not getting enough hours. One day they were at Applebee’s, and
Henderson noticed a help wanted sign:
I told my friend to ask for an
application. He replied in a mocking tone, “You ask for an application.” I got
one and together we filled it out for him. He got hired. Then, when he was
scheduled to start his first day on the job, he simply didn’t show up.
He quotes comedian Adam Carolla, who grew up in poverty:
“Everyone I tried to help from my old neighborhood has told me to fuck myself.”
My point isn’t that the world is fair or some people
don’t have real disadvantages. But if you show up on time and pass a drug test,
you can get a decent-paying blue-collar job in the US. There are currently
6.8 million unemployed Americans and 8 million job openings. If you talk to
anyone who hires blue-collar workers, they’ll tell you that the problem is
getting people to show up. Even if your only concern were providing jobs, we
don’t need manufacturing jobs when there are plenty of other opportunities
right now.
Did the Greedy 1% Rake in All the Gains?
If Elon Musk spends a trillion dollars to build a pyramid
for himself, this could increase GDP per capita without reflecting a
significant increase in the condition of the median person. According to a
popular view, GDP has gone up only because the rich got richer while leaving
everyone else behind.
This is a false.
The top 1% share of income after taxes, transfers, and benefits hasn’t
changed since 1960. (See the bottom line of the graph below.) The myth that
wealth inequality is exploding comes from studies of tax returns. But people at
the bottom of the income scale are less likely to get married relative to 20
years ago, which means they file taxes separately—so average income per tax
return goes down while household income does not. Also, more of their income is
not taxable or picked up by tax returns relative to the past. When corrections
are made, the result disappears.
Income is not the same as wealth, and
therefore income inequality doesn’t always track (whatever we mean by) wealth
inequality. Wealth is a much more slippery concept than income. You might think
wealth is “whatever is in your bank account plus how much you could sell all
your stuff for.” This formula sounds reasonable if you’re a student with a
debit account and a footlocker full of books and clothes, but it doesn’t work
so well when we apply it to more complex cases. Take a Harvard Law School
graduate with $5,000 in the bank, $100,000 in student loans, and a
$150,000/year job at a law firm in New York. Is his “wealth” negative $95,000?
Every time the stock market goes up, Elizabeth Warren tweets that Elon Musk
“made” X-billion dollars and he should pay a wealth tax on it. (She
doesn’t say anything when the stock market goes down.) But Musk can’t actually
sell his stock or it would crash. Taylor Swift could sell her underwear for
tens of millions of dollars. Does that count toward her “wealth”?
This isn’t to say that wealth isn’t a real phenomenon
(obviously it is, even if you can’t clearly define it). But it’s separate from
income, and insofar as there is wealth inequality, this doesn’t say much about
how the economy is distributing resources. After-transfers income inequality
has not increased since the alleged “golden age.”
Poor People Don’t Pay Federal Income Taxes in America
![]() |
Source: Heritage Foundation |
Millionaires
earn around 15% of the total income and pay 39% of federal income taxes.
Their average tax rate is 3.5 times higher than it is for the rest of the
population.
There is nothing for Oliver Anthony to worry about,
unless he became a millionaire from the lucrative conservative grifting
circuit.
Why Does No One Say This?
The myths that I just discussed are easily debunked. Why
do they persist?
Our political system doesn’t incentivize people to
acknowledge when things are okay. Everyone needs to present himself as the
solution to a crisis. If a politician says that we just need to stay the
course, he sounds like he doesn’t care about your problems, and he’ll lose to
the guy who sounds more hysterical.
In 2022, there was an outbreak of bird flu, which caused
an increase in the price of eggs. The US economy was doing well in other
respects. Although covid triggered inflation across the world, the inflation
rate was relatively low in America. Nevertheless, Trump got people to be
fixated on the price of eggs, as if this represented some massive failure of
Biden’s economic policies. For some reason the Democrats were unable to explain
that eggs are not the be all and end all of the economy, and this may have contributed
to their loss in the presidential race. (Trump promised to lower egg prices on
day one of his presidency, which of course didn’t happen. You can’t make bird
flu go away by talking tough to it.)
I know from personal experience that people get very
angry if you point out that America isn’t the third-world hellhole that they
want to believe it is. For example, in 2023, after I pointed out the
absurdity of Oliver Anthony’s song, there was a mass pile-on by conservatives
calling me an out-of-touch elitist for sharing facts. Political commentator
Ryan Girdusky replied
(in a tweet that was retweeted by Ann Coulter): “How dare the working-class
feels screwed!!! Don’t they know how much worse it is in Uganda or back in
1870?” According to Girdusky and Ann Coulter, what matters is how conservatives
feel, not objective reality. J. D. Vance responded: “Never
mind that food prices have risen substantially over the last two years and life
expectancy has dropped.” But even if covid caused inflation to rise and life
expectancy went down, this doesn’t make Oliver Anthony’s false claims true.
Vance would never admit this because there can be nothing good about America as
long as his political opponent is in power. Then Mike Cernovich of “Pizzagate”
fame went full communist and declared that
“The vast majority of the rich don’t add value” and “your neck is 13 inches.”
(This was followed by a totally non-gay discussion by hundreds of Trumpists
about the details of my neck.) Most people in public life don’t want to face
the mob, so they just go along with people’s delusions.
The Consequences of Stupidity
I have been sounding the
alarm that the anti-woke right needs to appeal to elites. Mob-rule by
morons is not going to be successful in the long run. We need to ask why most
smart people lean woke, and come up with a message that can draw them away from
the left. I have discussed
elsewhere exactly how we can do this.
Trumpists think that wokism triumphed because it had
power on its side. The way to defeat it is simply to take power for ourselves
and smash everything that leftists have built. Curtis Yarvin says we just need
a king who will impose his point of view on society. (Yarvin thinks the king
should be J. D. Vance.) Christopher Rufo also calls for a power-first strategy.
I say that
this is backwards. Wokism has power mainly because smart people were
attracted to the ideology in the first place. Important institutions are
staffed by cognitive elites, and, because they lean woke, the elites use their
positions of influence to advocate for wokism. There’s a limit to how much you
can accomplish via pure bullying. Yes, you can fire government bureaucrats and
strongarm universities to axe their DEI staff, but you’re not going to change
anyone’s views that way. You can’t build effective alternative institutions
with a bunch of Twitter trolls.
The term “fascist” is used as a generic insult, but
Trumpism has essentially become 1920s-style fascism. The original point of
fascism was to combine nationalism with socialism under the leadership of an
authoritarian state. Toward these ends, Mussolini ordered job-making
public-works projects and nationalist economic policies. Although it wasn’t an
explicit part of the ideology, fascism was also associated with thuggery, which
is increasingly the MO of the Trump administration.
If Trump goes through with his tariffs and isolationism,
this will have many effects, but probably not the one effect that he intends,
namely, bringing back manufacturing jobs. Tariff policy has been changing on a
weekly basis, and all of the tariffs could well be rescinded after Trump leaves
office. No one is going to start building factories in the US when they don’t
know what policies will be in place when the factory is ready to operate.
As for the negative effects: The tariffs have already
crashed the stock market, and they will raise inflation. There is a high
probability of stagflation (stagnation plus inflation). Trump’s economic
warfare and nationalist rhetoric has discredited the MAGA movement in the eyes
of the vast majority of non-Americans, thus weakening the MAGA-adjacent
anti-woke right in other countries. For example, the conservatives in Canada were
on track for an easy victory in the next election, but are now losing after
Trump kept threatening to annex their country.
Trump’s impending failure may set the stage for a
left-wing backlash. If the next president is a Democrat, he or she (I wouldn’t
rule out AOC or someone like her) is going to use Trumpian means to undo what
Trump did. This is one of the problems with Yarvin’s king idea. What happens
when the other side’s king takes power?
The past few decades have been the era of Pax Americana. Uncle Sam runs around the world putting out fires, making everyone play nice, stamping out pandemics, and preventing less enlightened countries from bringing back slavery or biological warfare. Uncle Sam also presides over the rules-based order that makes cooperation and free-trade possible, and has enabled the “Long Peace.” America Firsters see us spending a small amount of money on other countries, and demand that we cut off the freeloaders. But the consequences of the collapse of the international system will penetrate the borders of America. Pandemics in Haiti can’t be kept out by a wall. If China decides to gobble up all of Asia—and maybe Africa, too—it will eventually pose a threat to us, even given the false assumption that America can achieve autarky. Trump’s plan to alienate our allies and abandon our historic role will create a poorer, more chaotic, and more dangerous world for everyone.
No comments:
Post a Comment