What happens when we have no control over things? You’re seeing it play out right now.
The Fearful and the Frustrated
Donald Trumps nationalist coalition takes shapefor now.
BY EVAN OSNOS
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What do you say to the people on the radio this morning who called you a racist?
Well, you know, we just landed, and there were a lot of people at the airport, and they were all waving American flags, and they were all in favor of Trump and what Im doing. He shruggedan epic, arms-splayed shrug.
They were chanting against you.
No, they were chanting for me.
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The longer I stayed, the more I sensed that my fellow-attendees occupied a parallel universe in which white Americans face imminent demise, the South is preparing to depart the United States, and Donald Trump is going to be President. When Hill took the stage, he told his compatriots that the recent lowering of the Confederate flag was just the beginning. Soon, he warned, adopting the unspecified
they, they will come for the monuments, battlefields, parks, cemeteries, street names, even the dead themselves. The crowd was on its feet, cheering him on. This, my friends, is cultural genocide, he said, adding, Often, as history has shown, cultural genocide is merely a prelude to physical genocide. I ducked out to catch a flight to Des Moines: Trump was speaking the next day in Iowa.
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Trump has succeeded in unleashing an old gene in American politicsthe crude tribalism that Richard Hofstadter named the paranoid styleand, over the summer, it replicated like a runaway mutation. Whenever Americans have confronted the reshuffling of status and influencethe Great Migration, the end of Jim Crow, the end of a white majoritywe succumb to the anti-democratic politics of absolutism, of a conflict between absolute good and absolute evil, in which, Hofstadter wrote, the quality needed is not a willingness to compromise but the will to fight things out to a finish. Nothing but complete victory will do. Trump was born to the part. Ill do nearly anything within legal bounds to win, he wrote, in The Art of the Deal.
Sometimes, part of making a deal is denigrating your competition. Trump, who long ago mastered the behavioral nudges that could herd the public into his casinos and onto his golf courses, looked so playful when he gave out Lindsey Grahams cell-phone number that it was easy to miss just how malicious a gesture it truly was. It expressed the knowledge that, with a single utterance, he could subject an enemy to that most savage weapon of all: us.
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http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2015/08/31/the-fearful-and-the-frustrated