An Ethnograph: The anti-Trump movement
The
anti-Trump movement, which developed as a result of the nomination and then the
election of Donald J. Trump as President of the United States in 2016, has
developed several specific characteristics that are rare in American history
but are more commonly found in authoritarian and tribal societies. Americans, in
general, expect to be a part of, or expect to witness vigorous and at times
fierce debate over political and cultural issues. Indeed, such debate has been the
hallmark of our free society and our willingness to tolerate such debate has
served as a barometer measuring the overall health or sickness of our society.
The
reaction to the election of Donald Trump, among certain segments of his
opposition, has not been the societal norm in America and this speaks to the perception
on the part of these segments of what it means to be an American. The first
cultural manifestation of the anti-Trump movement came about when the
opposition started calling themselves “the resistance” which is an old
communist idea. Instead of viewing themselves as the “loyal opposition,” in
accord with American traditions, when the defeated party competes with the
victors for the mind and hearts of Americans on the field of law and opinion,
the opposition positioned itself, in a manner similar to a communist
revolution, as resisting the government and, in the de-facto sense, trying to
overthrow the government. This expressed itself when members of “the resistance”
expressed rage at Democratic Senators who voted to ratify the new
Administration’s nominees for cabinet positions, not because they necessarily disagreed
with the nomination, per se, but rather simply because by ratifying the nominee
the Senator had enabled the Trump Administration to establish a functioning
government.
The
anti-Trump movement breaks down into two camps, one that is whitting and conscious,
and the other largely unwhitting and unconscious. This metric, as would be the
case with any metric that attempts to examine a society or a group, is inexact
and most members of this specific movement, as it is defined here, embrace
variations of and different levels of both camps. It should be noted that the
vast majority of Americans who oppose the Trump Administration, including the
majority of those who voted against him, are normally and legitimately opposed
to him for the same reasons that anyone opposes any President or Administration.
They legitimately disagree with specific or general policies or issues the
administration supports or they dislike Trump’s style as a leader and as a person.
This ethnograph focuses on a specific segment of that opposition, one that, I argue,
is outside the norm.
The first
camp, the whitting and conscious camp, is what Trump accurately has identified
as the “deep state” or the “swamp.” These are people, both Democrats and Republicans,
who have accumulated power over many decades if not over the last half century.
They have been euphemistically referred to by various names including the
Eastern Seaboard Liberal Establishment. They are generally White Anglo-Saxon Protestants
who are amoral and non-ideological with the exception of believing it as
virtuous to turn the United States into a province and a cash cow for a world
order that they hope to control. Their clients are often people of color who
have accepted various favors from them. Government power is part of their
lifestyle and an outsider like Donald Trump, who is not beholden to special
interests and who, as a largely self-funded candidate who spent relatively little
money to get elected, threatens their power. It should be noted that self-described
Socialist Bernie Sanders, however misguided, also threatens their power which
is why they have gone to such great lengths to stop his movement. This whitting
camp has made major inroads, over several decades and through the use of the
carrot and the stick, into American cultural institutions of education, corporations
and the media. Their amoral agenda, as described by Italian communist social
scientist Antonio Gramsci as the “long march through the institutions” has
resulted in their control of the high-ground today in the United States.
They have
shown themselves as willing to engage in ruthless and extra-legal tactics to
stop and to possibly remove President Trump from office such as their
promotion, with the help of their media mandarins, of the preposterous claim
that President Trump is a Russian spy. The Obama Administration ensured that
the White House, and the intelligence establishment, was fully staffed with
conspirators who would try to stymie Trump’s agenda at every turn. They spied
on Trump, created a phony dossier with the help, ironically, of Russian
sources, and then used the information to get Robert Mueller, one of their own,
appointed as a Special Prosecutor. The Mueller conspiracy, with its constant
media drumbeat of blockbuster impending indictments, dragged on for over two
years and this was followed by the ridiculous claim that Trump had conspired
with the Ukrainians by asking them to open an investigation into former Vice
President Joe Biden, an investigation that Biden had himself previously shut down
after threatening to withhold American aid to Ukraine. President Trump was
impeached for what he clearly and accurately described as a hoax.
The second
camp, the largely unwitting camp, consists of those who really don’t know what
is going on but who respond, in Pavlovian fashion, to the drumbeat of manufactured
outrage reported, in a concertized style, by stooges, some whitting and some
not, by the mainstream media. This camp is stimulated by half-truths and lies relating
to identity politics, a practice that has gained momentum in recent decades.
Race relations, and racial inequality and segregation, is the most shameful
chapter of American history and its legacy lingers on. Recent decades have
witnessed leftists exploiting these tensions for political gain while covering
up their own de-facto racist policies which often promulgate and prolong racial
tensions and inequality. President Trump has presided over unprecedented gains
on the part of African-Americans on all levels and this is, I would argue,
directly attributable to his policies.
Yet the
second unwhitting camp is fooled into believing that Donald Trump and his
movement have something against African-American men and women. This type of
cynical and exploitative narrative, fueled by hate and fear, has certainly been
employed, almost routinely, against enemies of the left since the 1960’s but
never before at such a ferocious and divisive level. The manipulators are
willing to shred the fabric of American society with demagogic emotional claims
and all as a means to preserve and to advance their leftist enterprise by attempting
to utterly destroy their opposition.
I have
experienced the anti-Trump phenomena in my own life as an outspoken
conservative in my liberal community. Before the Trump election, I had been
seeing a therapist for several years going back to the collapse of my business in
2008 and the problems I experienced as a result. He had always found my
conservative activism, my books, and my media, to be mildly amusing. He had explained
to me that my conservatism emanated from my need to get attention, putting
aside that I would have likely been more successful and notable as an author,
columnist and radio host if I had been a liberal. In the sessions I had with
him leading up to the Trump election, he became completely unglued and
unprofessional in his diatribes. It was as if he had become a different person.
Perhaps, for the first time, he felt that his liberal world was being shaken.
He stopped
working with me the day after the election explaining that in order for us to
continue I would not be allowed to discuss politics. Likewise with the
Thanksgiving that year, which was held at the New York home of friends of my wife's family, where I was informed in advance that the dinner would be “trump
free.” At the time, I was broadcasting once a week at Tufts University College
radio station WMFO where I was an open supporter of Trump. In the ensuing
months, I was reported by a listener to the “anti-bias” police and an extremely
derogatory and inflammatory article was published about me in the school
newspaper. This was followed by my hour mover to 3 am in the morning. I got the
hint and left.
Likewise
with my job selling health and life insurance as a representative of Aflac. The
manager of the office called me into his office, asked me if I was a Trump
supporter which I answered affirmatively, and told me that I would have to work
from home going forward. I left that job as well. Likewise with my TV show at
Boston Neighborhood Network. The atmosphere there had become toxic and my wife
was concerned, and rightfully, that my visibility in the community as a Trump
supporter due to that show might hurt our daughters chances of getting into a
Boston area College. I agreed to leave. My hairdresser informed me around this
time that he didn’t want me to come back.
I could easily
continue with details illustrating the toxicity of the anti-Trump movement but
I will leave this study by noting that in order to continue my YouTube program
and other media activities that were left to me, I had to change my name. I did
this both to protect my family from possible negative consequences that might
arise from my support of President Trump and to ensure that they were separated
from me and my views as they are also opponents of President Trump. Meanwhile,
under an assumed name, I shall continue, as best as I am able, to support the
president and to examine the nature of his opposition and what it means for
American society.