and he wrote this personal e-mail:
I've been puzzled by the link you sent me in your last email.
In the probably fictional story about Diogenes of Sinope asking
Alexander the Great to get out of the way and stop blocking his sunlight,
Diogenes understood or would have understood who Alexander the Great was and
the abrasive insult he Diogenes was giving. Diogenes also implicitly
understood his own sense of being a maverick, being understood in his time and
place as being a respected philosopher, or at least a respected oddity, eccentric,
who spoke the truth and made sense. By the same token, Diogenes
understood he would not be punished, ridiculed, or killed by the most powerful
man in the Greek world. He understood that Alexander's respect and Greek
tradition would protect him. Diogenes understood an important
presupposition of Greek thought. Language is a means to the praxis of
consensus, a means of creating a consensus about what is, a means of appealing
to and using that consensus as communication of agreed upon facts as facts, and
that communication was only possible if the "real," perhaps a fiction
itself, was this consensus based on a shared reference to ascertainable facts.
In other words, there was a kind of truth that referenced a shared
agreement on the experience of what is and what isn't, i.e., what is fact.
The truth of Diogenes and the truth of your blog wrestles with the
entire ambiguity of truth by revealing and uncovering what is really true and
thereby exposing what is really false. The process employs paradox, irony,
and insight, depth, wisdom, and intelligence. That kind of exposure
exists NOWHERE in Trump's rhetoric. I am surprised you have been so
misled, but then I am certain you in Europe have been spared the interminable,
self-reflexive, self-congratulatory, bombastic, narcissistic rants of a full
Donald Trump speech.
The diatribe and vitriol expressed in your suggested link are
precisely the diatribe and vitriol Trump continually expressed during the
election, making the important assumption that like Diogenes there was a
tradition and a respect that would guarantee a lack of retribution, a kind of
immunity. Trump lied and exaggerated and lied. He appealed to
people's hatred and fears rather than their logic and desire for our common
welfare. Repeatedly, the American press revealed that 73% on average of
the claims Trump made in his Hitlerian rallies were provable falsehoods.
Almost three million more Americans, the majority of those who voted,
chose Hillary Clinton. The vagaries of the electoral college gave the
minority candidate the win.
I do not understand how a man of your intelligence, who so
carefully researches and presents so many fascinating facts about so much
interesting information can defend Mr. DT (his initials now turned around in
the US to denote the delirium tremens of his fantasy world). Trust me,
you have been exposed to little of the information precisely because you are so
far away. You don't have television. You have never seen an entire
Trump rally (as I am certain you never saw an entire Hitler speech or rally).
Your access is limited. Your information is limited.
Cynically, you have written that it is good he has shaken things
up. Indeed he has. But consider this: When Trump refuses to pay the
US national debt (at 13 trillion dollars or is it 17?), owed to foreigners, a
key financial tactic he has employed in his many bankruptcies (he is by no
means as rich as he says he is) of paying pennies on the dollar of his owed
debts, and when world markets and currencies tumble as a result, whatever state
subsidies you receive will vanish in value--at the very least. The US,
Canada, Russia, and Brazil are the only countries on the globe with the natural
resources to survive without reliance on any one else, including each other.
The US and Russia as Trump's new lover, have the military power to enact their
will anywhere. The dystopia that you have imagined and have suggested awaits in
the shadows is potentially nearer than you think.
Get the facts, my man. Think. You can call me an
alarmist. Okay. Enjoy your wine, your music, your reading, your
rhubarb crumbles, your access to the world, your audience, and may they not be
in as much jeopardy as I think they are, my feisty Irishman who lives so far
away!
This is my reply:
Mr Mean-Spirited reflects, I think,
Middle-American attitudes: the blacks are
getting uppity again, Family Values are being destroyed by homos, we’re being swamped by Latinos, etc.
etc.
Jim Crow is not very recently dead, just biding
his time. Mr Mean-Spirited won’t
travel by airplane any more because he can’t carry his gun on board !
You don’t realise the degree of Schadenfreude towards Big Brother USA that exists potentially in
Europe. Many ordinary people would be
thrilled at the collapse of the American economy, and would only realise too
late that they had to pick up the pieces.
But the pieces would not be that big – certainly not for people like
me. Of course the internet would eventually
collapse for lack of hardware, but it could be argued that it has had its day. People living in the countryside would hardly
be affected: Europe could survive much better than Cuba, and look how well it
survived! In fact, the economic collapse
of the US would be a fantastically good thing for climate change: China would
go bankrupt too, so no more coal-fired power-stations. India would go back to its fairly sane
existence between 1947 and, say, 1987. Russia
would lose its oligarchs and revert (like Ireland) to the not-so-dreadful state
it was in just before WW1. California
(already a bubble-state sailing in its cloud of self-congratulation towards The
Singularity) would become a country in its own right, exceeding Switzerland, Holland
and Belgium in its liberalism. Texas and
Florida might become fascist republics, and New York might declare itself an
International Zone (a turbo-charged and very rich version of Tangier or
Panama). New Mexico might decide to
re-join Mexico, which would then become rich from the legal and more-or-less controlled/taxed production of marijuana, financed by tobacco companies which would move south.
It might also be a good thing for the
threatened EU – or else (as John Gray hopes) it too might break up or become a
mere trading area with only food to trade.
Not a bad thing. We would still
get oranges from Morocco as in the 15th and 16th
centuries. Former refugees might drift
back towards the new Caliphate in Baghdad, Tehran or Damascus. Sa’udi Arabia etc. would go back to being a
nasty little desert kingdom. And plastic bags might become units of currency… Fabulous and wholesome recipes for nettles would be
invented, and wolves would again be heard around Caylus.
2 comments:
It is true to say that whilst European broadcasters have broadcast in full some of the presidential campaign speeches of Donald trump on the many rolling news channels, most people in Europe would rather be spoon fed their own vomit than be tied to a chair and forced to watch, listen to, and take in the value of, an entire speech by Mr Trump (or Hilary for that matter). His speeches were broadcast in America to be broken into smaller chunks for the news channels around the world to sell (more local) advertising with. In their fabulism the speeches were designed in part to merge with the adverts they would eventually co-promote. That is the way of the media. The collective bile of an entire speech would be all too horrible to contemplate. Many millions across the world don't go to live political events, which by definition are partisan and 'for the party faithful', so even if any of us did attend a presidential campaign speech of any sort, then reason and critical faculties would go by the board. Some critics of Trump compare him with Adolf Hitler, and say that both were/are charismatic liars. The percentage of Mr Trump's speeches that were lies averaged out at, what, 73% ? I wonder what percentage of lies fact checkers would find retrospectively in Adolf Hitler's speeches, they can be read to find out-they were bound in 1941 as the official follow up to 'Mein Kamph'.... But Trump has now been accepted by The Electoral College as President of the USA, so the damage will continue. The Liberal consensus will continue to be broken and he already has his own tame privately owned media through which to make every story he tells his version of events, and everyone other media outlet's version wrong. That is what shaking things up is proving to be.
The one thing I wish for I cannot have; to be brief, right, and prove to whoever needs it proved to them that Donald Trump is more wrong than ever he admits he is. Standing up to him as president is going to be as difficult as watching him fail.
The gist of the first paragraph is your lament, as I read you, Bearz, of falsehood over fact again taking the momentum of history. By any standard of Science, falsehood over provable fact as a standard for government in a democracy is a betrayal of the people. Indeed that is shaking things up. The US press is pressing their First Amendment constitutional prerogative--they are standing up to him, and so is the people majority. Trump's already failing--he's not yet President--and there are news stories about desperate, despairing voters who regret their votes. But the future drama is not pretty. You say it so well: "[it] is going to be as difficult as watching him fail."
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