The GOP in the Age of Trump: Part Apocalypse, Part Positive Thinking
The other thread at the RNC


When pundits describe this year's Republican convention, the words "dark" and "apocalyptic" keep cropping up. They aren't wrong about that: From Monday's Make America Safe Again theme night through the nominee's dystopian address on Thursday, the week was filled with the intertwined themes of fear and authority. In 2016, we were told, abominations have massed at the country's gates, and some have started to slip inside; to ward them off, we were urged to give more power to the police, to the Pentagon, and above all to Donald Trump.
But there was another thread to the Cleveland gathering too: At times it felt like the GOP had been taken over by the think-and-grow-rich division of the Church of Positive Thinking. Has there ever been another major-party convention where the voices at the dais included a multi-level marketer, a prosperity-gospel pastor, and a professional motivational speaker? I half-expected Trump's friend Tony Robbins to pop by for a surprise pep talk about awakening the giant within. (We did have Fran Tarkenton, whose résumé includes a guest appearance on one of Robbins' old infomercials.) This may reflect the scammy ethos of the man who gave us Trump University, but it also reflects a sincerely held part of the candidate's worldview. Trump is an earnest devotee of Norman Vincent Peale and his self-help-shelf school of religion, and last year he said he'd love to have Oprah as his running mate. That wasn't going to happen—among other problems with the pairing, she's for Hillary—but it reflects something more than just celebrity solidarity. There is a bona fide intersection of outlooks between the TV star who loves The Secret and the TV star who loves The Power of Positive Thinking.
Visions of apocalypse and visions of glory often go hand in hand; I don't doubt that you'll be able to find their counterparts at the Democratic convention next week. But the apocalypse and glory onstage in Cleveland this week had a distinct style and worldview to them, as though they'd both been picked out from the same checkout lane at Safeway. And they fit together in ways that journalists who have focused only on the dystopian side of Trumpism might miss. When Trump's daughter Ivanka introduced the nominee last night, she declared that "all things will be possible again" if her dad takes office. And then he took the stage to warn us of what would be possible if he didn't.
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Wishful thinking and idolatry - a pairing for the ages.
And here you have it. Finally, the prospect of a Hillary presidency is hitting Reason contributors and they're forcing themselves to dig deep and find something positive to say about the Democrat's opponent. GO TRUMP!
Damn yokel lunatarians!
Is it December yet?
You have to show people how dark their lives are before you can tell them that you are the light and the way.
Seems to me that all the gloom and doom is what he's always been running on. The poor benighted souls are the base of his support.
Mass movements do not require a savior, but they always require a devil
You know, it's kind of pot/kettle for Reason to be lamenting apocalyptic warnings. So many articles to chose from...here is one
"After the election, things will get worse..We don't know who will be in charge of the next administration. But it already has a haunting theme song: "Eve of Destruction.""
http://reason.com/archives/201.....-worseLink
The headline of the day: "Republicans Sheer Hillary's Policies When They're Delivered By Ivanka Trump"
As in "Affordable childcare for everybody! Yay!"
CBS This Morning ran with the dark tone theme, while contrasting the Trump speech with other, sunnier nomination speeches from bygone Republican conventions.
I look forward to next week's pivot to Apocalypse Trump.
TRUMPOCALYPSE
RAGNARUMP
THE TRUMPENING
RAGNARUMP
These masturbation euphemisms are getting mythological.
Isn't that every politician - especially the challenger? The world is burning down around us, and I'm the one who can get fix this mess?
"Maybe we should get us some of that ree-form, too."
"We can't be the ree-form candidate, you idjut! We's the incumbent!"