It Didn't Start With Trump
It didn't start with libertarians either—or the 1990s.

When the Clock Broke: Con Men, Conspiracists, and How America Cracked Up in the Early 1990s, by John Ganz, Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 432 pages, $30
When the Clock Broke, by the progressive essayist John Ganz, is a solidly educational and entertaining work of political history. While Ganz winningly doesn't bash you over the head page by page with the larger point he's trying to make, the stories he chooses to tell about the early 1990s are meant to hit home how elements of American political, cultural, economic, and ideological life back then laid the groundwork for Donald Trump's "Make America Great Again" (MAGA) movement today.
His title derives from an obscure 1992 speech by a figure most progressive readers have likely never heard of: the libertarian-movement founding father and gadfly Murray Rothbard, an economist who also explored political philosophy and history as he built a case for a totally stateless society.
Most libertarians' amour-propre might be wounded seeing their movement fingered as having meaningfully paved the way for Trumpism. But in May, the management of the Libertarian Party, dominated by a caucus that sees itself in the Rothbardian tradition, invited former President Donald Trump to speak at their presidential nominating convention, where he tried to make the case that their votes rightfully belonged to him. Whether or not it makes philosophical sense, there is something to Ganz's attempts to link anarcho-capitalist Rothbard with big-state caudillo Trump.
MAGA does at times seem to wear the mantle of smash-the-state anarchism in its rage against the modern progressive state, though Trump's regime managed a state pretty much as big and intrusive as its predecessors' (except for some tax and regulation reductions that were GOP orthodoxy long before Trump). And the Rothbardians' state-hatred can make any punctiliousness about the institutions of democracy and peaceful change of power that Trump threatened seem besides the point: If the state is pure rapine and murder, who can get too upset about whether or not power is exchanged politely?
Since most of this book about the tumult of the early 1990s has nothing to do with Rothbard or libertarianism, readers may wonder why they are hearing quite so much about things like what that eccentric economist in Las Vegas thought about Woody Allen's love life, or why his statement underlies the book's title. Ganz's choice here seems to imply that the clock-breaking Rothbard advocated actually happened.
What Rothbard called for—in a talk to the John Randolph Club, a mixed gathering of libertarians and reactionaries—was to "break the clock" of "social democracy…Great Society…welfare state…and New Deal." That clock-breaking obviously did not happen. The best one can say for such a thesis is that Rothbard in the last few years of his life—after his "paleo" turn led him to reject most of the libertarian movement and ally himself instead with Pat Buchanan–style conservatives—began dreaming of a Trumpian-styled right-populist champion on the horizon, one who would aggressively and with no politesse punch left-liberalism in the metaphorical nose. But When Obscure Agitators Who Wanted To Break the Clock Sounded Political Notes That Trump Later Magnified and Succeeded With isn't as catchy a title.
Rothbard and the paleos did accurately foresee something looming in American political culture that the libertarian comrades he left behind did not: that political success could be had by linking rhetorical anti-statism (about some things at least) with a gleefully rude appeal to white resentment.
More Trumpy than Rothbard were the other major characters in Ganz's narrative. Certainly, Buchanan's 1992 presidential campaign, detailed here at length, was a dry run for Trump, as were Buchanan's later books obsessed with defending the white European character of America by putting the brakes on immigration—though Buchanan was more conventionally educated in politics and economics than Trump is.
Another obscure writer whose story Ganz tells, Samuel Francis, presaged Trump in an almost eerily on-the-nose manner. Francis' columns in The Washington Times and Chronicles advocated an American right that was more open to bully-boy violence and even terror, more obsessed with closed borders, more furious at cultural elites, and more willing to use the government as a nationalist tool to prop up a white working-class constituency, reverse progressive cultural change, and tame "woke" corporations (long before that term was in use, of course).
Underlying Ganz's story is a narrative also believed by his ideological enemies on the nationalist right: that Reagan-era deregulation, deindustrialization, tax cuts, loosening of trade restrictions, and union-busting annihilated any chance for America's former middle classes to thrive, drove them insane, and led them to Trump.
But most evidence indicates that Trump voters are driven more by cultural insecurities and resentments than by economic ones. Besides, Ganz's story of American economic life in its focus only on decline is misleading and overly pessimistic. His book gives the impression that from the early 1990s to Trump's rise, an unrelenting economic disaster settled over the American working man. In fact, from 1992 to 2016 per capita gross domestic product more than doubled, as did median personal income; the median hourly wage nearly doubled; and while the homeownership rate declined, it did so by less than 1 percent (and was by 2023 nearly 2 percent above the 1992 rate). In that quarter century, more of the middle class disappeared into upper classes than tumbled into eternal penury, with the percentage of Americans in the lower middle class or poor shrinking by around 8 percent and the percentage in the upper middle class or rich going up by around 10 percent.
This is not to deny that there were individual voters who fell on the bad end of economic change or had other reasons to feel aggrieved. But it does blunt the idea that economic devastation explains Trump.
The bulk of Ganz's book tells the early-1990s stories of Jesse Jackson, Rush Limbaugh, Ross Perot, Bill Clinton, Daryl Gates, Randy Weaver, and John Gotti, drawing more or less convincing or interesting parallels between their activities then and Trumpian modernity. The Jackson chapter, with its focus on Bill Clinton's "Sister Souljah" moment, reminds us that in a pre-woke age even a liberal Democrat could sound tough on racial politics in a way that reads as MAGA now. The Limbaugh chapter highlights one clear aspect of Trump's appeal, as the paladin defending middle Americans who feel disrespected and mocked by those who control their culture and government. (Trump, Ganz demonstrates, is a walking embodiment of early-'90s right-wing talk radio.) The Gates chapter reminds us that in an era of far more prevalent crime than the one Trump portrayed as "American carnage," worries about street crime didn't necessarily have a racial valence, as even many black citizens and leaders wanted tougher policing. (Not that this was the point Ganz was trying to make.)
The Perot chapter shows that many Americans (though not nearly an electoral majority) were already in the early 1990s hungry for a non-status-quo strongman and didn't care exactly how that would play out in policy terms. And the Gotti chapter, at the book's end, is intended to make the reader think of Trump as more organized crime figure than politician, wrapping up the narrative with a small frisson of fear about what might await America next year.
The 1990s are a fresh area for Ganz to make his writerly mark. But if you read Rick Perlstein's work on the American right in the 1970s (an obvious influence on Ganz in both style and intent, though Ganz can't quite pull off Perlstein's effortlessly delightful readability), you'll see there was nothing uniquely germinal in the '90s for the Trump movement. It was a longer time coming.
Racial and ethnic resentment, revolutionary activity on the part of a tiny margin (with a larger audience of fascinated admirers), a conservative America that feels mocked and disrespected by an elite class, fear of clandestine government agencies, worries about the working class losing economic ground: They were not new in the Trump era, nor did they begin in the '90s. They are persistent parts of the modern American experience.
While Ganz wants to blame free markets for destroying widespread American prosperity, as always, the path to consistently creating wealth (and eventually spreading it more evenly) lies in halting government practices that have slowed down wage growth and productivity, particularly barriers to practicing professions and creating businesses and building living spaces. As always, the most state-encrusted parts of the economy, such as health care and higher education, are the most sclerotic and expensive.
As Ganz makes clear, the fascist-adjacent philosophers that his villain Francis doted on, the likes of Georges Sorel and Vilfredo Pareto, tended to analyze all social issues and crises in terms of who has power and who they wield it against. This is the mindset that leads tribalists such as Francis to try to make the American right a more explicitly race-based operation, as well as one eager to use state power to crush its cultural enemies. In a multiracial, multiethnic republic—something that America will continue to be no matter how many immigration restrictions the right tries to impose—that's bad for peace and prosperity.
Ganz launches his book with the political saga of David Duke, the former Ku Klux Klan leader who became a Louisiana state legislator from 1989 to 1992, a story that hits home how much the author centers racial conflict in the modern American story. Trump is certainly more circumspect on race issues than Duke. But to the extent that he and his epigones make politics more race-conscious, the worse things will get for America. The same goes for race-conscious Democrats.
Despite Rothbard's embrace of right-wing populism in his declining years, the libertarian project he did so much to further for most of his career—the project of limiting and decentralizing power rather than frantically striving to use it against your perceived enemies—is all the more vital for civic peace and prosperity in the Trump and post-Trump eras.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
From the article:
"If the state is pure rapine and murder, who can get too upset about whether or not power is exchanged politely?"
Yes, some people think like that! If the State is Purest EVIL, then it makes NO difference if we elect Hitler and Stalin and Mother's Lament, or Jesus and Mahatma Gandhi!
But the left does elect Hitler-identicals. Practically always.
They've been ignoring the USA for their [Na]tional So[zi]alist Empire for years.
The left elected Hitler himself.
Butt THAT was only because of the Stolen Erections!!!
I see a grey box beneath my comment. Probably made by something that should be trapped, taken to the vet, and put down.
Hey Punk Boogers! HERE is your “fix”! Try shit, you might LIKE shit!!!
https://rentahitman.com/ … If’n ye check ’em out & buy their service, ye will be… A Shitman hiring a hitman!!!
If’n ye won’t help your own pathetic self, even when given a WIDE OPEN invitation, then WHY should ANYONE pity you? Punk Boogers, if your welfare check is too small to cover the hitman… You shitman you… Then take out a GoFundMe page already!!!
"...are meant to hit home how elements of American political, cultural, economic, and ideological life back then laid the groundwork..."
Hit home send awkward here. I would have used the phrase "drive home", but that's just me.
So we have a book about how resisting progressive ideology is divisive. In a time where the progressives are advocating for the end of “whiteness”, where the Obama Administration sued the Little Sisters of the Poor for insufficiently bending the knee to their moral viewpoint on contraception. Where we have de facto blasphemy laws making felons of teenagers marring progressive iconography painted in the streets. Listen to Nancy Pelosi's speech before the Oxford Union denouncing populism (on the Right), where she claims her side has all the proper solutions but conservatives are blocked from accepting them because of "God, guns and gays". More conservative minded people have ample reason to think there is a lot of racial and cultural animus directed against them by a hubristic progressive movement growing and directing a massive state apparatus that does not suffer dissent with any grace.
A person is not necessarily paranoid if there are people who actively hate them and wish them harm.
A person is not necessarily paranoid if there are people who actively hate them and wish them harm.
For years I've said "Never disarm for a group of people that hates you."
Covid compliance was the trial balloon.
Anti smoking was the trial balloon. Covid was an aborted attempt to implement what they thought they'd perfected with 1, the anti smoking campaign, 2, the gay marriage campaign and 3, crossfire hurricane and the general Scot free shenanigans of Hilary's state department.
There are small balloons all the time. Rittenhouse was one that the progressives lost. Jose Alba, the bodega owner was a draw. Poor Jose had to leave the country.
Daniel Penny looks like it will be win for the progressives. Your actions can't result in the death of a crazy black guy who is threatening innocent people even if it's unclear how the lunatic died.
Penny will be found guilty by the same kind of political jury that nailed Donald Trump. He will probably be given the Epstein room at Riker's Island.
The progs so hate self defense that they will fight again and again until Americans concede that self defense is the original sin.
Penny's trial is scheduled for October, just ahead of the election.
The progs so hate self defense
That's because vulnerability to violence keeps people afraid and feeling reliant on the state to protect them. People who will stand up and defend themselves against thugs will also defend themselves against state goons.
WORD!
Armed men(Corrupticut quickly outlawed "Open Carry" have begun to patrol their streets because the HPD refuses to do so.Hopefully this will spread all over Godforsaken Hartford.
Epstein died in federal lockup. Not Riker's.
Epstein didn't die.
Well said; and to hell with 'both sidism;" these ass hats want to throw us into a hole [and that would be their most generous option]
It's obvious from the quotes that Ganz is working backwards in a desperate attempt justify his political agenda.
Life is far to complex to assign anything remotely close to what he is postulating. Like the reality that central planning always fails to accurately forecast economic demands simply because a handful of people can't substitute for billions of people who all know what their own personal needs are.
Some people like Trump simply because they find Biden to be an extremely poor president that they are willing to accept a mediocre former president instead of suffering through 4 more years of an unmitigated disaster with Biden. This is not a glowing endorsement of Trump as I'm not voting for him, but more of an illustration that Biden is simply a terrible excuse of a candidate who is more dangerous than Trump is.
Biden, as the "not Trump" option, is a place holder who is propped up like a corpse so his minions can run the country; he makes an ideal choice for them, and I would look for more of the same in the future.
I need to watch Weekend at Bernie's.
Um, ackshully, nothing stops American voters from voting for Chase Oliver if they are unwilling to take a second dose of Christian National Socialism or Sharknado Warmunism. This is the Solomon Asch social pressure experiment writ large, only with each gang having nothing to offer except the purported worseness of the supposed "only" alternative. Four million voters saw through this in 2016. That glimpse behind the curtain threw 127 electoral votes in 13 states back into the dice cup. Oliver, like Gary Johnson, is a pro-choice Libertarian.
Rainbow masks might stop them..
Ah, but both left and right think they hold legal title to their voters. The Republicans think they own the Republican, Libertarian and Constitution Party voters and the Democrats think they own the Democrats and the Greens.
"Nothing stops a vote for Chase Oliver!" That sounds like a campaign slogan for procedural integrity. He comes from the party that opted to decline Trump for President.
As a "leaning Libertarian"I'm appalled we don't back Trump 100%
I'm not choosing being hanged over being shot.
Trump is trash and Biden is garbage. Biden will win my state, anyway.
The original quote by Rothbard. Probably the most worthwhile thing you’ll read today.
"With the inspiration of the death of the Soviet Union before us, we now know that it can be done. We shall break the clock of social democracy. We shall break the clock of the Great Society. We shall break the clock of the welfare state. We shall break the clock of the New Deal. We shall break the clock of Woodrow Wilson’s New Freedom and perpetual war. We shall repeal the 20th century."
https://mises.org/mises-daily/strategy-right
Overturn Wickard v. Filburn, upon which the modern administrative state has based much of its power, should be overturned.
Breaking clocks works nicely because humans are not machines,. And a fascist state can wreck all clocks by way of a given motion. Freedom of a desirable sociability does not have to strain to be heard to excess 😉
What a load of shit. The Right are open to “bully-boy” politics? What kind of fvckin idiot slept thru the last decade.
To fix it for you, the country went off the rails when it openly embraced the criminal Clintons, and it’s been all downhill since
The current crop of writers for reason are all globalist shit heads.
Brian the retard is a fan of Marcusa repressive tollarance, he has no enemies to the left
As evidenced by his unironical use of the phrase white resentment to describe Trump's allure to the right.
"The spectre of fascism is forever descending on the Right and landing on the Left."
Ganz is lamenting that the progressive vision of enormous, authoritarian government used to advance progressive ideological and cultural objectives is being resisted, sometimes effectively.
For info about Murry Rottbutt, the anarco-communist infiltrator who associated the LP with Haymarket bombers, Guiteau, Czolgosz, Schrank, Emile Henry, Alex Schinas, Gaetano Bresci and every other legalize-murder madman that ever stretched a rope--see "It Usually Begins With Ayn Rand" by Jerome Tuccille.
Gee, a new book by a TDS-addled lefty shit! Imagine my surprise!
Yeah,TDS is everywhere but sometimes hard to detect in print.
Just more anti-Trump screed.
Apparently Biden's ok though.
Fascism is always descending on Trump but landing on Biden.
> John Giotti (sic)
It's "John Gotti" you dolt.
Tephlan Dawn
Rothbard never understood anything except economics. In the late 1960's he wanted an alliance with the Left and of all Leftists, he chose the Black Panthers over the issue of the "People's Park". I left New York in 1972 and lost track of the more prominent NY Libertarians, (Rothbard, Jerry Tuccille and Walter Block).
If you've ever wondered why libertarian writers continually reference Marxists, it's because they agree on Homo Economicus, It's not the economy, stupid, it's never been the economy, stupid, it's human nature and always has been.
Change the economic system, say the Marxists, and human nature will change to accommodate it. Too many libertarians believe this too.
If black panthers were white, they'd be considered far right. They were basically sov cits that wanted a black ethno state.
Wanting a revolution doesn't make one a leftist.
Preferring your own people doesn't make you a racist. An idea that was far less controversial in the 70s.
The Panthers wanted community control of the individual. They were leftists by the standard of the time. Wanting a revolution doesn't make you a leftist, wanting to eliminate any semblance of individuality does.
Individualism defines the right, collectivism defines the left.
"Preferring your own people doesn’t make you a racist."
It kinda does, if by "own people" you mean people of the same race.
Amazing, that so many people abound that you may prefer them all categorically, without looking!
The best job I ever had got me 100 drivers from every country and hue you can imagine.Once a complaint came in on an "African",I hadda ask ,"Which Country",turned out to be a Jamaican and he hated to be called "African".I became absolutely oblivious to
any color or nationality.
My ain’t is like that. She thinks her idiot leftist ideas will work and refuses to listen when I point out how they won’t because of obviously predictable human behaviors.
Sole people just get stuck on stupid. Those people shouldn’t be allowed to determine public policy.
It's true that libertarians have a lot in common with Marxists. It's the same mind set. They create their own definitions for everything and then look down upon everyone else as not understanding anything because they don't use their definitions. And Rothbard was a terrible economist. He was just a bullshitter. I don't think he ever published a single economic paper.
What is a woman?
"Follow the twirled screw, but limbo out of its path of contact at the last minute."
"except for some tax and regulation reductions that were GOP orthodoxy long before Trump"
Except, of course, that Trump wasn't content to just talk about doing them, he actually attempted to act on the talk.
The Rs always talk big about being against income tax and regulation and then they tax you at 34% instead of 37% like they're saving the fucking world.
US Debt per Taxpayer = $266,952
Sure, sure: home owners are only down 1%.
After everyone was already put in debt for the price of one house already.
And their USD was cut in half of it's earned value.
What economic problem? /s
>"a conservative America that feels mocked and disrespected by an elite class"
Does conservative America "feel" mocked and disrespected by an elite class, or are they in fact regularly mocked and disrespected by the elite class?
Also, given the number of "Left eating their own", pariahs, and defectors' stories I've seen, it isn't just conservatives that feel mocked and disrespected by an elite class.
I wonder how many more years will go on with people who clearly don't understand Trump failing to explain his rise to power. It is so much simpler and has nothing to do with any of the ideas put forward in this article.
1. Republican voters were promised certain policies by Republican governments. They never received said policies.
2. Trump criticized their lack of accountability during the 2016 primaries.
3. Trump took it a step further by acknowledging our ideas that Republican elected officials had ignored. China, immigration from at-risk nations, tariffs to assist with reshoring, etc.
Do not forget that Jeb was the front runner and Trump fought his way from the peanut gallery to the center of the debate stage. It's not because he is a gigachad who used his superior intellect and charisma to sway us. It's because he started saying things we had been talking about since the early 00s.
TDS affected individuals think it's all about Trump. They are incapable of understanding it has nothing to do with him and everything to do with what comes next.
1. Republican voters were promised certain policies by Republican governments. They never received said policies.
Republican governments delivered exactly what the Republican political class and business elites wanted them to: lower taxes, less regulation of business, and to make life more difficult for unions, all leading to higher profits. Anything else was red meat for the base.
What did Trump promise that was different than prior GOP promises, and how much of that did he deliver?
2. Trump criticized their lack of accountability during the 2016 primaries.
A fair point, but see my question above. To what extent are Trump voters holding him accountable? Also, remember that less than half of Republican primary voters in 2016 voted for Trump. Trump's message and/or personality didn't resonate with the majority of the GOP primary electorate.
3. Trump took it a step further by acknowledging our ideas that Republican elected officials had ignored. China, immigration from at-risk nations, tariffs to assist with reshoring, etc.
China wasn't being "ignored." There was a strategic mistake made by U.S. administrations going back to Nixon, probably. The thinking was that engaging with China economically and encouraging it to adopt more liberal business practices would filter into its society and culture and then eventually into its government. In hindsight, that was a huge miscalculation.
The U.S. has always had trading relationships with authoritarian regimes when it suited us, but we've rarely been under any delusion that we would change them because of it.
Immigration from "at-risk nations" has been a major part of the story of the United States since before the Founding. The Irish, the Italians, Slavic peoples of Eastern Europe and more all came from countries struggling in one way or another. The immigration policies that the Trumpists want now would likely have severely limited every major wave of immigration the U.S. has ever seen. Other, more recent refugees include Cubans, Vietnamese and other Southeast Asians. We should also note that despite the many Mexican immigrants that came to the U.S. after WWII, many illegally, there were also large numbers of Mexican Americans that had never left their homes, but only became Americans when the U.S. gained territory from Mexico.
If some Americans want immigration restricted from what Trump had once referred to as "shithole" countries, then that would be a major change from the country's history of taking in people from all parts of the world looking for a better life.
It would also be economic suicide. Native-born Americans are not having enough kids, especially not those in the middle-class and higher. Immigration is going to continue to be a necessary component of our economic growth for decades, at least. You might also want to think about how many jobs in construction and agriculture are being filled by 'illegal' immigrants before seeking to deport any that aren't criminals.
Lastly, tariffs would not lead to "reshoring." It would lead to higher prices. Trump said at a rally recently that Biden didn't know what "inflation" means. But he has never seemed to understand that it U.S. consumers that pay tariffs when the importing company (a business operated by Americans on our soil, by the way, even if it is foreign-owned), passes those costs on. Protectionism through tariffs has never been a net positive in history, as far as I know.
Do not forget that Jeb was the front runner and Trump fought his way from the peanut gallery to the center of the debate stage.
Trump didn't "fight" his way to the front. He got enormous amounts of help from certain conservative media outlets I don't need to name.
TDS affected individuals think it’s all about Trump.
Trump makes it all about Trump. Ever since he lost in 2020, he spends at least half of his time talking about himself. The thing that gets me the most is how he can be so effective at swaying people when he does next to nothing to display anything resembling empathy towards his average supporter. I really wonder how many of those adamantly supporting him now have really watched an hour of him speaking in one stretch. Add up how much time he spends talking about the problems the average American faces versus how persecuted he is, how awesome he is, or how much better things were when he was President compared to how awful things are now...
TDS affected individuals think it’s all about Trump.
Thanks for proving the point.
Thanks for proving the point.
I don't see a point, I see an attempt to avoid reasoned debate. "TDS" isn't even original. Democrats would accuse Republicans of "ODS," but they had copied the term from "BDS," which was coined by the late conservative columnist, and former psychiatrist, Charles Krauthammer,as a joke. The whole point of claiming that someone 'suffers' from Derangement Syndrome is to avoid having to engage in rational debate and still claim a 'win'.
It has been my experience here that the more I try and argue rationally, the more Trump fans will seize on a single line in a comment and ignore everything else I said. The irrational behavior is yours, not mine.
>>MAGA does at times seem to wear the mantle of smash-the-state anarchism in its rage against the modern progressive state, though Trump's regime managed a state pretty much as big and intrusive as its predecessors'
by not accounting for the Legislative Branch c.2016-2019 you jornolists will never be on the trolley re: T. you will never get it until you stop conflating.
That is a LOT of words just to say "I have TDS"
Well, it's pretty clear what we ended up with when we all agreed to disagree.
a story that hits home how much the author centers racial conflict in the modern American story. Trump is certainly more circumspect on race issues than Duke. But to the extent that he and his epigones make politics more race-conscious, the worse things will get for America.
Brilliant. Casually linking Trump to David Duke with no reasoning. Then claiming it's the right wing who make everything about race. Jesus christ.
Even better given that Duke is QUITE supportive of Gaza in their conflict with Israel.
Not many issues he and the GOP overlap on. THE big issue for the DNC he is on the side of the Left.
Didn't Duke endorse Biden? (Checks the internet), why yes. Yes he did.
Trump didn't start the fire. It was always burning since the world's been turning.
So as it happens I used to read Chronicles regularly, published locally at the Rockford Institute. Don't think I ever met Samuel Francis but the local libertarians actually occasionally ended up at events there and shot the shit with these guys. I'm also willing to confess that I read and listened to Pat Buchanan in those days. He completely lost me with the the whole Judeo-Christian state thing but he was solidly anti interventionist. And he was a really funny guy. Anyway the idea that Chronicles somehow helped unleash the Trump nightmare seems more than a little farfetched. There were some smart people there but their dogma was very esoteric. Interesting conversations but zero effect beyond a few hundred subscribers. Really scraping the barrel here.
It's true that there are a lot of resentful people in Trump's camp who feel disrespected by elites. However, instead of trying to tear the system down, I think a more productive avenue would be for them to try deserving respect. This disrespect by the elites doesn't come out of nowhere. It is a rational and merited response to the behavior of Trump's supporters. The reason that elites disrespect them is that the way they behave merits it.
I remember when Hillary Clinton said that half of Trump's supporters were a "basket of deplorables" back in 2016, that at the time I thought it was out of touch, inaccurate, and strategically a thing to say. I still think it was a bad thing to say strategically. But after seeing how Trump supporters have behaved for the past eight years, I no longer believe that it was inaccurate or out of touch. Hillary was right. The reason she said it wasn't because she was out of touch and didn't understand their grievances. It was because she was in touch and understood Trump's supporters very, very, well.
D-
"I think a more productive avenue would be for them to try deserving respect. "
No, anyone who deserves respect won't get it from the elites, if you want proof look at Snowden. Look at those who supported the lab leak theory before it became undeniable. Look at those who supported Kyle Rittenhouse. Look at how they treat people like Carl Benjamin. Look at how they smeared
"The reason that elites disrespect them is that the way they behave merits it."
If that were true they would disrespect the intelligence organizations, the banks, Dr. Fauci, and the leftist nutcases who go around burning things.
"It was because she was in touch and understood Trump’s supporters very, very, well."
If you're basing your ideas on Hillary Clinton being smart you're probably wrong, just a pro-tip for the future.
The groundwork was laid in the 17690s, if not earlier.
17690s??
The groundwork will be lain in the 17690's, if not earlier.
There, fixed the verb tense.
"Trump, Ganz demonstrates, is a walking embodiment of early-'90s right-wing talk radio."
Hence the old joke: "Donny from Queens... You're on the air!"
I disagree. First, Trump is a classic interwar Republican: anti immigration like Johnson and Reed, protectionist like Smoot and Hawley, and noninterventionist like Taft. Second, Trump took to heart the "bitter clingers" speech Obama made to his canvassers, and crafted his campaign around it. The message was that the Dems really didn't give a f about American working men and women, bc they had done nothing to help them for decades, except for helping end family-sustaining factory jobs in America.