Reagan and Trump: Tragedy and Farce

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“History repeats itself,” wrote Karl Marx in 1852, “first as tragedy, second as farce.”He was referring to Napoleon I and his nephew Louis Napoleon. One hundred and sixty-four years later, my subject is Ronald Reagan and Donald Trump.
People talk about “the Sixties” as a heyday of activism in the U.S., and they’re not wrong. I feel so grateful to have come up in a time when social imagination was encouraged, when social experimentation was rampant, when the desire to expand human liberty and human rights pervaded so many communities.
But the Sixties lasted more than a decade.Well into the Seventies, social action for justice and equity was going strong. It took a long time for the movement against the Vietnam War to succeed in stopping the war – or at least in exhausting the American people’s belief in the wisdom of our war leaders – but finally, the draft effectively ended in 1973 in response to massive protest and civil disobedience, and when Saigon fell in 1975, the war effectively ended too. There was a sizable People’s Bicentennial to counter the triumphalist official celebrations in 1976. Through the late Seventies, quite a bit of public money was still being invested in community development, including public service jobs that supported artists working in community to the tune of $200 million a year. It was by no means heaven on earth, but the enormous civil and human rights protests of the Sixties and early Seventies had made an indelible impression, creating the fervent hope and tentative expectation that justice would grow.
Back then, I lived in a world of the like-minded: San Francisco in the Seventies had not yet succumbed to the extreme gentrification brought on by high-tech corporate occupiers, and there were legions of organizers working from the micro – block-by-block politics – to the macropolitics of incipient globalization (a term that only began to take hold in the Seventies).
Here are two of the things that were widely believed in my circles at the time:
Social progress, in the form of the expansion of human rights and increasing equity, would continue. The force of history was unstoppable.
It didn’t make much difference who was elected President; we didn’t feel represented by either major party, and neither acted at all accountable to our values.
To say this was naive is drastic understatement.Within a startlingly short time following his election, Reagan had enacted a program that had been carefully planned in collaboration with the far-Right Heritage Foundation, abolishing public service employment and most community development funding, and going on to break unions, cut budgets for every type of social good, and reward his friends and supporters with tax-breaks and sweetheart deals.I was living in Washington at the time, covering cultural politics for a national organization of community arts folks. No one was allowed to possess a copy of the first edition of Mandate for Leadership, the Heritage Foundation report that set out Reagan’s agenda, but we were allowed to visit the Foundation’s office to sit in a room with a copy of the report and make notes by hand. I still have the first radically alarmed bulletin I wrote about that surreal experience, along with many more that followed.
The thing is, everyone I knew was surprised – astonished – that a majority of those casting ballots in the 1980 election thought Reagan worthy of their votes.I literally knew no one who had voted for Reagan. (I doubt I know anyone who will vote for Trump either.)
Our astonishment was a startling indicator of our own short-sightedness and ignorance. Reagan himself had been a progressive at one point, voting liberal Democrat and rising to the presidency of the Screen Actors Guild. When McCarthyism gripped Hollywood, he aligned himself with the witch-hunters. By 1962, he had joined the Republican Party and opened a lucrative new career track as a spokesman for conservatives. He was elected Governor of California in 1966, cementing his popularity by sending National Guard troops to crack down on student protestors and riding his increasing visibility through two unsuccessful attempts at the presidential nomination before winning it and beating Jimmy Carter in 1980.
Reagan was clearly plugged into a meta-trend in U.S. politics that had escaped my notice. It could accurately be described as a backlash against the very movements that my friends and I had mistaken for the pulse of the nation. Many people were frightened by the shifting social boundaries and mass protests that had filled their TV screens. They longed for a society of ordered authority with white men in charge. They had voted accordingly, responding to Reagan’s famous “Morning in America” message, which promised that under his leadership the clock would turn back.
The tragedy followed. Now comes the farce.Did you see The Daily Show segment featuring members of the U.K. Parliament denouncing Donald Trump as a buffoon? It was like a splash of cold water on a very dry day. My eyes feel more open now than in the Seventies, but still, I am having a familiar type of incredulity flashback. I’m having a hard time making myself believe that the U.S. electorate will allow this racist, sexist, narcissistic clown to become President.
The thing is, Ronald Reagan taught me to believe it.
And that’s not all he taught me. Reagan showed me a truth of postmodern politics: the candidate who speaks most strongly to those who are unhappy with the current order of things has a good chance of winning. Despite all the party-machinery superstitions that push candidates toward what is perceived as the “middle of the road” in the hope of capturing swing voters, it’s really hard to excite people with middle-of-the-road platitudes.
Establishment policy operatives tell us that we ought to stick to the middle of the road anyway, because the candidates who hang out there “know how to govern.” By which they mean: they have long been taken into the bosom of the system, they have proven themselves entirely willing to lease their souls to corporate donors, they have demonstrated their fealty to a system that values loyalty above any other virtue.
I am disturbed by the number of postings I’ve seen on Facebook and elsewhere in which erstwhile progressives say that Bernie Sanders is “unelectable” and urge their friends to support Hillary Clinton because she knows how to play the game.This is such a self-fulfilling disaster: what makes Bernie appear unelectable is the number of people who say they would vote for him on the merit of his positions, but having absorbed the distorted notion of reality that shapes our money-driven elections, have decided that the merit of his positions should take second place to a very strange criterion, comfort and coziness with a corrupt, broken system.
They come up with rationales that are predictions rather than observations grounded in experience. For instance, the idea that Sanders can’t win with voters of color, and that Clinton’s policies have endeared her to those same voters. Listen to Alicia Garza, cofounder of Black Lives Matter, in a recent podcast interview with New Yorker editor David Remnick. (The segment with Garza starts at about 26 minutes in.)
Garza talks about the Clintons’ role in setting this country on a course of mass incarceration, pursuing “this very robust agenda around criminalizing black people…(by) passing and championing this landmark ‘three strikes’ legislation, which actually incarcerated more black people than at any other time in history; and they also did something that was overwhelming, which was to dismantle state supports for families to be able to thrive, or just at the very least, survive.” She condemns Hillary Clinton’s evasion, defensiveness, and dismissiveness in response to the question of why she changed her mind.
“I definitely plan to vote,” said Alicia Garza. “I’m not going to vote for Hillary Clinton, and I’m not voting for any Republicans….I do think it’s troubling that we do something in this country, that we go, ‘if you don’t vote for the appointed ones, everything is going to go to hell.’ That’s not actually true. What is true, certainly, is that there are multiple things that it’s important for us to make decisions about, and the President is one…. But I also want to be clear that for black people in this country, to demand allegiance to a candidate that has deliberately lessened their quality of life is irresponsible.”
None of the candidates is perfect.Indeed, as soon as you take a step back, the whole idea of electing a single individual to govern, of the sort of symbolic monarch the President has become, seems ridiculous. Whomever becomes President is instantly embedded in a mass of advisors and pressure-groups, making the most important question not who a candidate appears to be, but to whom that individual listens and is beholden. This time, there’s a clear choice.
So long as our electoral system is imprisoned by money, the voices of “realism” will exhort us to support a candidate who knows how to please the possessors of entrenched economic privilege – the same people who overwhelmingly possess the racial and gender privilege that for them makes playing the system a winning game.
I lived through Reagan and have been fortunate enough to live into a time in which social action for equity and justice have once again arisen. But I dread the prospect of living into the farce that history will become if we don’t think for ourselves. At the turn of the year, as I asked friends to say how they felt at the prospect of 2016, despite the formidable obstacles we face, every one of them took heart from the impressive and growing movements for climate justice, racial justice, gender justice, and more. So do I. But I’m still worried. As different as today’s politics are from 35 years ago, our situation in some ways resembles the period before Reagan’s election: a robust and diverse progressive movement, and an unabashedly right-wing candidate who seems too much of a joke to believe.
We have an opportunity.The challenge is not to mistake for reality the propaganda of a deeply sick system that cares more for its own perpetuation than for justice, for equity, for the well-being of the people. There are two ways to be lulled asleep this time around: believing the lullaby of the system, that realism requires us to support a candidate who has already helped to establish policies that lessened our national quality of life; and failing to heed the warning of history repeating itself.
Here are two Seventies stars, the late David Bowie and Freddie Mercury, in isolated a capella tracks from a song they cowrote, “Under Pressure.”
[youtube: video=”OehLJcjFrAk”]

5 thoughts on “Reagan and Trump: Tragedy and Farce

  1. This is excellent. Very important. I did the “Like” thing but don’t know whether that means that it will be posted on facebook. I want my friends to see it. Unless you tell me not to, I may copy the whole thing to facebook. In either case I am definitely copying this paragraph:
    I am disturbed by the number of postings I’ve seen on Facebook and elsewhere in which erstwhile progressives say that Bernie Sanders is “unelectable” and urge their friends to support Hillary Clinton because she knows how to play the game.This is such a self-fulfilling disaster: what makes Bernie appear unelectable is the number of people who say they would vote for him on the merit of his positions, but having absorbed the distorted notion of reality that shapes our money-driven elections, have decided that the merit of his positions should take second place to a very strange criterion, comfort and coziness with a corrupt, broken system.
    Thanks.

  2. I’m grateful for the above article. Bernie is a opportunity that will, in my opinion, that will not appear again for a long time. We owe it to our grandchildren and further ancestors to join him and to also work vigorously against Global Warming, and for a world of generosity, kindness and vision. H ear, O

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