Long time away, read this piece from an Irish journalist abut how pitiful the US is these days, and then read my response in next post. Hope it's not too much!
Irish Times
April 25, 2020
By Fintan O’Toole
April 25, 2020
By Fintan O’Toole
THE WORLD HAS LOVED, HATED AND ENVIED THE U.S. NOW, FOR THE
FIRST TIME, WE PITY IT
Over more than two centuries,
the United States has stirred a very wide range of feelings in the rest of the
world: love and hatred, fear and hope, envy and contempt, awe and anger. But
there is one emotion that has never been directed towards the US until now:
pity.
However bad things are for
most other rich democracies, it is hard not to feel sorry for Americans. Most
of them did not vote for Donald Trump in 2016. Yet they are locked down with a
malignant narcissist who, instead of protecting his people from Covid-19, has
amplified its lethality. The country Trump promised to make great again has
never in its history seemed so pitiful.
Will American prestige ever
recover from this shameful episode? The US went into the coronavirus crisis
with immense advantages: precious weeks of warning about what was coming, the
world’s best concentration of medical and scientific expertise, effectively
limitless financial resources, a military complex with stunning logistical
capacity and most of the world’s leading technology corporations. Yet it
managed to make itself the global epicentre of the pandemic.
As the American writer George
Packer puts it in the current edition of the Atlantic, “The United States
reacted ... like Pakistan or Belarus – like a country with shoddy
infrastructure and a dysfunctional government whose leaders were too corrupt or
stupid to head off mass suffering.”
It is one thing to be
powerless in the face of a natural disaster, quite another to watch vast power
being squandered in real time – wilfully, malevolently, vindictively. It is one
thing for governments to fail (as, in one degree or another, most governments
did), quite another to watch a ruler and his supporters actively spread a
deadly virus. Trump, his party and Rupert Murdoch’s Fox News became vectors of
the pestilence.
The grotesque spectacle of
the president openly inciting people (some of them armed) to take to the
streets to oppose the restrictions that save lives is the manifestation of a
political death wish. What are supposed to be daily briefings on the crisis,
demonstrative of national unity in the face of a shared challenge, have been
used by Trump merely to sow confusion and division. They provide a recurring
horror show in which all the neuroses that haunt the American subconscious
dance naked on live TV.
If the plague is a test, its
ruling political nexus ensured that the US would fail it at a terrible cost in
human lives. In the process, the idea of the US as the world’s leading nation –
an idea that has shaped the past century – has all but evaporated.
Other than the Trump
impersonator Jair Bolsonaro in Brazil, who is now looking to the US as the
exemplar of anything other than what not to do? How many people in Düsseldorf
or Dublin are wishing they lived in Detroit or Dallas?
It is hard to remember now
but, even in 2017, when Trump took office, the conventional wisdom in the US
was that the Republican Party and the broader framework of US political
institutions would prevent him from doing too much damage. This was always a
delusion, but the pandemic has exposed it in the most savage ways.
Abject surrender
What used to be called
mainstream conservatism has not absorbed Trump – he has absorbed it. Almost the
entire right-wing half of American politics has surrendered abjectly to him. It
has sacrificed on the altar of wanton stupidity the most basic ideas of
responsibility, care and even safety.
Thus, even at the very end of
March, 15 Republican governors had failed to order people to stay at home or to
close non-essential businesses. In Alabama, for example, it was not until April
3rd that governor Kay Ivey finally issued a stay-at-home order.
In Florida, the state with
the highest concentration of elderly people with underlying conditions,
governor Ron DeSantis, a Trump mini-me, kept the beach resorts open to students
travelling from all over the US for spring break parties. Even on April 1st,
when he issued restrictions, DeSantis exempted religious services and
“recreational activities”.
Georgia governor Brian Kemp,
when he finally issued a stay-at-home order on April 1st, explained: “We didn’t
know that [the virus can be spread by people without symptoms] until the last
24 hours.”
This is not mere ignorance –
it is deliberate and homicidal stupidity. There is, as the demonstrations this
week in US cities have shown, plenty of political mileage in denying the
reality of the pandemic. It is fuelled by Fox News and far-right internet
sites, and it reaps for these politicians millions of dollars in donations,
mostly (in an ugly irony) from older people who are most vulnerable to the
coronavirus.
It draws on a concoction of
conspiracy theories, hatred of science, paranoia about the “deep state” and
religious providentialism (God will protect the good folks) that is now very
deeply infused in the mindset of the American right.
Trump embodies and enacts
this mindset, but he did not invent it. The US response to the coronavirus
crisis has been paralysed by a contradiction that the Republicans have inserted
into the heart of US democracy. On the one hand, they want to control all the
levers of governmental power. On the other they have created a popular base by
playing on the notion that government is innately evil and must not be trusted.
The contradiction was made
manifest in two of Trump’s statements on the pandemic: on the one hand that he
has “total authority”, and on the other that “I don’t take responsibility at
all”. Caught between authoritarian and anarchic impulses, he is incapable of
coherence.
Fertile ground
But this is not just Donald
Trump. The crisis has shown definitively that Trump’s presidency is not an
aberration. It has grown on soil long prepared to receive it. The monstrous
blossoming of misrule has structure and purpose and strategy behind it.
There are very powerful
interests who demand “freedom” in order to do as they like with the
environment, society and the economy. They have infused a very large part of
American culture with the belief that “freedom” is literally more important
than life. My freedom to own assault weapons trumps your right not to get shot
at school. Now, my freedom to go to the barber (“I Need a Haircut” read one
banner this week in St Paul, Minnesota) trumps your need to avoid infection.
Usually when this kind of
outlandish idiocy is displaying itself, there is the comforting thought that,
if things were really serious, it would all stop. People would sober up.
Instead, a large part of the US has hit the bottle even harder.
And the president, his party
and their media allies keep supplying the drinks. There has been no moment of
truth, no shock of realisation that the antics have to end. No one of any
substance on the US right has stepped in to say: get a grip, people are dying
here.
That is the mark of how deep
the trouble is for the US – it is not just that Trump has treated the crisis
merely as a way to feed tribal hatreds but that this behaviour has become
normalised. When the freak show is live on TV every evening, and the star is
boasting about his ratings, it is not really a freak show any more. For a very
large and solid bloc of Americans, it is reality.
And this will get worse
before it gets better. Trump has at least eight more months in power. In his
inaugural address in 2017, he evoked “American carnage” and promised to make it
stop. But now that the real carnage has arrived, he is revelling in it. He is
in his element.
As things get worse, he will
pump more hatred and falsehood, more death-wish defiance of reason and decency,
into the groundwater. If a new administration succeeds him in 2021, it will
have to clean up the toxic dump he leaves behind. If he is re-elected, toxicity
will have become the lifeblood of American politics.
Either way, it will be a long
time before the rest of the world can imagine America being great again.
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