Link: http://www.quebecoislibre.org/16/160315-5.html It is disconcerting to watch as the front-runner for the 2016 Republican Presidential nomination in the United States espouses a genuinely fascistic agenda – not just from in terms of protectionism, economic nationalism, militarism, and the desire to centrally plan economic greatness – but also in terms the overtly uglier sides of historical fascism: the xenophobia, racism, advocacy of torture and blood guilt, desire to silence political opponents, and incitements to violence against protesters and dissenters. Yet this is precisely what Donald Trump has done, unleashing the long-dormant worst tendencies of American politics. He has emboldened the crudest, least enlightened, most hide-bound enemies of tolerance, cosmopolitanism, and liberty to emerge from well-deserved disgrace to fuel the campaign of a cynical, unprincipled opportunist who thrives by pandering to their lowest impulses. Trump is vulgar, volatile, and unhinged. He has already turned his rallies into miniature versions of the police state he would create if elected – evicting even protesters who simply stand there with signs or clothing that express disagreement with Trump, or even individuals who attract the ire of the frenzied Trumpists for having the “wrong” color of skin or the “wrong” incidental expressions. Because of a bizarre law (H. R. 347, enacted in 2012), it is illegal to protest inside Trump rallies (or rallies of any candidate that receives Secret Service protection), so Trump is already utilizing coercive police powers to suppress dissent. Though it may be alleged that economic fascism has characterized America’s “mixed economy” since at least the New Deal of the 1930s, the resurgence of cultural fascism would have been unthinkable even during the 2012 Presidential Election. Mitt Romney, who seemed to me at the time to represent a paradigm of crony capitalism that inched toward overarching totalitarianism, now appears to be a gentleman and an intellectual – a voice of reason, class, and prudence in his eloquent denunciation of Donald Trump. Romney, as President, would have been unlikely to avert an incremental descent into fascism (although, in retrospect, he seems to be a decent human being), and his own candidacy was marred by manipulations at various State Republican Conventions, but, compared to Trump, Romney is a model of civility and good sense. Romney, if elected, would primarily have been the next status-quo President, overseeing a deeply flawed and deteriorating but endurable economic, political, and civil-liberties situation. Trump, however, would plunge the United States into an abyss where the remnants of personal liberty will suffocate. And yet the manipulations that occurred in 2012 to aid Romney paved the way for a Trump candidacy and its widely perceived “unstoppable” momentum. (Let us hope that this perception is premature!) I was a delegate to the Nevada State Republican Convention in 2012, where I helped elect a pro-Ron Paul delegation to the Republican National Convention. However, upon learning of the events at the National Convention, I became forever disillusioned with the ability of the Republican Party to become receptive to the advocacy of individual freedom. I wrote after Romney’s electoral defeat that
The Republican
Party establishment intended its rule change to prevent the
ability of motivated grass-roots activists to elect
delegates at State Conventions who would vote against the
“presumptive nominee” and in favor of an upstart –
presumably more libertarian – contender such as Ron Paul.
Little did the establishment expect that this rule change
would prevent its own favored candidates from
effectively contesting Donald Trump’s nomination if Trump
continues to win popular votes, especially in
“winner-take-all” primaries, and approaches a majority of
the total delegates. The most that the Republican Party
elites can hope for now is that a candidate such as Ted Cruz
eventually overtakes Trump, or that the remaining candidates
– Cruz, Marco Rubio, and John Kasich – split enough of the
delegates to deny Trump the majority and lead to a brokered
convention. But as the narrative of inevitability continues
to be spun in Trump’s favor and he amasses prominent
endorsements and even promises from the other candidates
that they would support him if he were the nominee, these
damage-control plans seem quite vulnerable. Blind party
loyalty, combined with a bandwagon mentality, appears to be
driving the Republican establishment to a reluctant
capitulation to Trump – which would be political suicide,
but they are apt to do it anyway.
Yet the biggest
underlying facilitator of Trump’s frightening rise is the
very two-party political system in the United States. Had
the ballot-access laws not been rigged against “third”
political parties and independent candidates, and had
representation been determined on a proportional rather than
a “winner-take-all” basis, there would have been genuine
alternatives for voters to choose from. At present, however,
every recent election season has degenerated into a
spectacle of demonizing “the other side” – even if that side
is just a different wing of the same political
establishment. Far too many people vote for “the lesser evil”
in their view, rather than the candidate with whom they
agree most (who will most likely be a minor-party or
independent candidate, since both the Republican and
Democratic Parties are widely perceived as ineffectual and
misguided once actually in power). Instead of evaluating
specific candidates based on their stances on the issues as
well as their personal record of integrity (or lack thereof),
too many voters have learned to viscerally hate “the other”
party’s brand and exhibit unconditional loyalty to their own.
During the primary process, even voters who prefer the
candidates who did not become the nominee will often
capitulate and embrace a deeply flawed frontrunner. If too
many Republican voters come to believe that Hillary Clinton
or Bernie Sanders would be intolerable choices for President,
then they may come to rally behind Trump even if they
personally would have preferred Rubio, Cruz, or Kasich – and
that is how a fascistic campaign could elicit the support of
even the many non-fascists who simply cannot distance
themselves from the “R” next to a candidate’s name.
More recently, in 2015, I explained that
Had Trump been one
candidate among tens of independent contenders, he would
have been rightly recognized as a demagogue whose base of
support is a xenophobic, poorly educated fringe. Had
numerous political parties been able to compete without
major barriers to entry, today’s “moderate” establishment
Republicans and movement conservatives would have had no
need to fight with Trump over a particular party’s
nomination, since they – having little in common – would
have likely fielded multiple candidates of their own from
multiple parties. As it stands now, however, the two-party
system has destroyed the checks that would exist in a truly
politically competitive system to prevent a fascistic
demagogue’s meteoric rise. Only the consciences of voters
stand between Trump and the Republican nomination, as well
as the Presidency. Now, more than ever, it is imperative to
vote solely on principle and escape the “lesser
evil” trap, lest the greater evil of untrammeled
illiberalism trap us forever.
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