One of the most perceptive analyses of Trump and his followers was written more than two decades ago. I’m talking, of course, of Umberto Eco’s oft-discussed essay on what he calls Ur Fascism or Eternal Fascism, his attempt to set forth the central features that define Fascism. I reread it today for the umpteenth time, and was struck again by its eerie prescience.
Though it contains precisely zero references to Trump — who at the time was just a real estate mogul with a penchant for boasts and bankruptcy — Eco’s 14-point checklist describing what makes a fascist a fascist applies to Trump and Trumpism in so many ways it’s scary.
Let’s go through the list, shall we? The bold parts are Eco’s categories; the rest is my commentary.
The cult of tradition: Trump frequently harks back to what he sees as a former golden age for America. His slogan, after all, is Make America Great Again.
The rejection of modernism: Trump has famously said that he thinks “a lot of modern art is a con.” In the final days of his campaign a number of his most fervent followers convinced themselves that Hillary was a literal devil worshiper because her campaign chair John Podesta was once invited to a so-called “Spirit Cooking” dinner held by performance artist Marina Abramovic. Many of Trump’s fans seem to actually believe that her artistic performances are in fact Satanic rituals.
The cult of action for action’s sake: Trump is a whirligig of pointless action who repeatedly declared that Hillary was unfit for president because sometimes she took a day or two off from campaign events, and was even known to go to sleep from time to time.
Disagreement is treason: Trump has repeatedly called the press “corrupt” for not accepting his version of reality. During his rallies he regularly led what Orwell might have called “two-minute hates” against journalists covering his campaign. Trump’s fans ultimately began chanting “lügenpresse” at journalists; the term, German for “lying press,” was originally made popular by, yes, literal Nazis in literal Hitler’s Germany.
Fear of difference: Do I even need to cite examples here? Trump’s campaign, which began with a bizarre attack on Mexican immigrants, was largely based around Trump’s weaponization of this primal fear.
The appeal to a frustrated middle class: Again, do I even need to bother with examples? Trump’s whole campaign centered around his attempts to convince white middle-class Americans that they had more to fear from poor people of color than from wealthy tax-avoiders and serial-bankruptcy-declarers like him.
The obsession with a plot, possibly an international one: Trump, like many of his followers, is both a proud nationalist and a conspiracy theorist. He kicked off his political career alleging that Obama wasn’t born in America; last week he declared that the anti-Trump protests that have sprung up all over the country in the wake of his electoral college victory are the work of “professional protestors, incited by the media.” Trump’s fans on the alt-right blame everything on a cabal of Jewish globalists, a charge Trump himself echoed in the final ad for his campaign.
The followers must feel humiliated by the ostentatious wealth and force of their enemies: You might have thought that Trump, in many ways the poster boy for ostentatious wealth, would have had a hard time pretending that Hillary and her supporters were the privileged ones. But Trump was somehow able to convince his fans he was a sort of “billionaire Robin Hood,” as Trump admirer Piers Morgan put it, while portraying Hillary as “a career politician who has repeatedly fleeced her positions of power to make millions of dollars for herself and her husband, and who carried with her a permanent smug sense of entitlement to be America’s first female president.”
Life is permanent warfare: Trump is someone who will go to war against a former beauty queen on Twitter at 3 AM. He’s always fighting someone. His advisors and surrogates also live in a constant state of war — from ideological scrapper Steve Bannon, the former Breitbart boss who Trump just picked as chief White House chief strategist, to spokeswoman Katrina Pierson, known to wear a literal necklace of bullets during her media appearances. Meanwhile, Trump’s alt-right fans — particularly those who learned virtually everything they know about politics from 4chan and Gamergate — are happy to serve tirelessly in Trump’s unofficial meme army.
Popular elitism: Given Trump’s penchant for superlatives, is it any shock to find his fans declaring themselves “the best supporters?”
Everybody is educated to become a hero: Declaring that “I alone can fix it,” Trump famously presented himself as the one true savior of American society. This makes voting for him, or wearing a Make America Great Again hat, itself a kind of heroism.
Machismo: The constant sexual boasting (including his casual admissions of sexual assault); the relentless misogyny; the schoolyard threats of violence — does anyone doubt that Trump wants the world to see him as the ultimate “alpha male?”
And then there’s that whole Wrestlemania thing.
Against “rotten” parliamentary governments: Trump clearly has very little comprehension of how government works, seeming to think that the president has or should have almost unlimited power. We’ll just have to see what happens the first time a legislative body stands in the way of his political desires.
Ur-Fascism speaks Newspeak: Trump’s fans have invented a whole weird lingo of their own, calling themselves “nimble navigators” and/or “cenntipedes” and flooding the web with Pepe memes. Trump hasn’t adopted any of this lingo for himself, but he does speak his own, distinctively Trumpian, version of American English — big league! Trump’s speeches are collections of slogans and platitudes; he regularly reduces his opponents to single insulting adjectives — “lyin’ Ted,” “little Marco,” “crooked Hillary.” Trumpspeak, like Newspeak, is an impoverished language filled with thought-stopping cliches.
So there we have it.
Trump basically ticks every one of Eco’s fourteen points. And of course many of his supporters are Hitler-worshipping, Jew-hating, Holocaust-advocating white supremacists. All Trump seems to be missing, Fascism-wise, is an armband.
If you haven’t read Eco’s essay, go read it now. If you have read it, go read it again.
H/T — Thanks to Skiriki, who pointed out some of Trump’s similarities to Eco’s Eternal Fascist in the comments here yesterday.
EDIT: Added more on Trumpspeak.
This is like an extended version of Skiriki’s post on Eco’s piece, from yesterday (my time).
Sobering and scary, and as Skiriki pointed out, it’s not just Trump and the US.
@Skiriki, I hope you don’t mind me highlighting this. Your comment still has me thinking now. Not good thoughts but important ones.
@Mish of the Catlady Ascendancy
I hope I can contact the electorate and just message them this site page, maybe it’ll convince them to vote for the people.
http://66.media.tumblr.com/1475fef86a27ba2d341d52e21d12f6f8/tumblr_ns2coftNRE1uu8359o1_1280.png
I…I forget sometimes just how ridiculous Christians can be.
I’m hoping that was a small group.
Can someone with decent recording equipment do a reading of this analysis and put the video on YouTube? This needs to spread beyond our small website.
Mish, yeah, I just added at H/T to the post.
Handsome “Punkle Stan” Jack, it wasn’t Christians so much as alt-right idiots like Cerno.
There has been some media commentary about Trump’s post election interviews. They’ve contrasted his less bombastic behaviour in those as opposed to his public addresses to his followers. They’ve queried whether this restraint demonstrates that he’s not quite as bad as he seems and previously he was just playing to an audience.
It’s probably just as well Godwin’s Law is now superfluous as my immediate thought was to remember another over the top orator who was a lot more restrained in private discussions.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hitler_and_Mannerheim_recording
@David Futrelle,
Apologies if my comment sounded critical (a la ‘hey, you stole this from Skiriki!’). I meant that the two posts go very well together, as S was reminding us to look at it in the global context, whereas yours is a more detailed look at the US. They line up nicely (in a really bleak and depressing fashion).
We’re facing quite a challenge.
Not that long ago, African-Americans faced an enormous, entrenched challenge. I was born into the middle of the civil rights movement. By the time I learned to read, it was beginning to pick up steam. Reading in my small-town newspaper about black people winning significant victories over racism gave a white girl hope for a better future for all people.
My mother was born a year before women could vote. So my grandmother was almost middle-aged before she cast her first vote. All power to those women (and a few men) who hung in there for 70 years. They kept their eyes on the prize, and eventually they triumphed. Sexism remains but women are much better off now than in the before-time (before we won our own civil rights).
Back in that same before-time, before OSHA and labor laws, my great-uncle — who worked 70-hour weeks — met his death through falling into a machine in a steel mill. He left a widow and three young children. There were no survivors’ benefits. Another great-uncle met his death through a cave-in at a coal mine. My great-grandfather, who worked in that mine alongside his son, returned to Europe with a shattered heart.
Many of our literal and political ancestors fought like hell for themselves and for us. Let’s keep up that excellent and necessary work for human beings and for this planet.
Donald Trump will be the first cuck president since Carter.
@Kat
@Scild
Thank you for your messages, they really keep me steady in times like these.
I understand it was the alt-right trying to rile people up, specifically people who believe witches, spirits and Satanism are a threat, aka Christians.
But I don’t understand why Christians still think of those things as threats, think they’d even affect them. It’s weird to me. It’s Chick Tract ridiculous–people laugh at them but apparently people are still think what’s in them in true.
Of course, I’m in bed with witches so I’m biased, but still.
@Ooglyboggles
Hey, it’s my pleasure!
Brand new Netflix series premiering in 2017. “Like Buffy, but with more sex!” says generic critic.
@Handsome Jack
You’d think that they would have more faith — which is the opposite of fear — in their God.
Plus more naps.
I did phrase that with Paradoxy in mind.
I just don’t…understand…God has a plan but we have free will…all you need is faith but god helps those who help themselves…love thy neighbor unless they aren’t godly…I just don’t…understand…
Is… Is that Lost Girl? I haven’t seen it, but I think that’s Lost Girl. Can any fans confirm? And I’m pretty sure the 1st few seasons are on Netflix. Or they were a little while ago anyway IIRC…
@Axe
I’m pretty sure you can describe Lost Girl like that.
@Handsome “Punkle Stan” Jack
Believe in god of this flavor = moral
Not believe in god in this flavor = amoral
There’s alot more to the mental gymnastics as to why some christians seem to act entirely against jesus’ teaching, but that requires alot of knowing dozens of passages and interpretations to fully explain it.
@Handsome “Punkle Stan” Jack
Entire books can and have been written on how and why (particularly fundamentalist) Christians believe the way they do, but one thing to remember is that there are definitely people who wholeheartedly do believe in Satan and that “he” is actively trying to turn people from God.
Personally, I’m atheist and believe in neither. But I live in a very “Christian” area and I’ll tell you, there is a > 0% who truly do believe that.
All I ask from religion and its followers is for some internal consistency, that’s all.
@Oogly
A recommendation?
And, oh yeah, Trump’s totes a fascist. Just to be on topic for a sec…
Reiterating my request to have a video made of this analysis for wide dissemination. David, can you please add a call for the videomaking-savvy to the bottom of the post? I feel like my comments are getting lost.
There’s more lesbians, so, yes.
@Axecalibur: Middle Name Danger
It’s the only show that my entire family would go together and watch, so yeah I’d give it a recommendation. I’m not exactly sure what says about my family but whatevs. Be warned. Nudity everywhere. And abs for days, oh there are abs for days. Also the show doesn’t slut shame the succubus femc and sex is all good so long as it’s consensual. Plus the fae culture and fae society is like a mish mash of jewish/celtic things. Both men and women instigate sex
Um, pardon me, but I’ve read Ecco’s essays, and one of the most crucial elements that you’ve not mentioned is a paramilitary force that is loyal only to the leader. While it is true there are loose packs of racist thugs willing to pee on and beat the homeless, vandalize the property of minorities, even murder people based solely on race, it is not clear that there is an organized corps of these asshats taking marching orders directly from Trump.
Ecco pointed out that while fascism may exist without all 14 of the points discussed (i.e. this is a “constellation of symptoms”, not an all-or-nothing thing), he stressed that one element a fascist always exhibits is the creation of a paramilitary force that answers to no one but him.
Unless and until Donald Trump organizes and commands such a force, I believe it is inconsistent with Ecco’s essay to brand him a fascist. Perhaps we could say he is a Procrustean proto-fascist, but I do not believe we can toss this particular f-word at him unqualified at the moment.
That said, the man is disgusting, an abomination, and he should be stopped because as it presently stands, he absolutely COULD generate such a paramilitary force and seize power and that terrifies the hell out of me not only for my own sake, but for the sake of my trans friends, my minority friends, my friends from foreign countries, my Muslim friends, and my female friends. That’s damn near everybody I know.
So to that end, let’s make the Million Woman March in D.C. happen! My partner and I are going; we’d love to meet up with a bunch of you in D.C. to network, share ideas on how to trump hate with love, how to take the fight to the system if it comes to that, and how to go on living our lives in light of a constant barrage of reality shitposting life at us.
The march is being organized and coordinated on Facebook. You can read about it here: http://www.elle.com/culture/career-politics/news/a40709/million-women-march-trump-inauguration/
It would be cool to run into other Mammotheers! I’ll be the tall dude with the “Bad Hombre” shirt standing next to a small but extremely dangerous lady wearing a “Nasty Woman” shirt. Say hi if you see us! 🙂