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 Trump’s fans ultimately began chanting “lügenpresse” at journalists; the term, German for “lying press,” was originally made popular by, yes, literal Nazis in literal Hitler’s Germany.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.
@Belladonna:
Introduction to Cassandra, a tech talk. Presented by a good presenter, which is very rare!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B_HTdrTgGNs
Description of Spark, short and newbie-friendly:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SxAxAhn-BDU
Finally, a playlist of short, simple, friendly Machine Learning videos:
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLjJh1vlSEYgvGod9wWiydumYl8hOXixNu
That last one’s great. It assumes you know a little about how computers do things, but there’s no math or programming, and the diagrams help. Might be good to have pen and paper around while you watch though. Each video’s only a few minutes but boy does it pack in the knowledge.
Have fun!
@authorial alchemy I hope you keep listening to Flobots. All of their album Fight with Tools is exactly what we need right now.
https://www.youtube.com/shared?ci=cXOEFU83FqE
Was on my phone, I wanted to add that Flobots are highly involved in political social justice movements, especially using music as protest. See their latest album No Enemies which was built on kickstarter to be used as part of organizing communities for musical action. http://flobots.com/noenemies/
Flobots is such a hidden treasure, I just have to gush about them (Denver proud!) when I see them brought up.
@Scildfreja
Thank you, again! I copied your comment so I won’t lose track of the links. I’ll definitely watch them. Although it may take me a while. Right now, I’m working toward the first of Oracle’s Java certifications and my brain is full trying to remember all of the potential gotchas to look for in the code questions. That’s also why I haven’t looked very far into the Khan academy courses yet. It seems to be all Javascript, and although I’d like to pick up more Javascript at some point, I just don’t have the mental capacity right now. Probably, I’m deficient. 🙁
Ah, Java. It’s the language I’m best with. Lingua franca of the internet, really. All of the Apache projects are in Java, really. Great language if you can manage its quirks. I hate Java’s project dependency structure with an intense fiery burning passion. So much anger.
Still! That’s a highly worthwhile certification to go after! I hope it goes well.
Today on another blog someone made that tired old plea, “Well, it seems to me you ladies are getting all in a tizzy before you’ve even given Trump a chance! Don’t you think you should wait and see what happens?”
And this was my reply – it’s become a partly-standard answer for this disingenuous kind of plea:
Yeah, here is why I will NOT be doing that:
– I don’t recall any Republicans or Tea Partiers sitting the fuck down and shutting the fuck up when Obama was elected (twice!).
-Trump has proved himself to be a liar, a strongman/fascist, misogynist, racist, and xenophobic. I do not have to wait around quietly while he proves it to me even harder before I speak up
-This is not the time to be quiet and a good little lady and “can’t we all just get along”? I endured 8 years of hatefulness and inaction from Republicans, being a nice quiet little lady and “being the bigger person”, refraining from making a fuss, resulted in this, where we are now
-How long do you suggest we wait? We’ve already seen a huge uptick in hate crimes just since last week. How many people do you think I should allow to die before I make a stink? How many women should I let die of infection or bleeding out when they go for illegal abortions, because safe abortion and birth control is no longer available for them? How many Muslims and blacks should I allow to be lynched before I say something? How many Hispanics and refugees should I wait to see deported before I speak up?
Is it any surprise that this was someone mansplaining why we little women were getting all hysterical over nothing?
@Scildfreja
Thank you! I should be ready for the test in a month or so, then I’ll move on to the second cert. I haven’t had to deal with the project dependency stuff yet, so I’m still pretty much in love with Java. I read and study, and when I need a confidence boost, I go solve a puzzle on codingame.com. I seriously love that site (although I had to switch my language preference to French because sometimes there were some really repulsive people in the English chat).
Sometimes I have to work on something for a long time, but there’s nothing quite like that feeling when you get a program to work! And then when you go back and find ways to make it even better. It feels a bit odd to be someone with an English degree who is nearing 50 and just discovered a deep love of programming, but I’m not complaining. 🙂
Anyway, this is seriously off topic, so I apologize to everyone else, but thank you again for your advice and support!
@Belladonna
For more coding practice in multiple languages you can try http://www.hackerrank.com and there’s also http://rosalind.info if you’re at all interested in Bioinformatics. It’s in Python, which is very human readable but very different from Java, as it’s a scripting language. http://overthewire.org is good if you want to learn security testing. There are a few programmers here so you can always ask us for help. ^o^
Edit: I’m not sure if they allow accounts from everyone, but my alma mater has a Java practice website, too: http://practiceit.cs.washington.edu/
@Belladonna:
I’ve done a lot of Java in the past, so I’m available to help you.
@kupo
Thank you! I will definitely try out those sites, because practice, practice, practice!
I’ve done some simple coding in Python and I like the language, although it feels a little bit disorienting to move to it from a strongly typed language, and sometimes it’s really damn hard to remember not to type those semicolons. 🙂
Another site I’ve been trying to work on a bit is projecteuler.net. It’s really, really mathy, but that’s probably something I need.
Anyway, most of all, thank you for the offer of help! I can’t begin to say how awesome you guys are.
EDIT: And that includes you Laugher at Bigots! 🙂
@Scildfreja and Co
If I may jump in! I’m in my 6th year of a psychology-philosophy degree (my university keeps changing the parameters of what I need to have achieved, it’s a fucking farce) and currently picking up credits with an introductory AI course, because I’m pretty much into AI above all else.
Thank you everyone for the links and advice – it wasn’t meant for me but I hope you don’t mind if I use it anyway!
Specifically as regards neural networks etc, I’m surprised and saddened to learn that in your experience, Scildfreja, perceptrons are given to researchers/students as tools, if I understand what you’re saying? Even on my basic first year introductory course, at what is not exactly a university big on funding educational tools (corruption everywhere) in the somewhat alienated north of Scotland, we’ve already been given programs for running slightly more complex neural networks. I mean, we emulated perceptrons to help ground our theory, but we have moved on to training our own simple convolutional neural networks, and from what we’ve been told higher level students would be very much frowned upon if they tried to use perceptrons in their work.
Sorry if there was some confusion, I’m just surprised (and currently looking for any outlet to geek out about this stuff that doesn’t require an ability to program properly.)
@Headologist, oh, yes, 6th year courses will certainly deal with CNs and the like. They’re a vital methodology these days, and anyone pursuing mastery in ML isn’t going to get far without them. I was more referring to the material you’d get in a Bachelor’s degree, which will give you a few neural networks but nothing modern. There’s a huge difference between the material in the two for computer science.
@Headologist
Hey, no! It’s mine. It’s all mine! They gave it to me! 😉
@ Scildfreja
Ah, that makes more sense. I think I was confused because while I’m in my 6th year I’m still studying for my bachelor’s, and the course I’m taking is a first year course, so I was thinking if we were given basic CNs surely higher levels should be! That makes much more sense.
@ Belladonna
I challenge you… To a pun off! Best/worst computing pun gets to use the resources :p
(I jest, I’m really bad at puns, please don’t make me.)
tsk, tsk. That’s *clearly* going to deadlock you in a race condition. Don’t you know the Dining Philosophers problem? ;D
Well now it’s 4am and I want spaghetti.
@Headologist
So a whole crap load of computing terms went racing through my head, and I grasped at ATM.
Asynchronous Transfer Mode and Automated Teller Machine and At the Moment. There must be something there . . .
*blank*
Then I thought CMOS! Complementary Metal Oxide Semiconductor and Chicago Manual of Style. No, too obscure.
Then I thought, what the fuck’s wrong with you, Belladonna. Nobody puns with initialisms. Total fail.
Then Scildfreja mentioned race conditions and I thought semaphore? Atomic? Well, maybe for someone better at puns than me.
So you may be bad at puns, but I can’t even initiate the first round. I concede. All the resources are belong to you. 🙂
@dreemr
^5
“Just give it a chance” is the rallying cry of privileged groups telling the marginalized that they shouldn’t worry about the impending further marginalization and harm because those in privilege and power aren’t going to be affected. It’s even worse when it’s coming from one’s own supposed allies who fail to understand that just because they won’t be negatively impacted it doesn’t mean no negative impact is coming. To turn a meme into a sentence, tell “we survived Reagan; we’ll survive this too” to all the gay and black victims of the AIDS epidemic of the 80’s.
@Belladonna
I’ve been trying to come up with a witty punchline to “what’s a semaphore?” for years.
Dumb programming joke:
There are 10 kinds of people in the world; those who understand binary and those who don’t.
@kupo
lol. I know right? It seems like there should be some kind of joke there!
And I love the 10 kinds of people joke.
I can’t remember what the context was, which makes it even lamer, but I remember not too long ago trying to make some kind of a joke out of
2^3 = 1000
to a programmer colleague, and it failed abysmally.
@ Amara – That’s really cool. I’ll add them to the artists I plan on listening to. (They’re in the company of Flying Lotus, Arctic Monkeys, 21 Pilots, King Crimson, Atoms for Peace and Joy Division.)
I’ve been listening to Radiohead’s Kid A and Hail to the Thief a lot. It’s a bit grim though.
Lately I’m partial to Dead Kennedy’s Nazi Punks Fuck Off. 😉
At the moment, with all the gloating, the Smiths are on high rotation inside my head.
Grim AF.
http://m.youtube.com/watch?v=12Z90ysVeiE
Let’s hope time’s tide does smother them.
@dreemr, HawkAtreides, and everyone else re the ‘give Trump a chance’ plea,
I just read quite a good, short wee blog post on this. The author is a tad casual with words like ‘psychopath’ but the overall content is on point, I think.
OT – the geeky programmer exchanges going on here are adorable. Utterly mystifying but adorable <3
@Mish <3
I had a similar feeling in another thread when people were talking about, I think (maybe), something to do with whatever Handsome “Punkle Stan” Jack’s nym refers to. I was seeing these English words on my screen, pretty much all of which I understood by themselves, but in context I understood absolutely nothing at all. It was kind of weird. It might as well have been a foreign language. But I just had this overwhelming feeling of fondness for Mammotheers come over me.
And I’m reading your link now!