Sunday, November 13, 2016

Why the Protests?


            IM:  Gentlemen, why are there anti-Trump protests?

            AM:  Trump threatens their view of life.

            Old Gadfly:  What is it?

            AM:  Progressivism.

            Old Gadfly:  Are you saying Trump opposes progress?

            AM:  No.  He represents values that are contrary to progressivism.

Old Gadfly: Explain.

AM:   Progressivism represents the common good, which is defined by a ruling class and imposed upon the masses by the ruling class.

Old Gadfly:   If the common good is good for everyone, then why is this not something to be advanced by Americans?

AM:  It suffocates the notion of liberty and the pursuit of each individual’s idea of the American dream.  Trump and the Republican Party advance this "common purpose."

IM:  We discussed this in a conversation going into the 2012 Presidential election.  It was based on a dream I had about “dry, parched lips.”
 
AM:  I remember that conversation in Gadfly’s book, The 2012 Contest in America:  Conversations with a Gadfly.  The conversation revisited Dostoevsky’s parable about the Grand Inquisitor, who chastised Jesus Christ for dying on the cross to set people free to make their own choices, good or bad.  The Grand Inquisitor then boasted that people don’t know how to make good choices, thus they need administrators like the Grand Inquisitor to make those choices for them.

IM:  So, we watch the reaction to the Trump election and wonder what is going to happen.  Some progressive friends, with whom I have spoken, believe the protests are spontaneous and reflect fears of an autocracy.  Of course, they mimic the demagoguery of people like Rachel Maddow (for example, see here).  Maddow interviewed Cecil Richards of Planned Parenthood (see here), who observed that “young people are overwhelmingly progressive.”

Old Gadfly:  We’re all about the same age and are Cold War veterans.  In June 1957, speaking to a nationwide television audience in America, Nikita Khrushchev calmly stated:

“. . . I can prophesy that your grandchildren in America will live under socialism.  And please do not be afraid of that.  Your grandchildren will not understand how their grandparents did not understand the progressive nature of a socialist society” (J. Edgar Hoover in Masters of Deceit:  The Story of Communism in America and How to Fight It).


AM: Richards is referring to our grandchildren.  And they are protesting Trump’s election.

IM:  They cannot discern Maddow (and other progressive) propaganda when Trump is called a bigot, racist, homophobe, xenophobe, misogynist, and so forth.  Trump is opposed to illegal immigration, not immigration.  His wife is an immigrant.  Trump may have said crass words in response to crass words from women.  Little has been said about his campaign manager: a woman.  Trump believes in the Constitution and the rule of law—yet he is to be feared as an autocrat.  Many other examples can be listed to demonstrate how progressives have “painted” a picture that distorts reality.  If progressives are so morally pure, then why must they distort the truth?

AM:  Eric Hoffer, a lifelong longshoreman till retirement at the age of 65, wrote extensively on mass movements and the role propaganda played in them.  He concluded:  “Propaganda does not deceive people; it merely helps them to deceive themselves.
 

Old Gadfly:  This describes our progressive grandchildren.  While our parents, the greatest generation, fought against socialism (communism and fascism), our generation failed to recognize the “progressive nature of socialism” and how it took root in America.  We can, however, fight it.  But it will not involve compromise.  Compromise for a progressive does not involve adaptation of their worldview; it mandates capitulation by its opponent.  As I have emphasized numerous times, progressives believe the conservative worldview is not only wrong but immoral.  Progressives do not negotiate with conservatives.  

2 comments:

  1. Hello Gadfly--for your consideration I am enclosing the text of an email that I sent to a colleague in Pakistan who wonders how I am after the Trump election: Situation in America is just OK. You should understand that politics in America is a "blood sport" and many people complain but do not understand the political system. Our presidents are not "dictatorship" powerful. Our Constitution provides a strong system of checks and balances. In order for Trump to get any initiative passed into law, he must first develop a powerful consensus. That is something Obama had to learn the hard way. So, I am never worried that any one president is going to destroy the country. All presidents make mistakes in their first year in office as they learn what all presidents must learn and that is how to be president in a democracy.
    Best,
    Dr. Michael W. Popejoy
    Assistant Editor, White House Studies

    ReplyDelete
  2. Thank you, Dr. Popejoy. I look forward to more comments.
    Best,
    Gadfly

    ReplyDelete