Friday, January 5, 2024

Trump Cut from Balm in Gilead

 I had written these paragraphs as part of the draft of a book I'm working on with the working title Balm in Gilead. I decided they don't belong there, so I'm posting them here. They make several important points.


Trump Cut from Balm in Gilead

 

We see American nationalism, and to some extent Christian nationalism, in Donald Trump. He once publicly referred to certain countries other than the United States as “shithole” countries. He carries on about “America first!” He wants to shut off all, or nearly all, immigration into this country. He wants to deport millions of people who are already here. He wants to pull the United States out of certain international treaties He pulled us out of one treaty on the environment while he was president. He is an anti-Semite and racist who considers only us white Americans truly to be Americans or at least to be the good Americans. In all of these ways Trump has crossed from a healthy or at least harmless patriotism to a fascistic nationalism.

And he’s taking millions of conventional American Christians with him across that line. A great many American adherents of Conventional Christianity are MAGA Republicans who will overlook all of Donald Trump’s personal and political shortcomings in their effort to make him president again. He, of course, panders to them. He gives them “dog whistles” that don’t come right out and say things like use violence against my opponents but that many of his followers hear as calls to do just that. Donald Trump is no kind of Christian. He will use Christianity to enlarge his political base, but he has no actual faith in anything or anyone but himself. Yet so many adherents of Conventional Christianity are diehard Trumpists.

Why? How can that be? It can be in large part because of the way adherents of Conventional Christianity make banning abortion the main, and sometimes it seems the only, goal of Christianity. As I noted briefly above, conventional Christians have been on a crusade against legalized abortion for decades. Donald Trump and other Republicans promised them again and again that they would appoint federal judges who would overturn Roe v. Wade, the 1973 Supreme Court case that said that the right to an abortion is not just legal but is constitutional. Donald Trump finally fulfilled that promise while he was president. The Conventional Christian opposition to all abortion is based on the absurdity that an embryo is a human being. Conservative Christians have followed politicians for years who have echoed that ridiculous assertion. Those politicians led a great many Christians to the far right of American politics. In the 2016 presidential election, which Trump won despite losing the popular vote, Trump got a great many Christians to overlook his obvious failings and shortcomings because he promised them he would get Roe overturned. Trump, it seems, has no strong personal opinion on abortion. He is, however, more than ready to use that issue to drum up support for his neofascism.

There is another powerful, though finally indefensible, reason why so many conservative American Christians follow Trump. It is the issue of the way the demographics of the United States are changing. Most American adherents of Conventional Christianity, though not all of them by any means, are white Americans of European descent. A majority of Americans have been white Americans at least since European immigrants displaced Native peoples as the primary demographic group in the country. White Americans pretty much ran the whole show. And not just white Americans but white American men made essentially all of the country’s decisions from the beginning until quite recently.

There have always been people of color in the United States and its predecessor political entities. Those first nation people have always been here and still are. There have always been Black Americans of African descent. For most of our history there have been Asian people in the country. And, of course, white Americans, hard as they tried, never quite succeeded in killing off all American Indians.[1] Especially, but not exclusively, in the what became the American southwest there have been people of Hispanic or mixed Hispanic/Native descent.

Nonetheless, white men were by far the dominant demographic in this country’s power structures from the beginning of European settlement. For example, I find photographs of Congress after Reconstruction and before the mid-1960s shocking because everyone in them is a white man. White men ran the government. White men ran the economy (though they did it relying on the labor of a great many people of color). White men ran most of the churches that had any political significance. White men ran the military. White men ran most of the country’s educational establishments, HBCU institutions being an exception here. There was always a bottom demographic level of people of color without which the country could not have functioned, but white men held essentially all of the power.

That demographic is changing. A time is now in sight when white Americans will still be a plurality of the population but will no longer be a majority. People of color have, to some extent, come into positions of power and authority in the country. We’ve had a Black president, not that having him made as much difference as many of us hoped it would. The Latinx population of the country has grown to the point that Spanish is practically a second language for us the way French is a second language of Canada. It is no longer as rare as it used to be to see people of color occupying positions of responsibility and authority in the country’s economic, political, and educational institutions at every level. Women too have come into positions of responsibility and authority. As I write, our Vice President is a woman. There simply is no question but that the demographics of this country are changing radically and rapidly.

A great many white Americans experience those changing demographics as a threat to them. We white American males are losing some of the privilege we used to have in our country. Or perhaps more accurately, women and all people of color are living with more privilege than they ever have before. Donald Trump plays to the insecurity and angst these changes produce among a great many white Americans. He blames people of color, especially recent immigrants, for what he says are this country’s problems. He says we must expel all immigrants or at least all undocumented immigrants. He says there are fine people among white supremacists. In the 1920s and 1930s, Adolf Hitler played on the insecurity and angst of a great many Germans by telling them that the Jews were responsible for all of their problems. Trump is using immigrants in exactly the same way, and his claims about immigrants are as much a big lie as were Hitler’s claims about the Jews. Tragically, a great many American Conventional Christians buy into this American fascism that Trump propounds.

Trump’s racism, and his misogyny too, are radically anti-Christian; but a strange thing is happening in this country. People, most of them probably adherents of Conventional Christianity, are melding an unhealthy nationalism and white supremacism with their faith and producing something called Christian nationalism. Trump plays to the country’s Christian nationalists nearly every time he opens his mouth in public. He panders to their anti-Semitism and their Islamophobia. He panders to their sexism. He blames immigrants, or at least immigrants of color, for economic problems that either don’t exist or that are in no way caused by immigrants. Christianity ought to keep people out of Trumpism, but instead many American Christians distort Christianity so badly that they have no problem combining their faith with politics produced not by faith but by fear.

All through 2023 the polls said Trump will almost certainly win the Republican nomination for president next year. The fact that he has been indicted for something like 91 different felonies has not significantly reduced his support among people who self-identify as Republicans. Whether a conviction before the 2024 election will reduce his support remains to be seen at the time of this writing. One thing that, ironically, might reduce his support is the Supreme Court’s overturning of Roe v. Wade. That overturning won’t reduce Trump’s base. Trumpists love it. It may, however, reduce Trump’s support because it was fanatical opposition to abortion that got many people to vote for Trump in the first place. Now these people don’t need a president to do anything to overturn Roe. It’s already been overturned. So will Christians start to wake up to Trump’s personal immorality and fascistic nature of his policies? That, sadly, remains to be seen.

 



[1] I was never taught anything like this truth in public school, but Adolf Hitler believed that America could not object to what he was going to do to the Jews because of what white Americans had done to First Nation peoples in their country.


No comments:

Post a Comment