Don’t Cry for Me, America
What Trumpism Means for Democracy
By Andrew J. Bacevich
Whether or not Donald Trump ultimately succeeds in winning the White House, historians are likely to rank him as the most consequential presidential candidate of at least the past half-century. He has already transformed the tone and temper of American political life. If he becomes the Republican nominee, he will demolish its structural underpinnings as well. Should he prevail in November, his election will alter its very fabric in ways likely to prove irreversible. Whether Trump ever delivers on his promise to "Make America Great Again," he is already transforming American democratic practice.
Trump takes obvious delight in thumbing his nose at the political establishment and flouting its norms. Yet to classify him as an anti-establishment figure is to miss his true significance. He is to American politics what Martin Shkreli is to Big Pharma. Each represents in exaggerated form the distilled essence of a much larger and more disturbing reality. Each embodies the smirking cynicism that has become one of the defining characteristics of our age. Each in his own way is a sign of the times.http://www.tomdispatch.com/post/176109/tomgram%3A_andrew_bacevich%2C_donald_trump_and_the_remaking_of_america/#more
Tuesday, March 1, 2016
Don’t Cry for Me, America What Trumpism Means for Democracy By Andrew J. Bacevich
http://www.tomdispatch.com/ post/176109/tomgram%3A_andrew_ bacevich%2C_donald_trump_and_ the_remaking_of_america/#more
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