Entering Uncharted Territory in Washington
Are We in a New American World?
By Tom Engelhardt
The other week, feeling sick, I spent a day on my couch with the TV
on and was reminded of an odd fact of American life. More than seven
months before Election Day, you can watch the 2016 campaign for the
presidency at any moment of your choosing, and that’s been true since at
least late last year. There is essentially never a time when some
network or news channel isn’t reporting on, discussing, debating,
analyzing, speculating about, or simply drooling over some aspect of the
primary campaign, of Hillary, Bernie, Ted, and above all -- a million
times above all -- The Donald (from the violence at his rallies to the size of his hands). In case you’re young and think this is more or less the American norm, it isn’t. Or wasn’t.
Truly, there is something new under the sun. Of course, in 1994 with O.J. Simpson’s white Ford Bronco chase (95 million
viewers!), the 24/7 media event arrived full blown in American life and
something changed when it came to the way we focused on our world and
the media focused on us. But you can be sure of one thing: never in the
history of television, or any other form of media, has a single figure
garnered the amount of attention -- hour after hour, day after day, week
after week -- as Donald Trump. If he’s the O.J. Simpson of
twenty-first-century American politics and his run for the presidency is
the eternal white Ford Bronco chase of our moment, then we’re in a
truly strange world.
Or let me put it another way: this is not an election. I know the
word “election” is being used every five seconds and somewhere along the
line significant numbers of Americans (particularly, this season, Republicans)
continue to enter voting booths or in the case of primary caucuses,
school gyms and the like, to choose among various candidates, so it’s
all still election-like. But take my word for it as a 71-year-old guy
who’s been watching our politics for decades: this is not an election of
the kind the textbooks once taught us was so crucial to American
democracy. If, however, you’re sitting there waiting for me to tell you
what it is, take a breath and don’t be too disappointed. I have no idea,
though it’s certainly part bread-and-circuses spectacle, part celebrity
obsession, and part media money machine.
Actually, before we go further, let me hedge my bets on the idea that
Donald Trump is a twenty-first-century O.J. Simpson. It’s certainly a
reasonable enough comparison, but I’ve begun to wonder about the
usefulness of just about any comparison in our present situation. Even
the most nightmarish of them -- Donald Trump is Adolf Hitler, Benito Mussolini, or any past extreme demagogue
of your choice -- may actually prove to be covert gestures of
consolation, reassurance, and comfort. Yes, what’s happening in our
world is increasngly extreme and could hardly be weirder, we seem to
have the urge to say, but it’s still recognizable. It’s something we’ve
encountered before, something we’ve made sense of in the past and, in
the process, overcome.
Click here to read more of this dispatch.http://www.tomdispatch.com/post/176120/tomgram%3A_engelhardt%2C_don't_blame_it_all_on_donald_trump/#more
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