http://fpif.org/donald-trump-changed-everything-2016-2020/

How Donald Trump Changed Everything (2016-2020)
Donald Trump is set to unravel not only the accomplishments of Barack
Obama but the very United States itself.

By John Feffer, December 6, 2016. Originally published in TomDispatch

Image from Pixabay

I didn’t vote in the pivotal American election of 2016. Thirty-five
years ago, in that unseasonably warm month of November, I was in
Antarctica’s Allan Hills taking ice core samples with a hand augur.
The pictures I have from that time show my team drilling deep into the
blue ice, but what we were actually doing was digging a million years
into the planetary past to gaze upon the panorama of climate change.
The election was a bad soap opera playing out far beyond my field of
vision.

At the time, I lived in Washington, D.C. So my vote, I told myself for
years afterward, wouldn’t have made any difference in that
overwhelmingly Democratic city. And of course, I never had a doubt
about the result, nor did my family and friends, nor did the
pollsters, the media, and the entertainment industry, nor the members
of the political and economic elite of both major parties. Ours was a
confidence composed in equal parts of ignorance and arrogance. We
underestimated the legitimate anger and despair of large sections of
the country — as well as the other darker motivations much discussed
in the years since.

“Remember, Rachel,” my ex-husband used to say, “Homo homini lupus: man
is wolf to man.” I criticized him for slandering the poor wolf, but he
was right. Beastliness has always lain just beneath the surface of our
world.

My ex-husband, the author Julian West, is a man who cared little about
ice or nature. We couldn’t have been more ill-suited in that regard.
He was always focused on politics. At that moment, he was less worried
about Donald Trump winning the presidency than a far slicker populist
coming along to galvanize the same anti-establishment constituency
four years after a Trump defeat. In 2016, Julian was still a
relatively conventional political scientist. The election would change
all that, setting in motion the events that ultimately inspired his
seminal bestseller, Splinterlands, which, as you no doubt remember,
was published in 2020 and predicted — with considerable accuracy — the
broke-down, shattered world all of us now live in.

I used to think geologically, which transformed the grand sweep of
human history into a mere sliver in the planet’s 4.6-billion-year
timeline. The Earth had repeatedly warmed and cooled in a set of
protracted mood swings that encompassed the epochs. Don’t imagine,
though, that just because I thought in million-year intervals I was
entirely above the fray. By examining those columns of ice we were
extracting from Antarctica, I hoped to understand far more about our
own era of global warming.

What I’d learned by 2016 was not encouraging.

In every previous cycle, the Earth had regulated itself. Then we
humans came along and started fiddling with the global thermostat. The
era of climate change that began in the nineteenth century with our
concerted use of fossil fuels would prove unprecedented. Scientists
began to speak of our 11,700-year epoch, the Holocene, as the
Anthropocene, the first period in which the actions of a particular
species, our very own anthropos, changed the planet. (I used to
half-jokingly call our era the Anthro-obscene.)

Already by 2016, we were experiencing “the hottest summer on record”
year after dismal year. By then, we’d raised the global temperature by
one degree, and that fall the Arctic was an astonishing 36 degrees
warmer than normal. In Antarctica, where our 12-person team was using
a Badger-Eclipse drill and hand augurs to collect samples, the ground
seemed to be turning liquid beneath us as we worked.

At that point, of course, the looming reality of global warming should
have been obvious to everyone, not just scientists. But in that era of
fake news and rampant conspiracy theories, climate change proved to be
just one more “debatable” topic. In the past, at comparable moments,
wisdom had eventually won out over wrongheadedness, whether the shape
of the world or the position of Earth in the universe was in question.
Alas, in the most important debate of them all, the one on which the
very existence of human life on this planet depended, calmer heads did
not prevail — not in time anyway.

As time itself began to telescope, many of us, in the United States in
particular, simply closed our eyes and pretended that species death
was not staring humanity (and many other species) in the face.
Geologic time would, of course, go marching on, just not for us.

The four-year term of Donald Trump proved such a disaster that a
chastened nation, instead of christening public buildings after the
disgraced president, bestowed his name on the devastating,
climate-change-energized hurricane that struck the country’s East
Coast in 2022. Like its namesake, Hurricane Donald began as a squall,
only later to develop into the destructive force that ruined the
national capital and caused billions of dollars of damage.

Julian and I lost our home in Hurricane Donald. Having never liked
Washington, I was, in the end, happy enough to leave the city to the
floodwaters. I divorced my husband (no need to go into that story
here), reverted to Rachel Leopold, the name I’d previously used only
for my scientific publications, and retreated to Vermont.  There, in
our community of Arcadia, I’ve cultivated my garden and watched the
inexorable rise of the global thermometer ever since.

The good news: our citrus crop was excellent this year. The bad news:
a significant coastal chunk of what was once the habitable world is
now underwater.

How much of that is the responsibility of President Trump, how much
his shortsighted predecessors’ and his blinkered successors’, I leave
to scholars like my ex-husband to mull over. I can tell you only what
I saw with my own eyes. I was pretty good with an augur back in the
day, so let me drill down one last time through the crust of history.

The Trump Years

Since I take the long view, I know that time can march backward. Just
ask the graptolites. Oh, sorry, actually you can’t.

Graptolites were tiny sea creatures that once lived in colonies
huddled at the bottom of oceans or floating like ribbons of seaweed on
the water’s surface. For nearly 200 million years, they prospered in
their aquatic world. They probably thought — if they thought at all —
that such longevity guaranteed them eternal life on this planet. Then
came the Carboniferous Period and a brief but severe ice age. Poof,
the graptolites were gone, along with 86% of all other species.

Before evolution culminated in its most glorious and destructive
creation — and you know just who I mean — the planet experienced five
mass extinctions. The most devastating came at the end of the Permian
era, around 250 million years ago, when 96% of all species died out
because a huge volcano exploding in present-day Siberia set off a
chain reaction that raised the temperature of the seas radically. All
of those long-gone creatures left behind no more than a few marks on
stone or some petro-carbon pools beneath the Earth’s surface.

The essential law of evolution is the survival of the fittest. Many
species die out thanks to some spectacular event or other: an asteroid
crashing into the Earth, say, or a massive volcanic eruption. But no
wrathful god or malevolent alien force proved necessary for human
beings: we were quite capable of being our own worst cataclysm. In an
instant of geologic time, we heedlessly burned through our natural
resources, while creating weapons of mass destruction that could do in
the world hundreds of times over. And then, in 2016, roughly half the
voting population of the United States walked into the polls and
pulled the lever for doomsday.

My ex-husband loved to regale me with comparable stories from history
— of empires that rose and fell, great civilizations that left behind
not much more than the poor graptolites had. He believed, however,
that the Enlightenment had fundamentally changed human consciousness,
that history thereafter was slated to move forward, with only a few
stutter steps, into a radiant future. The election of 2016 changed him
and his thinking on such subjects irrevocably.

Definition of a pessimist: an optimist mugged by current events.

I, too, didn’t quite realize how quickly a country could move
backward, dragging the world with it. I watched helplessly as the
Trump administration toppled one scientific enterprise after another,
like a sullen child kicking over the sand castles of other kids. As
soon as he took office, the new president green-lighted every dirty
energy project within reach. Over the objections of environmentalists,
scientists, and anyone with a modicum of common sense, his
administration boosted a dying coal industry, lifted regulations on
carbon emissions, opened up federal land to drilling and fracking, and
okayed pipelines that pumped out yet more oil and gas to turn into
carbon emissions and further heat the planet. It was the equivalent of
a second Industrial Revolution in Saudi America, at the very moment
when the planet could ill afford another fossil fuel spree.

Worse yet was the new administration’s decidedly lukewarm attitude
toward the Paris Accord on climate change. Even as the president
revised his earlier contention that global warming was a Chinese hoax,
the United States turned its back on its pledge to reduce greenhouse
gas emissions in concert with the other industrialized powers. It also
stopped all payments to other countries to help them reduce such
emissions. In the space of months, years of patient negotiations
unraveled.

The Trump energy stimulus — along with tax cuts for the wealthy,
military budget increases, and a major, privatizing infrastructure
program — provided a short-term boost to the American economy. It was
like giving an exhausted worker a hit of meth. Even then, it hardly
took an Einstein to know that what goes up must inevitably come down.
The new president’s “plan” threw the American economy into even more
serious debt, and the initial spike in employment it caused — the new
jobs in mining, pumping, fracking, and building — proved
unsustainable, even as an already yawning gap between rich and poor
continued to widen. The global economy responded by sliding into
stagnation (and then worse), while the positive effects of the
short-term stimulus in the United States soon evaporated.

Perhaps if there had been more resistance to the Trump juggernaut, we
wouldn’t find ourselves in the present situation. Most critics saw the
new president as only a variation, however strange, on all-American
themes. They acted as if the normal melody of politics was continuing
to play. They ignored the growing cacophony in the country and the
world.  They simply didn’t see the true nature of the threat.

They didn’t understand how fracked we all were.

Of course, we did finally stop fracking — the pumping of high-pressure
liquid under the ground to extract otherwise hard-to-get hydrocarbons
— once we fully understood more than two decades ago the devastating
consequences it had for the environment and for us. But by then it was
too late. Donald Trump had already fulfilled his promise to get at
those hidden reserves of oil and gas. In doing so, he ensured that yet
more rounds of carbon emissions would head into the atmosphere,
unleashing a wave of destructive force that widened the existing
cracks in American society.

It’s no surprise that the world began to splinter. But I don’t want to
cover the ground my ex-husband has already explored. I have my own
story to tell.

>From Reconstruction to Deconstruction

Here in this Vermont community where I’ve lived for the past quarter
century, I’ve had a lot of time to read. I no longer take ice core
samples. There isn’t much point (or much ice left either). Instead, we
survive as best we can, while bracing for yet another tempo shift that
will force us to measure our lives not in decades but in years, or
even days.

We have a good library here in Arcadia, assembled from the basements
and attics of farmhouses in the area. No one reads books any more, so
we had our pick. In addition to taking charge of the greenhouses in
our community, I teach science in our school. In the evenings, when I
have the time, I also read history. For all those years we were
together, I listened to my husband’s take on the world of the past.
Now I’ve developed my own interpretation.

>From my reading, I think I understand what happened to the United
States in the aftermath of Hurricane Donald. I think I know now why
the country cracked into so many pieces. At the time, I believed it
was because of the political divisions of the day, the disagreements
over immigration and guns and trade. I didn’t realize that all of
these disputes stemmed from a much older conflict built into the very
foundations of this country.

Like most Americans, I assumed that our forefathers beat the British
in the Revolutionary War and, in short order, created a new experiment
in democracy. I’d forgotten — or never even knew — that a
decentralized group of not-so-united states existed for six years
between the end of that war and the Constitutional Convention of 1787.
In those years, the 13 states that had agreed to the Articles of
Confederation were quite interested in forming a more perfect union.
They evidently liked their status and felt resistant to replacing an
imperial overlord with a federal one. Only through a sleight of hand
did the founding fathers conjure up an American federation. It was a
brilliant piece of politics, but Washington, Hamilton, Madison, and
the others never fully convinced those skeptical of federation.

Indeed, the Constitution papered over the problem by forging
compromises between the one government and the many states that would
prove increasingly vexing over the ensuing decades. Ultimately, it was
brought to a head by the Civil War, thanks to the perennial
disagreement about whether new states admitted to the Union would be
“slave” or “free.” It wasn’t so much the North as the federal
government that emerged victorious from that war and then tried to
impose a solution on the rebellious states, which balked at
constitutional amendments enfranchising freed slaves as equal citizens
and — for the men at least — members of the political community. The
post-war Reconstruction project remained unfinished until, a century
later, the civil rights movement successfully challenged the refusal
of the southern states to abide fully by those amendments.

Still, even that movement could not resolve the fundamental divide. In
the 1990s and the first years of the new century, economic
globalization took the top spot as the issue that split America into
two parts — an A team of the economically successful and a B team of
the left behind. At first blush, the election of Donald Trump seemed
to represent a victory, at long last, for Team B. Certainly, economics
did drive enough voters in the Rust Belt to abandon their traditional
allegiance to the Democratic Party to lift him to victory in the
electoral college.

As his administration got down to work, it became clear that economics
only went so far in explaining his victory. Rather, it was again the
old issue of whether the federal government had the mandate to
implement policies for the entire nation. Those who supported Trump
thought not. They didn’t want comprehensive national health care. They
were not happy with the way the federal government permitted abortion
and same-sex marriage and yet outlawed prayer in school and kept
creationism out of the textbooks. They didn’t like the way the
government taxed them, regulated them, and kept their cattle off
public lands. They didn’t want the government resettling immigrants in
their communities. They cared little for affirmative action, feminism,
or transgender activism. And they were leery of any restrictions on
their access to guns.

Trump supporters were not against elites, at least not all elites.
After all, they’d just elected a celebrity billionaire who promptly
filled his administration with his equally wealthy friends and
colleagues. No, they were against the elites they associated with the
imposition of federal authority.

America B didn’t want to secede territorially from the United States.
Rather, it wanted to deconstruct federal power. As a result, the
United States pushed the rewind button and, in some sense, went all
the way back to 1781. The Trump administration began to undo the ties
that bound the country together, and we very quickly became less than
the sum of our parts. The so-called red states, unshackled from
federal requirements, went their own way. Liberal East Coast and West
Coast states, appalled by the hijacking of federal authority for the
ultimate purpose of undermining federal authority, tried to hold onto
constitutional values as they understood them. It didn’t take long —
in fact, the pundits regularly commented on the blinding speed of the
process — for the failure of the larger project of integration to
become self-evident.  By 2022, the United States existed in name only
(and an increasingly ironic one at that).

The Age of Diminished Expectations

Imagine that you are a 16-year-old girl, healthy and happy and looking
forward to many decades of love and life. And then, one terrible day,
you’re blindsided by a Stage Four cancer diagnosis. You had been
measuring the future in decades. Suddenly, those decades disappear,
leaving you with possibly only a few years to go. Your parents, once
skeptical about vaccinating you as a child, now reject conventional
cancer treatments. First they deny the diagnosis outright. Then they
urge you to eat ground-up apricot pits, drink special teas, and go on
a high-fat diet. Nothing works, and the years turn into months, and
those months into days, as the world closes in.

Yes, it’s a real tearjerker, but substitute “human race” for
“16-year-old girl” and “climate change” for “cancer” and you’ll see
how accurate it is.  At the time, though, many people just looked away
and shrugged. By that pivotal year of 2016, the world had already
received a poor diagnosis. The election of Donald Trump was our way,
as a country, of first denying that there was even a problem, then
refusing medical treatment, and finally embracing one quack remedy
after another.

In the aftermath of that election, I struggled with the contraction of
time and space, as geologic time shifted into human time, as we all
came to terms (or not) with the obvious planetary diagnosis. So, too,
did the map of my world shrink. During the first part of my adult
life, I imagined myself as part of an international community of
scientists. Then I worked at a national level to save my country.

Here in Vermont, I’ve ended up confined to quite a small plot of land:
our intentional community of Arcadia, which we’ve walled off from an
increasingly dangerous and hostile world. Soon enough, I’ll find
myself in an even smaller space: an urn in the community’s mausoleum.

We’re doing fine here in Arcadia. Climate change has turned northern
Vermont into a farming paradise. No federal government interferes with
our liberal community guidelines. We have enough guns to defend
ourselves against outside aggressors. Everything that has killed the
larger community beyond our walls has only made us stronger.

Perhaps, like the monasteries of the Middle Ages, communities like
ours will preserve knowledge until the distant day when we exit this
era of ignorance and pain. Or perhaps, like the graptolites, we’ll
fade away and evolution will produce another species without the
flawed operating system that doomed us.

The graptolites were mute. We humans can speak and write and film
ourselves in glorious 3-D. These skills haven’t saved us, but our
ability to document our times will perhaps save someone someday
somewhere.  Everyone prefers a happy ending to a tearjerker. With
these documents, these core samples of our era, perhaps we can still,
somehow, save the future.

John Feffer is the author of the new dystopian novel, Splinterlands (a
Dispatch Books original with Haymarket Books), which Publishers
Weeklyhails as “a chilling, thoughtful, and intuitive warning.” He is
the director of Foreign Policy In Focus at the Institute for Policy
Studies and a TomDispatch regular. Follow TomDispatch on Twitter and
join us on Facebook. Check out the newest Dispatch Book, Nick Turse’s
Next Time They’ll Come to Count the Dead, and Tom Engelhardt’s latest
book, Shadow Government: Surveillance, Secret Wars, and a Global
Security State in a Single-Superpower World. Copyright 2016 John
Feffer


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