[As the Princeton University philosophy professor Harry Frankfurt put
it in a famous essay, to lie presumes a kind of awareness of and
interest in the truth — and the goal is to convince the audience that
the false thing you are saying is in fact true. Trump, more often than
not, isn’t interested in convincing anyone of anything. He’s a
bullshitter who simply doesn’t care.
In Trump's own book, Crippled America: How to Make America Great
Again, our now-president describes himself in a way that Frankfurt
could hold up as the quintessential example of a bullshitter. Trump
writes that he’s an "I say what’s on my mind" kind of guy. Pages
later, he explains that doesn’t mean he’s necessarily an honest guy.
"If you do things a little differently," he writes of the media, "if
you say outrageous things and fight back, they love you." The free
publicity that results from deliberately provoking controversy is
invaluable. And if a bit of exaggeration is what it takes, Trump
doesn’t have a problem with that. "When," he asks "was the last time
you saw a sign hanging outside a pizzeria claiming ‘The fourth best
pizza in the world’?!"]

https://www.vox.com/policy-and-politics/2017/5/30/15631710/trump-bullshit

The Bullshitter-in-Chief
Donald Trump’s disregard for the truth is something more sinister than
ordinary lying.
Updated by Matthew Yglesias@[email protected]  May 30, 2017, 8:40am EDT

Donald Trump says a lot of things that aren’t true, often shamelessly
so, and it’s tempting to call him a liar.

But that’s not quite right. As the Princeton University philosophy
professor Harry Frankfurt put it in a famous essay, to lie presumes a
kind of awareness of and interest in the truth — and the goal is to
convince the audience that the false thing you are saying is in fact
true. Trump, more often than not, isn’t interested in convincing
anyone of anything. He’s a bullshitter who simply doesn’t care.

In Trump's own book, Crippled America: How to Make America Great
Again, our now-president describes himself in a way that Frankfurt
could hold up as the quintessential example of a bullshitter. Trump
writes that he’s an "I say what’s on my mind" kind of guy. Pages
later, he explains that doesn’t mean he’s necessarily an honest guy.

"If you do things a little differently," he writes of the media, "if
you say outrageous things and fight back, they love you." The free
publicity that results from deliberately provoking controversy is
invaluable. And if a bit of exaggeration is what it takes, Trump
doesn’t have a problem with that. "When," he asks "was the last time
you saw a sign hanging outside a pizzeria claiming ‘The fourth best
pizza in the world’?!"

When Trump says something like he’s just learned that Barack Obama
ordered his phones wiretapped, he’s not really trying to persuade
people that this is true. It’s a test to see who around him will
debase themselves to repeat it blindly. There’s no greater
demonstration of devotion.

In his first and best-known book, The Art of the Deal, Trump writes a
passage that is one of the most remarkable ever set to paper by a
future American president. It’s deeply telling about Trump’s views on
the distinction between integrity and loyalty. Trump sings the praises
of Roy Cohn — Joe McCarthy’s infamous legal attack dog later turned
Trump mentor:

Just compare that with all the hundreds of “respectable” guys who make
careers out of boasting about their uncompromising integrity but have
absolutely no loyalty. They only care about what’s best for them and
don’t think twice about stabbing a friend in the back if the friend
becomes a problem. What I liked most about Roy Cohn was that he would
do just the opposite. Roy was the kind of guy who’d be there at your
hospital bed long after everyone else had bailed out, literally
standing by you to the death.
Trump, ironically, would not stand by Cohn’s deathbed as he perished
of AIDS; instead, he disavowed his friend. For Trump, loyalty is a way
to size up those around him, suss out friend from foe. It is not a
quality he cares to embrace in his personal life. Now president, it’s
the same in his political life.

The two passages taken together illuminate an important facet of
Trump’s personality, and of his presidency. He’s a man who doesn’t
care much about the truth. He’s a man who cares deeply about loyalty.
The two qualities merge in the way he wields bullshit. His flagrant
lies serve as a loyalty test.

Trump’s tactics, in a different context, would be understood as
typical authoritarian propaganda — regimes often propound nonsense
more to enforce expectations on their citizens than because they are
expecting anyone to actually believe it. The United States isn’t the
kind of place where that can work. There’s a free and vibrant press
and political debate operating wholly outside the world of Trump’s
bullshit. But by filling the heads of his fans — and the media outlets
they consume — with a steady diet of bullshit, Trump is nonetheless
succeeding in endlessly reinscribing polarization in American
politics, corroding America’s governing institutions, and poisoning
civic life.

Harry Frankfurt’s theory of bullshit
As Frankfurt put it in his groundbreaking essay “On Bullshit,” “one of
the most salient features of our culture is that there is so much
bullshit.”

Frankfurt attempts to give the term definition that distinguishes the
bullshitter from the liar, with the most salient distinction being
that the liar is genuinely trying to trick you.

“The bullshitter,” by contrast, “may not deceive us, or even intend to
do so, either about the facts or about what he takes the facts to be.”

The liar wants to be seen as the one telling the truth. The
bullshitter just doesn’t care. That’s Trump. During the course of the
2016 campaign, he said over and over again that America is “the
highest-taxed nation in the world,” which isn’t even remotely close to
being true. But he kept saying it, despite having been called out
repeatedly, and then he said it again in a recent interview with the
Economist.

Trump says, over and over again, that he won one of the greatest
Electoral College landslides in history. It’s not true, it’s obviously
not true to anyone who bothers to look it up or remembers any past
presidential elections, and it’s not even remotely clear why it’s
important. But Trump keeps on saying it.

This is just how Frankfurt defines bullshit:

For the bullshitter, however, all these bets are off: he is neither on
the side of the true nor on the side of the false. His eye is not on
the facts at all, as the eyes of the honest man and of the liar are,
except insofar as they may be pertinent to his interest in getting
away with what he says. He does not care whether the things he says
describe reality correctly. He just picks them out, or makes them up,
to suit his purpose.
This is a perfect portrait of a typical Trump statement. His
assertions about policy matters are often so garbled as to make it
nearly impossible to work out what he’s even trying to say in order to
evaluate its truth or falsity.

The reason is that Trump is often completely indifferent to accuracy.
His administration, like all administrations, sometimes tries to sell
the public on something or other using tactics that are at times
deceptive. But where he breaks from the mold is in the sheer quantity
of things he seems to say for no reason at all, utterly outside the
context of a planned sales pitch.

The annals of Trumpdown are simply littered with this kind of casual,
fundamentally pointless falsehood:

He told the Economist that he invented the phrase “prime the pump.”
He says China stopped manipulating its currency only after he won the election.
He says “millions” of illegal voters cost him the popular vote.
He claims to have had an incredibly productive first 100 days in office.
He says labor force dropouts are counted as employed by the Bureau of
Labor Statistics.
He says Germany and other NATO members owe money to the United States.
None of this is useful in moving the ball forward on any kind of
policy goal. And indeed, Republicans on Capitol Hill and even in the
executive branch typically groan about these outbursts of Trumpian
bullshit that throw their work into chaos and tend to at least
temporarily derail the GOP’s substantive goals. But Trump not only
keeps bullshitting, he tends to demand that his team offer a zealous
defense of whatever bullshit he happens to spout on any given day —
putting staffers and legislative allies in the untenable position of
defending the indefensible.

The function of bullshit in the Trump regime
Trump launched his term in office by dispatching White House press
secretary Sean Spicer to deliver an inaugural press briefing dedicated
to disputing clear photographic evidence about crowd size.

It seemed insane, and one popular interpretation was that Trump had,
in fact, lost his marbles and simply couldn’t stand the blow to his
ego implied by mocking media coverage. But George Mason University
economist Tyler Cowen argues that this kind of thing can serve a
strategic role.

The key issues are trust and loyalty. By asking subordinates to echo
his bullshit, Trump accomplishes two goals:

He tests the loyalty of his subordinates. In Cowen’s words, “if you
want to ascertain if someone is truly loyal to you, ask them to do
something outrageous or stupid.”
The other is that it turns his aides into members of a distinct tribe.
“By requiring subordinates to speak untruths, a leader can undercut
their independent standing, including their standing with the public,
with the media and with other members of the administration.”
Both of these things allow Trump to do a better job of operating in a
low-trust environment. All presidents face a mild form of a
principle-agent problem in which their subordinates’ interests are
only imperfectly aligned with their own. In the past, presidents like
Dwight Eisenhower and John Kennedy tended to solve this by selecting
White House staffs full of longtime personal loyalists.

In more recent years, ideological polarization of the parties has
produced what Richard Skinner calls the “partisan presidency” — White
House teams are made up primarily of generic party operatives who have
deep party ties that transcend their personal connection with the
president. This works for a president like George W. Bush or Barack
Obama because the president himself is also a long-term party loyalist
who does not perceive there to be a huge divergence between the
party’s priorities and his own.

Trump is clearly not a longtime Republican Party loyalist, so he can’t
rely on this solution. In part, he is reaching for a personal
presidency — installing, for example, his son-in-law in a senior
advisory position. But an old-school personal presidency wouldn’t work
for Trump. For one thing, he needs the support of congressional
Republicans, which means he needs people they trust on his team. But
beyond that, unlike Ike or JFK, Trump has no experience in politics or
government, so a team of pure personal loyalists would have no idea
what they’re doing.

He needs to operate in the context of a mostly partisan presidency,
even though he knows most of the members of his party would probably
prefer to see Mike Pence sitting in the Oval Office. Throwing out a
constant stream of bullshit simultaneously helps the president assess
whom he should regard as loyal, and also serves as a filter to
increasingly bind a growing circle of politicians and political
operatives to him and his family.

Post-totalitarian bullshit
Frankfurt initially wrote his essay in 1986 (it found a lay audience
on the internet in the early 21st century and was published as a book
in 2005) largely as an amusing observational piece about life in
comfortable capitalist liberal democracies. He did not, primarily,
have the practical conduct of politics in mind — though he did suggest
that bullshitting about politics is a particularly common form of
bullshit, he regarded it primarily as a recreational habit of citizens
rather than as a governing tactic.

Eight years earlier, the Czech dissident (and later president of his
country) Václav Havel wrote on a similar theme of truthlessness in
“The Power of the Powerless,” taking as his backdrop the very
different situation of what he called “post-totalitarian” communist
dictatorships in Central Europe.

He considers the case of the grocery store manager who places in the
shop window a sign emblazoned with the slogan “workers of the world
unite.” The poster would have been delivered from headquarters along
with the vegetables and placed in the window “simply because it has
been done that way for years, because everyone does it, and because
that is the way it has to be.” As Havel writes, the display of the
sign surely communicates something, but it equally surely does not
communicate a desire to see unity among the world’s workers:

Obviously the greengrocer is indifferent to the semantic content of
the slogan on exhibit; he does not put the slogan in his window from
any personal desire to acquaint the public with the ideal it
expresses. This, of course, does not mean that his action has no
motive or significance at all, or that the slogan communicates nothing
to anyone. The slogan is really a sign, and as such it contains a
subliminal but very definite message. Verbally, it might be expressed
this way: "I, the greengrocer XY, live here and I know what I must do.
I behave in the manner expected of me. I can be depended upon and am
beyond reproach. I am obedient and therefore I have the right to be
left in peace."
Yet equally crucially, the regime itself does not post these signs in
the hopes of convincing anyone of anything, or of conveying any kind
of meaningful information about the world. The sign — the slogan
itself — is mere bullshit. But according to Havel, it serves an
important function:

The greengrocer had to put the slogan in his window, therefore, not in
the hope that someone might read it or be persuaded by it, but to
contribute, along with thousands of other slogans, to the panorama
that everyone is very much aware of. This panorama, of course, has a
subliminal meaning as well: it reminds people where they are living
and what is expected of them. It tells them what everyone else is
doing, and indicates to them what they must do as well, if they don't
want to be excluded, to fall into isolation, alienate themselves from
society, break the rules of the game, and risk the loss of their peace
and tranquility and security.
Trumpian bullshit involves the transplantation of the kind of social
and political role that Havel envisioned into a society that is much
closer to the one Frankfurt lived in. Nobody in America is coerced
into parroting the Trumpian line, and indeed, elements of the media
that lie outside the Trumposphere appear to be prospering and
flourishing under his regime.

But it is still true that Trumpian bullshit serves not only as a test
of elite loyalty, but as a signifier of belonging to a mass audience.
One chants, “Lock her up,” at a rally not to express a desire or
expectation that Hillary Clinton will serve jail time for violating an
obscure State Department guideline, but simply because to be a certain
kind of member of a certain kind of community these days requires the
chant.

The big, beautiful wall that Mexico will allegedly pay for, the war on
the “fake news” media, Barack Obama’s forged birth certificate, and
now the secret tape recording that will destroy James Comey are not
genuine articles of faith meant to be believed in. Their invocation is
a formalism or a symbol; a sign of compliance and belonging. The
content is bullshit.

Bullshit as a coping mechanism
Critically, though bullshit plays a genuine functional role for the
Trump regime, there is no particular reason to believe its adoption as
Trump’s primary rhetorical mode is a strategic choice. Trump is wildly
unfit for the presidency in obvious and well-known ways, including,
critically, a total lack of knowledge of or interest in any area of
public policy.

Trump lacks the knowledge to govern, the patience to learn how to
govern, or the humility to admit it. Consequently, he bullshits,
telling Time that he “only needed a short time to understand
everything about health care” and the Economist that his tax cut plan
doesn’t benefit the rich because “I mean I can tell you this, I get
more deductions, they have deductions for birds flying across America,
they have deductions for everything.”

As Frankfurt writes:

Bullshit is unavoidable whenever circumstances require someone to talk
without knowing what he is talking about. Thus the production of
bullshit is stimulated whenever a person’s obligations or
opportunities to speak about some topic are more excessive than his
knowledge of the facts that are relevant to that topic. This
discrepancy is common in public life, where people are frequently
impelled whether by their own propensities or by the demands of others
to speak extensively about matters of which they are to some degree
ignorant.
Nobody, needless to say, could actually have predicted Trump’s
ascension to the presidency. But Frankfurt’s 30-year-old analysis
perfectly forecasts the consequences of electing a profoundly ignorant
man to the most powerful political office in the world — an
unprecedented explosion of bullshit.

The president bullshits because he is ignorant. But his aides, in
order to manipulate Trump into governing in ways they find reasonable
or ideologically congenial or both, must echo his bullshit to prove
their loyalty. This winds up creating substantial levels of
second-order bullshit as flunkies pony up an outlandish series of
pro-Trump claims — claims that are then echoed in a large and vibrant
ecosystem of pro-Trump media.

This sphere of bullshit ultimately ends up encompassing not only
flunkies like Sean Spicer and Kellyanne Conway but aides such as
Deputy Attorney General Ron Rosenstein or National Security Adviser
H.R. McMaster, who entered Trump’s service with sterling reputations
yet inevitably find themselves fronting for one form or another of
flimflam.

Trump’s bullshit is contagious
For somebody who is so poorly informed, Trump is by all accounts a
voracious news consumer. Shane Goldmacher reports for Politico that on
a typical morning, “Trump reads through a handful of newspapers in
print, including The New York Times, New York Post, The Washington
Post and The Wall Street Journal — all while watching cable news shows
in the background.”

He watches, most of all, to see who is defending him zealously. The
Washington Post reports that in the wake of Comey’s firing, Trump “sat
in front of a television watching cable news coverage of” the firing
and “noticed another flaw: Nobody was defending him.” As a result, he
was “irate” and “pinned much of the blame on Spicer and [White House
Communications Director Michael] Dubke’s communications operation,”
even as allies of Spicer and Dubke complained to the press that it was
unreasonable to expect them to have a surrogate strategy to roll out
when Trump had given them no advance notice of the move.

But the president doesn’t want a well-planned communications strategy;
he wants people who’ll leap in front of the cameras to blindly defend
whatever it is he says or does.

And because he’s the president of the United States, plenty of people
are willing to oblige him. That starts with official communicators
like Spicer, Conway (who simultaneously tries to keep her credibility
in the straight world by telling Joe Scarborough she needs to shower
after defending Trump), and Sarah Huckabee Sanders. But there are also
the informal surrogates. Trump is tapping Callista Gingrich to serve
as his ambassador to the Holy See, an honor that Jonathan Swan reports
he was initially reluctant to grant “because he likes seeing her
husband Newt defending him on TV.” When reassured that there would be
a satellite link for Newt in Rome, Trump agreed.

House Intelligence Committee Chair Devin Nunes embarrassed himself but
pleased Trump with a goofy effort to back up Trump’s wiretapping
claims. Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin, who certainly knows better,
sat next to Trump in an Economist interview and gave him totally
undeserved credit for intimidating the Chinese on currency
manipulation. Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross hailed a small-time trade
agreement with China consisting largely of the implementation of
already agreed-upon measures as “more than has been done in the whole
history of U.S.-China relations on trade.”

This kind of bullshit, like Trump’s, couldn't possibly be intended to
actually convince any kind of open-minded individual. It’s a
performance for an audience of one. A performance that echoes day and
night across cable news, AM talk radio, and the conservative internet.

The growing bullshit zone threatens reality
Havel’s post-totalitarian bullshit would be reinforced and undergirded
by a state-controlled media apparatus. In Peter Pomerantsev’s
evocative phrase about media and society in Vladimir Putin’s Russia,
in such a place, “nothing is true and everything is possible.”

Trump’s America is, obviously, not like that. The United States lacks
a major state-run broadcast agency, and PBS television is more likely
to show you old episodes of British TV shows than government
propaganda. America has a large and vibrant independent media sector
that is, if anything, prospering financially as a result of Trump’s
ascension to power.

What we have instead is Fox News, Sean Hannity, Rush Limbaugh, and
other talkers — a constellation of conservative-themed commercial mass
media outlets that decided during the 2016 primary that ratings were
more important than ideology and that now serve as a nonstop amen
chorus for the White House.

Slate’s Will Oremus wrote on May 10 that “Fox News is covering James
Comey’s firing from an alternate reality”:

No one familiar with the network's popular prime-time opinion shows
will be surprised to know that they responded to the news unanimously
with full-throated Trump boosterism. But even a jaded Sean Hannity
viewer might have been brought up short by just how hard he spun the
Comey firing throughout the course of his 10 p.m. show. The FBI
director had been blasted by Hillary Clinton supporters for
publicizing the agency’s investigation into her emails at the height
of the presidential campaign — a criticism echoed in the memo from
Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein that Trump used to justify
Comey’s dismissal. Yet Hannity suggested that Comey’s real failing was
that he let Clinton off the hook. The host called him “a national
embarrassment” who “has failed you, the American people, on a
spectacular level” by not going after Trump’s election rival more
aggressively. Hannity closed his show with what he called “the most
important question of the night”: With Comey gone, will Clinton
finally face the criminal prosecution she deserves? All three members
of his expert panel proceeded to agree that she was a felon who should
be indicted, though they differed on whether that would actually
happen.
Bill Kristol, the veteran conservative operative and longtime
proprietor of the Weekly Standard, told a Mediaite podcast that the
tenor of Fox’s Trump coverage is “ridiculous, honestly, and
depressing.”

National Review’s Kevin Williams has been in a long-running Twitter
feud with Hannity, in which the more thoughtful and more
ideology-oriented writer calls the radio host and television
personality a “sycophant” who is also “dumb and dishonest and has no
self-respect” (he is not wrong).

 Follow
 Kevin D. Williamson @KevinNR
The problem with Hannity is that he is dumb and dishonest and has no
self-respect. https://twitter.com/breathtkinan/status/863016427481174018
…
8:03 PM - 12 May 2017
  84 84 Retweets   321 321 likes
Twitter Ads info & Privacy
 Follow
 Kevin D. Williamson @KevinNR
He's a sycophant. He does what sycophants do, that's all.
https://twitter.com/MarshallLocke/status/863097803760779264 …
12:16 AM - 13 May 2017
  17 17 Retweets   82 82 likes
Twitter Ads info & Privacy
Rush Limbaugh opened his May 15 show, by denouncing all interest in
the Comey story as just a feeble effort to take down the president,
arguing that “the real Watergate comparison here would be Barack Obama
ordering the FBI to spy on Republican campaigns, maybe not just
Trump’s.”

CNN long ago sidelined its normal roster of conservative pundits in
favor of reliable Trump defenders Jeffrey Lord and Kayleigh McEnany.
George Will lost his contract with Fox News in favor of a new gig on
MSNBC. Trump critic Bret Stephens is gone from the Wall Street Journal
op-ed page and over to the New York Times, while over at the Journal,
you can read Daniel Henninger explain that the Clintons are to blame
for Comey’s firing.

In the United States of Bullshit, anything can happen
For Trump, the constant bullshitting serves as a highly effective
filter. Senators like John McCain and Ben Sasse, who’ve overwhelmingly
voted with Trump when it counts, have nonetheless refused to echo his
bullshit — proving their integrity to the world and their disloyalty
to Trump. But formerly obscure figures such as Lord and Nunes who’ve
proven their subservience to Trump are on the upswing, while other
longtime players in conservative politics are debasing themselves on
Trump’s behalf.

“Since his selection as vice president,” Abby Phillip writes at the
Washington Post, “[Mike] Pence has been unflagging in his loyalty and
deference to Trump. But in return, the president and White House aides
have repeatedly set Pence up to be the public face of official
narratives that turn out to be misleading or false.”

The upshot is a conservative movement and a Republican Party that, if
Trump persists in office, will be remade along Trumpian lines with
integrity deprecated and bullshit running rampant. It’s clear that the
owners and top talent at commercial conservative media are perfectly
content with that outcome, and the question facing the party’s
politicians is whether they are, too.

The common thread of the Trumposphere is that there doesn’t need to be
any common thread. One day Comey went soft on Clinton; the next day he
was fired for being too hard on her; the day after that, it wasn’t
about Clinton at all. The loyalist is just supposed to go along with
whatever the line of the day is.

This is the authoritarian spirit in miniature, assembling a party and
a movement that is bound to no principles and not even committed to
following its own rhetoric from one day to the next. A “terrific”
health plan that will “cover everyone” can transform into a bill to
slash the Medicaid rolls by 14 million in the blink of an eye and
nobody is supposed to notice or care. Anything could happen at any
moment, all of it powered by bullshit.


---
Peacr Is Doable

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Green Youth Movement" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To post to this group, send an email to [email protected].
Visit this group at https://groups.google.com/group/greenyouth.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to