6 January…Now that was an inept coup…for the most part.

A president just can’t rely on an angry mob to disrupt democratic process any 
more, but within that mob was something more dangerous and sinister. While we 
saw a lot of Trumpists having the best day of their life bathing in the 
pleasure of transgression, there were others hiding in that mob who knew what 
they were doing. They knew how to build bombs and brought them to DC. (Two were 
actually placed at RNC and DNC headquarters, and the Michigan and Georgia 
legislatures were evacuated due to a bomb threat for MI and an armed militia 
presence in GA.) They were prepared for capture and kill with smuggled 
firearms, bulletproof vests, and zip ties. I don’t even want to speculate on 
what would have happened had they reached any congressional representatives, 
but the Michigan plot to capture and kill the governor gives us a clue. These 
revolutionaries are not play soldiers. They understand distributed leadership 
and have for years. (If the cult loses its leader, can it continue? For the 
truly committed, yes.) They have military training, and are training others. 

How many there are is hard to know because no one knows how to separate the 
real soldiers from the toys, but I feel confident saying there are enough to 
cause a lot of trouble for a long time to come. The question for me is how did 
they interpret the day’s events? Trump gave them the go-code with “Fight for 
Trump.” Did that mean for just that day, or is the US going to have a decade of 
revolutionary adventurism akin to what the Left did in the 70s. The US has 
conveniently forgotten how much violent activity there was from radical groups 
in the 70s (over 2,500 bombs detonated in ’71 and ’72 and hundreds thereafter), 
and it looks like the US could soon be getting a reminder what that is like. 
Chatter about a new attack three days before inauguration day is already 
underway.

The other key element to come out of this day is that there is a high 
probability that it marks the end of Trumpist populism. The off ramp has 
arrived, and now two key realignments are going to accelerate. (I have no idea 
what the final outcome will be.) There will be a reorganizing of the racial 
order (not just BLM, but also an institutional one symbolized by the Georgia 
election). A reorganization of the political order is also about to happen. 
These two events will occur in the context of the economic order of inequality 
continuing to intensify. So what is the political calculation? What will it 
mean to be conservative and what will it mean to be a Republican? How will 
these new coalitions take form, and what new contradictions will be tolerated 
or rejected?

The anti-Trump Neoconservatives and Reagan conservatives are ecstatic, 
believing they may have a chance to recapture the Republican Party. A lot of 
back-slapping and congratulatory rhetoric is going around—they were on the 
“right side of history.” This could indicate that their unlikely alliance with 
the Democrats could be ending. Now that the all-out effort to rid the country 
of Trump and Trumpism seems to be accomplished, they can go their separate 
ways. The neocons can go back to warmongering and torture, and Reaganites can 
get on with ending the federal government and the social safety net (such as it 
is). These contradictions no longer have to be ignored. What they will continue 
to agree on is that populism (as opposed to rule by the elite) is the ultimate 
enemy. Yes, there could be a struggle over who will be the party of the elite.

As for populism after Trump, it will continue and try to dominate what it means 
to be conservative and a Republican. The new model is already being floated. 
The Republicans could become a big tent working-class party. Given that these 
voters are going to continue to be economically crushed, they will be angry, 
motivated, and numerous. This new party could perhaps flip the left into being 
the minority party. 

To do this some sacrifices will have to be made. First, the racism has to go. 
Some on the right see that they made progress with people of color with the 
populist position even with a racist candidate and agenda. If they ejected the 
racists and the racist agenda, how many folks could they attract? One group 
they would get in droves immediately is Catholic Hispanics. The racist wing 
won’t vote for the Democrats, and the party of “grievance for all” (now 
primarily economic) could grow bigger and will have a future given changing 
demographics. Second, they must sacrifice Wall Street (which already seems 
pretty willing to go) and the waxing sector of corporate power (which also 
appears willing to leave). Those sectors will head to the democratic side 
cynically waving their Black Lives Matter banners (the best marketing plan 
since greenwashing). A lot of anti-corporate rhetoric from the right is already 
starting to appear on the popular right-wing shows and podcasts. Then again the 
racist white grievance party under new management could hang on for another 
election cycle depending how much more violence is coming. 

The libertarians appear to be split. The establishment side, like the Reason 
Foundation, seems to be leaning left. Even their funder, Charles Koch (although 
the Foundation was originally David’s baby), seems to be reassessing his 
relation to the right. They will ignore all the economic disagreements, 
believing the social elements are more important for now. Whether the Dems take 
up this possibility remains to be seen. Given recent activities, the more 
radical working-class libertarians, mostly in the West and eastern Northwest 
are still on a “destroy all government” agenda followed by getting jiggy on the 
rubble. They have no governance plan. Just live free. January 6 was a good day, 
but would be better if they burned the Capitol down along with the rest of DC.

The Christian right is also split. The undereducated seem to want to stick with 
Trump as God’s instrument on earth, which is understandable because that is 
their only possibility for power. The establishment is unhappy all round. Even 
Pat Robertson and Betsy DeVos have denounced Trump. The suburban middle-class 
Christians wondering how to get their kids a new swing set during Covid are 
horrified by what happened, and are beginning to see their allegiance to Trump 
as misguided. They are also shaken that the promise of victory given by their 
prophets was wrong. Could they have been listening to false prophets, or did 
they just not have enough faith? The Christian right is in the wilderness 
again, since it is doubtful they will be accepted by any of the coalitions. 
Trumpism is/was their only path to power. 

I should add these realignments are also taking place under Covid—an absolute 
catastrophe for right-wing ideology in the US. With no belief in the public 
good (only individual responsibility), in the magical thinking that the market 
will solve any crisis, that the government can’t help and instead makes crises 
worse, that austerity is necessary, and that everyone must always work, they 
are deploying a merciless necropolitics that cannot reconcile death and 
economy, so residents get the worst of both. 

Christians pushed it even further in journals such as First Things (America’s 
most influential religious journal) that the working class knows that this life 
is just one part of their journey to greater glory, so they have no fear of 
decay or death and want to go back to work. Where I am in Florida (America’s 
social laboratory where the residents are the lab monkeys), everything is open, 
the hospitals are full, people are dying at alarming rates, and the Trumpist 
governor has decreed that no mask mandates may be passed anywhere in the state. 
Whatever right coalition emerges as dominant, it will have to contend with the 
virus and that may throw a few more contradictions into the mix. 

SK

________________________________________
From: [email protected] <[email protected]> on 
behalf of Geert Lovink <[email protected]>
Sent: Friday, January 8, 2021 11:13 AM
To: a moderated mailing list for net criticism
Subject: Re: <nettime> made for TV, made for social media

Good question, Keith.

Was it a putch without a purpose of a mob without a cause? For sure they were 
all revved up, dazed by meme magick and shit, looking for the best selfie 
opportunity.

Once we enter the heart of the power, and roam around there, we do not face 
power as such. No need to repeat here what Foucault and many other after him 
have written about power. We know, but what if one has to experience this at 
first hand, as riot tourists?

The warriors were running through corridors, without a plan, needless to say, 
without their leader, as he was sitting in front of his TV set, around the 
corner, enjoying the images, watching the spectacle unfold, yet remaining 
silent at the decisive moment.

There was no command, no plan, not even a serious counterforce. At best it was 
a ‘disruption’ such as promoted by Silicon Valley venture capitalists.

Geert

> On 8 Jan 2021, at 4:39 pm, Keith Sanborn <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> Put another way, was it the burning of the Reichstag or the storming of the 
> Winter Palace? or neither?



#  distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission
#  <nettime>  is a moderated mailing list for net criticism,
#  collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets
#  more info: http://mx.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l
#  archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: [email protected]
#  @nettime_bot tweets mail w/ sender unless #ANON is in Subject:
#  distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission
#  <nettime>  is a moderated mailing list for net criticism,
#  collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets
#  more info: http://mx.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l
#  archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: [email protected]
#  @nettime_bot tweets mail w/ sender unless #ANON is in Subject:

Reply via email to