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<https://truthout.org/articles/noam-chomsky-trump-has-adopted-a-viva-death-approach-to-the-presidency/>
  


Noam Chomsky: Threat of Trump Galvanizing a Militia to Stay in Power Cannot be 
Ruled Out


George Yancy

20-26 minutes

  _____  

As protests against racist police violence rock the country, fascism ascends in 
the Trump White House and the COVID-19 pandemic persists, this country is at a 
pivotal moment. I spoke about this flash point in history with Noam Chomsky, 
known as the father of modern linguistics, who is one of the world’s most 
prominent public intellectuals and the author of over 100 books, including 
Hegemony or Survival, Failed States, Optimism Over Despair, Hopes and 
Prospects, Masters of Mankind and Who Rules the World?

In the following interview, Chomsky provides insight on how we can best grapple 
with the current moment – and prepare for the sobering future.

George Yancy: Before I ask you about COVID-19, I’d like to start by asking your 
thoughts on the horrible murder of George Floyd and how you understand the 
protests that have occurred throughout the U.S. and the world. I am especially 
interested in your response to Trump’s rhetoric to deploy the military to 
suppress a so-called insurrection. 

Noam Chomsky: “Horrible murder” is right. But let us be clear about the murders 
of Black Americans going on right now. The brutality of a few racist policemen 
in Minneapolis constitutes a small part of the crime.

It has been widely noted that death rates from the pandemic are far higher 
among Black people. A current study found that “Americans living in counties 
with above-average black populations are three times as likely to die of the 
coronavirus 
<https://www.washingtonpost.com/graphics/2020/politics/coronavirus-race-african%20americans/?utm_campaign=wp_evening_edition&utm_medium=email&utm_source=newsletter&wpisrc=nl_evening>
  as those in above-average white counties. This slaughter of Black people is 
partly a result of how resources were devoted to dealing with the crisis, 
mostly “in areas that happened to be whiter and more affluent.” But it is 
rooted more deeply in a hideous record of 400 years of malevolent racism. The 
plague has been taking different forms since the establishment of the most 
vicious system of slavery in human history — a prime foundation of the 
country’s industry, finance, commerce and general prosperity — but has at most 
been mitigated, never brought close to a cure.

American slavery was unique not only in terms of its viciousness, but also in 
that it was linked to skin color. Within this system, every Black face was 
marked with the emblem, “Your nature is to be a slave.”

Other sectors have been harshly treated. Jews and Italians were so feared and 
despised a century ago that the 1924 racist immigration law was designed to bar 
them from the country, sending many Jews to crematoria. In support, racists of 
the day could plead that we had to protect ourselves from the Jews and Italians 
running the major criminal syndicates, from creatures like Meyer Lansky and Al 
Capone and Bugsy Siegel. But they were finally assimilated. The same happened 
with the Irish.

With Black people, however, it is different. They are deemed permanently 
unassimilable in a society cursed by racism and white supremacy. For the 
victims, the effects are compounded by the lasting socioeconomic gaps 
engendered by the curse, intensified by the neoliberal assault of the past 40 
years, a great boon to extreme wealth, a disaster for the more vulnerable.

The slaughter of Black Americans proceeds under the radar. The president, whose 
malice knows no bound, has been exploiting the focus on the pandemic to pursue 
his service to his prime constituency, great wealth and corporate power. One 
method is eliminating regulations that protect the public but harm profits. In 
the midst of an unprecedented respiratory pandemic, Trump has moved to increase 
air pollution, which makes COVID-19 far more deadly 
<https://truthout.org/articles/trumps-epa-is-unleashing-the-pollution-that-makes-us-vulnerable-to-covid-19>
 , so much so that tens of thousands of Americans may die as a result, the 
business press reports. As usual, deaths are not randomly distributed: “Hardest 
hit are low-income communities and people of color,” who are forced to live in 
the most dangerous areas.

It is all too easy to continue. The protesters know all of this very well. They 
need no studies. For many it is their lived experience. The protests are not 
just calling for an end to police brutality in Black communities, but for much 
more fundamental restructuring of social and economic institutions.

And they are receiving remarkable support, as we see not only from actions all 
over the country but also from polls. An early June poll 
<https://www.reuters.com/article/us-minneapolis-police-poll-exclusive/exclusive-most-americans-sympathize-with-protests-disapprove-of-trumps-response-reuters-ipsos-idUSKBN239347>
  “found 64 percent of American adults were ‘sympathetic to people who are out 
protesting right now,’ while 27 percent said they were not and 9 percent were 
unsure.”

We may compare this reaction to another occasion when similar protests 
occurred: 1992, after the acquittal of the Los Angeles police officers who beat 
Rodney King almost to death. A week of riots followed, with over 60 deaths, 
finally quelled by the National Guard backed by federal troops sent by 
President Bush. The protests were mostly limited to Los Angeles, nothing like 
what we are seeing today.

Trump has one overriding concern, his own welfare: How can I use this tragedy 
to enhance my electoral prospects by firing up the most racist and violent 
components of my voting base? His natural instincts call for violence: “the 
most vicious dogs, and most ominous weapons, I have ever seen.” And send in the 
military to teach the “scum” a lesson they’ll never forget.

Trump’s plan to “dominate” the errant population by violence elicited 
widespread anger, including bitter condemnation by former chairmen of the Joint 
Chiefs of Staff along with expressions of sympathy for the protestors. Former 
Joint Chiefs of Staff chairman Admiral Mike Mullen wrote 
<https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2020/06/american-cities-are-not-battlespaces/612553/>
 : “As a white man, I cannot claim perfect understanding of the fear and anger 
that African Americans feel today…. But as someone who has been around for a 
while, I know enough — and I’ve seen enough — to understand that those feelings 
are real and that they are all too painfully founded.”

The changes in the past two decades are perhaps a sign that large parts of the 
population are coming to recognize long-concealed truths about our society, a 
ray of light in dark times.

We are often told that the United States is the most powerful country in the 
world. We are fed on a diet of “American exceptionalism.” Yet, globally, we 
have the highest number of deaths due to COVID-19. We were systemically 
unprepared. How do you explain this incongruity, and what role does Trump play 
in all of this?

The lack of preparedness has three basic causes: capitalist logic, neoliberal 
doctrine, and the character of the political leadership. Let’s run through them 
briefly in turn.

After the 2003 SARS epidemic was contained, scientists were well aware that a 
pandemic was likely and that it might be caused by another coronavirus. They 
also knew how to take measures to prepare. But knowledge is not enough. Someone 
must use it. The obvious candidate is the drug companies, which have all the 
resources needed and huge profits, thanks in no small measure to the exorbitant 
patents granted them in the mislabeled “free trade” agreements. But they were 
blocked by capitalist logic. There’s no profit in preparing for a possible 
catastrophe down the road — and as economist Milton Friedman intoned at the 
dawn of the neoliberal age 40 years ago, the sole responsibility of the 
corporation is to maximize shareholder value (and management wealth). As 
recently as 2017, the major drug companies rejected a European Union proposal 
to fast-track research on pathogens 
<https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/may/25/exclusive-big-pharma-rejected-eu-plan-to-fast-track-vaccines-in-2017>
 , including coronavirus.

The other candidate is the government, which also has the necessary resources 
and has played a significant role in developing most vaccines and drugs. But 
that path is blocked by the neoliberal doctrine that has prevailed since 
Reagan, who informed us that government is the problem — meaning that decisions 
must be removed from the government, which is to some extent influenced by 
citizens, to the unaccountable private tyrannies that were the primary agents 
(and beneficiaries) of the neoliberal triumph. So, government is barred as well.

The third factor is individual governments. Keeping to the U.S., President 
George H.W. Bush had established a [President’s] Council of Advisors on Science 
and Technology (PCAST) to keep the president abreast of important scientific 
issues. One of President Obama’s first acts on taking office in 2009 was to 
commission a PCAST study on how to deal with a pandemic. It was provided to the 
White House a few weeks later. The science-oriented Obama administration 
proceeded to put in place a pandemic infrastructure which planned early 
response to infectious disease threats. That was in place until Jan. 20, 2017, 
when President Trump took office, and within days began to dismantle the entire 
executive branch science infrastructure, including the preparations for 
pandemic 
<https://www.statnews.com/2020/05/17/the-art-of-the-pandemic-how-donald-trump-walked-the-u-s-into-the-covid-19-era/>
 , and indeed moved on to reject science generally from a role in informing 
policy, reversing the bipartisan initiatives since World War II that have been 
critical for developing the modern high-tech economy.

To drive further nails into the coffin, Trump disbanded programs in which 
scientists worked with Chinese colleagues to investigate coronaviruses. Each 
year, he defunded the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). That 
continued with his budget proposal of February 2020 while the pandemic was 
raging, calling for further CDC cuts (while raising subsidies to fossil fuel 
industries). Scientists were systematically replaced by industry officials who 
would ensure that private profit is maximized whatever the impact on the 
irrelevant public.

Trump’s decisions accord with the judgment of his favorite pundit, Rush 
Limbaugh, to whom he awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom. He instructs us 
that science is one of the “four corners of deceit,” along with academia, media 
and government, all of which “exist by virtue of deceit.” The guiding maxim of 
the administration was articulated more eloquently by Franco’s leading general 
in 1936: “Down with intelligence! Viva death!”

As a result, the U.S. was “systematically unprepared” when the pandemic hit.

In February, Trump said that COVID-19 would just disappear, that “one day, it’s 
like a miracle, it will disappear.” He was profoundly mistaken and then blamed 
China, even “racializing” the disease. Some would claim that Trump has blood on 
his hands because of his gross mishandling of COVID-19. What are your thoughts 
about this? 

Tens of thousands of Americans died as a result of Trump’s dedicated service to 
his primary constituency: extreme wealth and corporate power. His malevolence 
persisted after the disease struck. A few weeks after discovery of the first 
symptoms last December, Chinese scientists identified the virus, sequenced the 
genome, and provided the information to the WHO and the world. Countries in 
Asia and Oceania reacted at once, and have the situation largely under control. 
Others varied. Trump brought up the rear. For two crucial months, U.S. 
intelligence and health officials tried to capture the attention of the White 
House, in vain. Finally, Trump noticed — possibly when the stock market 
crashed, it has been reported. Since then it has been chaos.

Not surprisingly, Trump and his minions have been thrashing around desperately 
to find some scapegoat to blame for his crimes against Americans, oblivious to 
how many more people he slaughters. Defunding and then pulling out of the WHO 
[World Health Organization] is a sadistic blow against Africans, Yemenis, and 
many other poor and desperate people who had been protected from rampant 
diseases by WHO medical aid even before the coronavirus struck, and are now 
facing new catastrophes in addition. They are dispensable if it will improve 
his electoral prospects.

Trump’s charge against the WHO, which is too ludicrous to discuss, is that it 
was being controlled by China. By pulling out, he increases Chinese influence. 
But it is unfair to criticize him for foolishness. The outcome only underscores 
the fact that he never cared about this in the first place.

Speaking of responsibility and blood on one’s hands, a certain interpretation 
of individual rights seems to override a collective social responsibility for 
many in the U.S. who are not observing the recommendations of the WHO and the 
CDC, including a blatant rejection of wearing masks. What would you say is 
fueling this anger and lack of responsibility toward the health and safety of 
others?

Republicans overwhelmingly have faith in the president, no matter how much his 
actions harm them. His god-like image is amplified by those who surround him, 
thanks to his successful campaign to get rid of everyone but fawning 
sycophants, like the second-in-command, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, who 
muses that God may have sent Trump to earth to save Israel from Iran. Pompeo’s 
fellow evangelicals, the largest base of Trump supporters, likely agree. And 
they hear much the same generally from the Republican Party, which has 
virtually abandoned any shred of integrity and abjectly worship him whatever he 
does. Much the same is true of his media echo chamber. Studies have shown that 
the primary source of information for Republicans is Fox News, Limbaugh and 
Breitbart. In fact, an interesting dyad has developed: Trump issues some random 
pronouncement, it is hailed by Sean Hannity as a path-breaking discovery, and 
the next morning Trump turns to Fox News to find out what to think.

Surveys of public opinion reveal the consequences. A Pew poll in April, when 
Trump’s responsibility for the growing disaster was beyond serious debate, 
found that 83 percent of Republicans and Republican leaners rated Trump’s 
response to the outbreak as either excellent or good 
<https://www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2020/04/02/5-facts-about-partisan-reactions-to-covid-19-in-the-u-s/>
  (as compared with 18 percent of Democrats and Democratic leaners). They are 
listening to a president who had been comparing the virus to “regular flu,” and 
who in mid-April tweeted instructions to his supporters to “LIBERATE VIRGINIA, 
and save your great 2nd Amendment. It is under siege!” The 2nd Amendment has 
not the slightest relevance, but Trump knows what buttons to push. He was, 
transparently, urging his troops to take up arms, part of his more general 
attempts to encourage armed protestors to violate orders in states with 
Democratic governors 
<https://www.latimes.com/opinion/story/2020-04-23/trump-liberate-michigan-but-not-georgia>
  (like Virginia), at a time when there were almost 50,000 recorded deaths.

Let’s kill more Americans, not just Yemenis and Africans, if it will improve my 
electoral prospects. “Down with intelligence! Viva death!”

When we exclude the Astroturf operations and the fervent loyalty of the voting 
base, it’s not clear that much is left of an appeal to “individual rights” in 
any meaningful sense.

Nor is it clear that the protestors are overriding social responsibility. They 
evidently don’t see it that way. They would be appalled at the idea that what 
they are doing is similar to people with assault rifles running around the 
streets shooting randomly, though the comparison is apt. They do not think they 
are endangering anyone. Rather, they are following their revered leader in 
protesting an effort by the radical left, maybe on instructions from China, to 
destroy their elementary rights and even to take away their guns.

All further signs that the country is in deep trouble — and in the light of 
U.S. power, the world with it.

Apart from Trump’s incompetence, what needs to be done globally so that we 
might both prevent another pandemic and what must we do to be better prepared 
in the future? 

I don’t feel that “incompetence” is quite the right word. He’s quite competent 
in pursuing his primary goals: enriching the very wealthy, enhancing corporate 
power and profit, keeping his base in line while he stabs them in the back, and 
concentrating power in his hands by dismantling the executive branch, and so 
intimidating congressional Republicans that they timidly accept almost 
anything. I didn’t hear a peep from them when Trump fired the scientist in 
charge of vaccine development for daring to question one of the quack cures he 
is promoting. There is dead silence from these ranks as he carries out his 
purge of inspector generals, who impose some controls on the swamp he has 
created in Washington, also insulting one of the most respected Republican 
senators, 86-year-old Chuck Grassley, who devoted his long career to 
establishing this system.

It is an impressive achievement.

What has to be done globally is to follow the advice that scientists are 
providing. A new pandemic is likely, probably worse than this one because of 
global warming, which may become climate roasting with another four years of 
the Trump plague. Steps have to be taken to prepare for it, the kind that were 
recommended in 2003 and were in small part pursued until Trump wielded his 
wrecking ball. There should be international cooperation in seeking 
coronaviruses and other potential hazards, developing the scientific 
understanding needed for rapid development of vaccines and drugs to alleviate 
symptoms, and implementing contingency plans to be put in place if a pandemic 
strikes again.

For the U.S. in particular, that means extricating the society from neoliberal 
dogma, which has had bitter consequences in the domain of health (and many 
others). The business model for hospitals, with no waste or spare capacity, is 
an invitation to disaster. More generally, the highly inefficient privatized 
health care system is a terrible burden on the society, with double the costs 
of other developed countries and some of the poorest outcomes. A recent Lancet 
study estimates its annual cost at almost $500 billion and 68,000 extra deaths. 
It is outrageous that the U.S. cannot rise to the level of other societies and 
instead relies on the most cruel and costly system of universal health care: 
emergency rooms. If you can drag yourself to one you can get care — followed 
perhaps by a healthy bill.

The same neoliberal dogma prevents the National Institutes of Health from 
proceeding beyond essential research and development for drugs to testing and 
distribution, bypassing the private companies and implementing the provisions 
of U.S. law, constantly ignored, which require that drugs produced with 
government assistance (virtually all) be available to the public at reasonable 
cost. The most careful studies of these matters that I know of are by Dean 
Baker, who estimates enormous savings with no loss of innovation if such 
measures are introduced (see his book  <https://deanbaker.net/books/rigged.htm> 
Rigged, available free).

This is only a bare beginning. There are deep social, cultural and 
institutional problems that should be addressed.

Assuming that the November election is close, do you see Trump deploying the 
ruse of voting fraud to remain in power? If that happens, what do you foresee 
in terms of this playing out politically? 

Trump and associates are already pushing that scam energetically, not for the 
first time. They know that they head a minority party and must resort to deceit 
and fraud to maintain political power. And for them, a lot is at stake. Another 
four years would enable them to guarantee that their far-right policies will 
prevail for a generation no matter what the population wants. That’s been the 
goal of the McConnell strategy of placing the judiciary, top to bottom, in the 
hands of young far-right jurists who can block programs that are in the public 
interest. Loss of the current opportunity might doom their project. For Trump 
personally, the prospects of loss may be severe, even if he is psychologically 
capable of accepting it like a normal human being. He may be vulnerable to 
serious legal charges if his immunity is lost. And with the Republican Party 
having surrendered to his authority, North Korean-style, he faces few 
impediments. We can leave the rest to the imagination.

I realize that this sounds dystopian, but who is to say that Trump, out of 
sheer lust for power, will not galvanize a militia to back his desire to stay 
in power? Any thoughts? 

Can’t be ruled out. As widely recognized, the country is facing a longer-term 
constitutional crisis. The Senate is a radically undemocratic institution, to a 
lesser extent the electoral college. For demographic and structural reasons, a 
small minority of white, Christian, rural, traditional, often white supremacist 
voters can maintain control to an extent even beyond what racist Southern 
Democrats exercised before Nixon’s “southern strategy” brought them into the 
Republican fold. And this is virtually unchangeable by constitutional 
amendment. It’s not out of the question that in Trump’s hands, the impending 
crisis may come about very soon.

Noam, I know that you prefer not to talk much about yourself, but at 91 how are 
you personally dealing with our surreal historical moment living under 
COVID-19? 

In narrow personal terms, it’s not a severe difficulty for my wife and me. For 
many others, it’s a radically different story. The moment is indeed surreal. 
The future will be shaped by how we emerge from the crisis. The forces that are 
responsible for it, and for the neoliberal assault on the population that has, 
demonstrably, intensified it sharply, are not sitting back quietly. They are 
working relentlessly to ensure that what emerges is a harsher and more 
authoritarian version of what they had created in their own interest. There are 
popular forces seeking to grasp the current opportunities to reverse the 
disasters of the recent past and to move forward to a far more humane and 
decent world. And, crucially, to confront the far more severe crises that are 
looming.

We will recover from the pandemic, at a terrible cost. We will not recover from 
the ongoing melting of the polar ice sheets and the other consequences of the 
roasting of the earth that will make many of the areas of human habitation 
unlivable before too long if we continue on our current course. Another four 
years of the Trump malignancy will sharply increase the difficulties of dealing 
with this impending catastrophe — even if we escape the threat of terminal 
nuclear war that Trump is escalating by dismantling the arms control regime 
that offered some protection and racing to develop new and more dangerous means 
of destruction that undermine our diminishing security.

https://truthout.org/articles/noam-chomsky-trump-has-adopted-a-viva-death-approach-to-the-presidency/

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