Trevor Morley's Tache
Well-Known Member
Yes, it’s part of the slow creep of authoritarianism.
Most aspiring dictators don’t do it intentionally (though, often their advisors are very aware of the tactic and encourage them to do it, which is the case for Trump); it’s just the way they behave. It has allowed them to gain lower levels of power so they continue it as they rise. They chip, chip, chip away at norms and perceptions of acceptability.
Overtime they wittingly or unwittingly normalise behaviour that would have previously been seen as objectionable or abhorrent, eventually working their way to outright illegal, until their supporters are willing to accept anything they say or do as doctrine of the one-man ‘party’. Which is really just a cult, as @FogBlueInSanFran has mentioned once or twice. :-)
It doesn’t happen overnight. But, with the level of media scrutiny available today, we can now see it in fine detail, in real time, over many years, and via comprehensive retrospective analysis.
It’s the same tactic when he makes “jokes” about being president for more than two terms, which he has done many times, as recently as last week (this time in a less jovial tone). It’s not a joke — it’s him telling you what he plans to do, before he tries to do it.
It’s nearly always him telling you what he actually wants to do. Or what he actually wants his ‘supporters’ to do, in this case.
But, as you say — as is the case for Putin and other de facto dictators — he couches his statements so as to maintain deniability. Notice I didn’t say “plausible deniability”, because that is often not the goal. Much of the time the authoritarians want everyone to know they aware their opposition especially can see through it. The fact they can do it, with little-to-no consequence, is part of the exercise. They just want to be able to officially deny later to keep up the pretense of ‘civility’ and ‘responsibility’.
I really do fear for many groups, but journalists are top of the list, as they are usually among the first to be officially silenced as countries shift from democracy to authoritarianism.
That process of course started awhile ago, but it hasn’t quite gotten to open state-sponsored suppression yet. But make not mistake, even with the US’s relatively strong culture of freedom of speech and press, it can be suppressed, especially if Trump gets a second term and declares a mandate for further “reforms”.
Every day he is telling America what his regime is going to do.
Is that the same as 'progressive' authoritarianism?
Asking for a friend.