In late January, “crunchy conservative” journalist
Rod Dreher
took a stab at understanding the disconnect between the conservative
“elites” [ha, ha—oops, I mean “sic”] and the long-suffering
Generic American Party grassroots. Writing in
The American Conservative (
Trump & the Conservative Intelligentsia, January 23, 2016), Dreher got to the nub of his quandary with these four paragraphs:
Conservative elites—GOP leaders, donors, journalists and
others—are in the heat of battle now. I certainly understand why they
feel that they don’t have the luxury of going all introspective at this
moment. But at some point very soon they (again, we) should all ask
ourselves why none of us saw Trump coming, and what that says about how
out of touch we are with the conservative-leaning people of this
country.
Last summer, as my father lay dying, I sat by his hospital bed
watching a Trump rally in Mobile with him and my mother. I listened to
the things Trump was saying, and thought it was absurd, and surely the
American people would wake up to the demagoguery. But my parents liked
what he had to say. Trump’s words resonated with their own thoughts and
experiences.
You know what? They might have been wrong in their political
judgment. I believe they were. The point here is not that my parents
were wrong and I was right. The point is that I could not grasp how anybody
could believe what Trump was saying. Nobody I knew from my circle of
intellectual conservatives could grasp it either. We assumed it would
evaporate. And here we are, on the verge of the Iowa caucuses, with
Trump poised to sweep to the nomination.
Trump voters may be blind, but so are we who did not see him coming,
or foresee the political, economic, and cultural conditions that
produced him.
Dreher then ruminated, unmemorably, about the quandary before
reaching an unmemorable, split-the-differences conclusion. But
apparently a reader’s comment later induced him to extend the article.
The comment, by “Borachio,” strikes me as just right:
As an intellectually serious conservative who supports
Trump, I’ll tell you the problem with “intellectually serious
conservatism” as practiced on K Street, Wall Street, and the various
precincts of power and money:
It’s a pack of lies.
Establishment conservatism is just an ideological smokescreen to
camouflage the pauperization and dispossession of the American middle
class for the benefit of a kakistocracy at the top and various
special-interest client classes at the bottom.
My support for Trump is not based on his being an intellectually serious conservative, which he obviously isn’t.
I’m not sure if Trump can help our country. However, I DO know for
sure that none of the establishment-approved candidates will do anything
but enrich themselves and their friends at the expense of what is still
the American majority.
Trump is our Hail Mary pass, our last desperate attempt to salvage
something of what America was before the whirlwind destroys the last of
it.
VDARE.com’s Peter Brimelow made the same point—Trump? Maybe/ Everyone
else? NO—in his talk at the recent American Renaissance conference,
as quoted in the conference report:
[C]an [Trump] be trusted if he wins? “Absolutely not,”
said Mr. Brimelow. “No politician can be trusted.” The important
difference is that we know exactly what the other candidates would do,
whereas there is at least some uncertainty with Trump.
A month ago, Ted Cruz supporter Andrew McCarthy wrote at
PJ Media that actually Trump is
the most pro-amnesty candidate (
Where Would Trump Be If He Had Run as What He Is: the Amnesty Candidate?,
May 2, 2016). That might seem startling, but McCarthy was, with some
justice, keying on Trump’s casual remarks in mid-February favoring what
amount to a “touchback” amnesty, a la former Republican Congressman Mike
[Immigration Goober]
Pence, now governor of Indiana; NumbersUSA’s Roy Beck
analyzed
Trump’s utterances on the subject—and invoked Pence’s disastrous and
instructive experience with his touchback proposal—at the time.
I think the conclusion regarding Trump and immigration must be that
he actually knows almost nothing about the (admittedly vast) subject, so
he’s really no different on that score from the vast majority of our
beloved politicians and of our inspiring
fellow citizens. (The exceptions to this rule among national politicians can probably be counted on, at most, two hands: Senator
Jeff Sessions, Congressman
Steve King, Congressman Lou Barletta, Congressman Lamar Smith, Congressman Louie Gohmert, …)
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But Trump, crucially,
has read Ann Coulter’s essential, civilization-rescuing book,
¡Adios America!.
So America’s future may well rest on Trump and a Hail-Mary-pass of an election. All in all, I’m glad to be 67 …