"Alexander" is a young man in middle America with a broad view of the current craziness...
Trump is the figurehead of a doomsday cult.
That might be a bold assertion to some. An slanderous accusation even. Yet every day that passes I cannot think of any other way to describe his following.
I have been watching his political career since he entered the Republican primary. I, like many, thought he had little chance of becoming the Republican candidate, let alone President. Like so many others, I sat there slack-jawed on election night as he was declared President-elect.
Foolish, in retrospect. I should have considered that my distaste for the Democratic party in general and Hilary Clinton in particular was not unique to me.
At the time though I turned to certain internet commentators with my questions. Their claims were myriad and ever-changing: his dress style, his charisma, his refusal to engage in debate, 5D-thinking that could outwit his opponent at every turn. Meanwhile pundits and preachers farther to the right than my sources were providing an altogether different explanation:
The will of God.
That was nothing new, of course. I remember President Bush having similar religious cheerleading. So I didn't pay much attention to the religious aspect of Trump's political bloc.
Over the next 3 years I would drift away from the conservative sources I once trusted to inform me, a story for another time. However, as I shifted to more left-leaning commentators I noticed something...odd, about Trump's core supporters.
So much of their public support of Trump came with openly religious overtones.
Baptist preachers were singing his praises in the middle of sermons. Televangelists with congregations numbering in the hundreds of thousands were leading their followers in prayer to strengthen his reign.
It was from these churches that the prophecy flowed like water.
Trump would make abortion a crime. Trump would overturn gay marriage. Trump would put mandatory prayer back in schools. Trump would take the liberal media off the air. If a right-wing Christian had a political wet dream there was a preacher on their shoulder to promise them that Trump was days away from providing it.
The result was a swirling torrent of religious fervor backing Trump's presidency, one that his underlings quickly capitalized on. Over the course of his four years in office Trump leaned more and more on his religious following, culminating in that deeply ironic photo shoot in front of a church, after protesters had been chased off its lawn with tear gas.
However, it is not for this reason that I claim Trump is the figurehead of a cult.
That fault lies with Qanon.
I don't have time to go over Qanon in all its horrifying degenerate splendor here, I think that's best saved for its own post, but here is what's important for this article.
Qanon is an online movement named after the username Q. Q claims to be a government employee with 'Q clearance', a top secret government clearance associated with the U.S. Department of Energy. Q also claims that this clearance gives him access to the highest level of government secrets, as well as the secrets of a underground shadow government called the Deep State.
The movement is primarily driven by incredibly vague posts left by Q, which are decoded by the community. The posts are so vague, and the decoders are mostly veteran conspiracy theorists. This means the conspiracy itself is too complicated and ever shifting to fully comprehend, but here are some key points.
1. There is an evil shadow government known only as 'the Cabal' comprised of powerful individuals, mostly from the Democratic party.
2. The Cabal is doing outrageously evil things usually involving murdering children and devouring their corpses in satanic rituals (yes, really.)
3.Trump and a few other high-level Republicans are working to expose the Cabal.
4. Any day now Trump will reveal his master plan, and all members of the Cabal, Democrats, and liberals in general will be rounded up and executed.
This movement, as you might have gathered from context, is completely nuts.
That in no way hindered it from melding into the widespread religious exaltation of Trump. Soon every loyal right-wing Christian had their own theory on how Trump was going to wipe America clean of sinners.
One might notice that this sounds an awful lot like a Doomsday prophecy, because it is. An oddly secular Doomsday prophecy, granted, as it would be carried out with guns and death camps as opposed to divine wrath, but the hallmarks are still there.
It was through this lens that Trump completed his transformation in the eyes of the hardcore right-wing Christian from political figure to eminent savior.
From there the movement quickly infected the Republican party.
I am unsure to what extent its adherents hold sway over the party, only that few Republican officials are willing to contradict them, which implies a staggering hold.
Indeed, any perceived insult against Trump's honor is a political death sentence for a Republican at the moment, as exemplified by Mike Pence.
With this as context the events of the January 6th insurrection seem more in line with The Great Disappointment than a standard political uprising.
That is to say that Trump leaving office was not a part of the Great Plan the true Trump believers were sold.
So, just as with the Great Disappointment the preachers of Trump's good word set a new date for the End Times. This new era is being led by Michael Lindell at the moment, though there is no telling how the wind will shift. He is predicting that Trump's imminent return to power, as well as the subsequent purges, will happen sometime in August.
I can only hope they won't be successful.
8 comments:
This writer says he never endorsed Trump but found he was useful in lifting the Establishment rock to expose the wrigglies beneath:
https://regiehammblog.wordpress.com/2021/06/30/behind-the-curtain/
Again for balance, this writer gives an overview of 4+ years of anti-Trumpism; I don't know whether what he states as now-established fact is so (I wish he would supply links), and as an outsider I don't/can't follow all the ins and outs:
https://threadreaderapp.com/thread/1413165168956088321.html
This doesn't justify Trump, or some of the crazy supporters you discuss; but it does make me wonder whether the current Constitutional setup is fit for purpose. Maybe monarchy wasn't such a bad idea?
I don't know who wrote that article, but I can guess he's a democrat. His next expose might be on the build-up of flying saucers at the Mexican border that have been abandoned by aliens entering the country illegally.
The reference to Mike Lindell is an example of a man who rose up and made something of himself. Everyman's dream. The democrats want to financially destroy anyone who helped Trump in any way.
This missive has no name attached to it. It's a obvious attempt at gaslighting. I wouldn't be surprised if it was written by Bernie Sanders or Robert Reich.
Hi, Jim. No. no fakery or skulduggery here, I can guarantee you. If you re-read you'll see it's more about an overheated element among DJT's supporters; the theological approach ups the ante. 'With God on our side' is a really bad way to do politics, we learned that in the English Civil War.
America is getting crazy, on both sides (and so is the UK). I've suggested to the author of this piece some possible reasons, one of which is that every generation seems to want a bad fight - sometimes with foreigners, sometimes between generations, sometimes between half-abstract political philosophies or social classes.
Oh, and Jim, if you'll look at the reference to Democrats (and especially Hillary) again... There are those who think that if you disapprove of one side you have to love the other; that certainly isn't my position !
Hi Sack
That "Letter from Young America" is a sermon. No fact, all logic.
Our president cannot rule abortion a crime, outlaw gay marriage or force school prayer. His job in office is to enforce the laws as passed by Congress. If Congress passes a new law, he has to approve it for it to be law of the land. If he veto's it, it can still become law if 2/3's of Congress overrides his veto.
The news papers and the internet, in the US are not reporting the news, they are censoring it. That is why I replied to this missive. It connects all of the dots in a far out way that could be possible to someone over the pond.
Right now, the present government has legalized crime, and left our southern border undefended. 80,000 illegal immigrants are flowing across the border every month. If you steal something from a store in California under 900 dollars, you get a ticket.
Our president is not enforcing our laws. Our newspaper's and internet wave Trump and Corona virus. What you are reading is what they want you to read.
@Jim: the link in my second comments summarise the anti-Trump propaganda and machinations, again I'm not in a position to say that what he asserts as proven fact is so, but it's a starting point.
The inability of the President to enforce certain things - is good Constitutionally but the writer of the piece is saying that certain of the religious Right seem to believe he can. What SCOTUS might do if asked to rule is another thing - repeal of Roe v Wade?
@Jim - "Our president cannot rule abortion a crime, outlaw gay marriage or force school prayer."
Then, I guess that you didn't follow all of the Executive Orders which Trump signed to restrict LGBTQ rights and instructions to the DOJ not to prosecute schools on religious First Amendment cases. It always seems that Republicans like lots of laws, until they are applied to them.
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