The next Republican debate
will shortly be upon us and people are wondering how well Donald Trump will
perform. In the previous debates, only
his mother and devoted enthusiasts were impressed. He was neither cogent nor forceful in his
presentation.
Nonetheless The Donald’s
aficionados are convinced that he is honest, brilliant, and strong. No matter what he says, they take it as
gospel. In fact, Trump is none of what
is alleged. To the contrary, he is a
pathetic imitation of what a tough-minded leader should be.
So why do so many people
think otherwise? Why is he hailed as a
national savior in some quarters? This
has become an enduring mystery. Indeed,
commentators of every political stripe have struggled to explain the
phenomenon. About all they can agree on,
however, is that the “establishment” got it wrong.
In fact, the answer is not
difficult to discern. The Trump boomlet
is a reflection of PC fatigue. As the
anti-political correctness candidate, he has benefited from a backlash that has
been slow in coming.
First, Donald is not an
honest man. He routinely denies that he
has said what he can be documented as saying.
Second, he is decidedly not brilliant.
His insights into foreign affairs and domestic politics really are on
the junior high school level. Third, he
is not especially strong. Anyone who
brags about his accomplishments as much as he does is fundamentally insecure.
Still, there is an area in
which Trump might be described as strong.
Trump has stood up against political correctness. He regularly says things that no sane
politician is supposed to say—and then he stands up to the criticism that
inevitably results.
Why this has gained him a
dedicated following can be understood by examining from whence his support
derives. As the polls demonstrate, his
most ardent backers are blue-collar whites.
They are the ones who cheer when he lowers the boom on his detractors.
But consider the primary
targets of PC. These too are straight,
white males. They are the folks who are
routinely accused of being racist, sexist, and homophobic. They are the ones depicted as mean-spirited
boobs who ought to be run out of town on a rail.
Consider too the methodology
of the folks who enforce political correctness.
These card-carrying liberals, and their naïve young henchmen, are
specialists in intimidation. Their
primary technique for quashing the opposition is to silence it into submission.
How do the achieve
this? Why they march through the streets
chanting about how they will roast pigs like bacon. They camp out on Wall Street in order to
disrupt capitalist activities. They
flood suburban malls to prevent shoppers from patronizing the stores.
The PC folks lie. They insist that “hand up don’t shoot” was a
reality. They firebomb senior centers. Stand in their way and they rough you
up. And, of course, if they can, they
will get you fired from your job.
Failing this, they will use the law to have you fined for not baking a
cake for homosexuals.
It, therefore, takes courage
to oppose to these bullies. Yet this bravery
is sorely lacking on campus, in the media, and among politicians. As a consequence, millions of Americans are
fed up with being treated like second-class citizens in their own land. They have been looking for a champion and believe
they have found one in Trump.
Unfortunately, The Donald is
a bogus hero. He is coarse, vulgar, and
in-your-face, but this is not the same as genuine courage. Truly courageous people do more than hurl
insults. They do not call women ugly, Mexicans
inveterate criminals, or soft-spoken rivals weak.
Trump is not smart because
he says he is. And he is not strong
because he promises to bomb the daylights out of our enemies. PC does need to be challenged—but not in the
way he does it. A devotee of infantile
rudeness cannot halt a plague of self-righteous meanness.
Melvyn L. Fein, Ph.D.
Professor of Sociology
Kennesaw State University
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