Welcome to Conspiracy Nation in the age of Trump
Paul Rosenberg looks at the mainstreaming of the paranoid style in the Age of Donald:
For several decades now, belief in conspiracy theories has been on the rise, as trust in institutions has declined. But Donald Trump’s candidacy supercharged that rise like nothing before it, and his impending presidency promises much more of the same. Conspiracy theory acts as a connecting bridge between the flood of false statements Trump constantly makes and the larger looming threat of a slide into authoritarian rule.
Not all conspiracy theories are created equal:
Of course, some conspiracies are chillingly real — Watergate, the Iran-Contra boondoggle of the Reagan years, the Tuskegee experiments, etc. — and others may be difficult to assess. So it’s helpful to focus more on the conspiracist mindset that persistently sees such conspiracies where they don’t exist, disregards all contrary evidence and ignores or severely distorts the broader historical context that helps make sense of what really happened. Such a focus reveals broader patterns, rather than getting dragged down into minutiae.
And not all leaders need to go full-blown conspiranoid to keep their followers fearful and angry:
While Trump hasn’t explicitly embraced [the Pauk Weyrich] paranoid worldview — he’s more of a broad-brush, big-picture blowhard — it fits well with what he has said, and with the alt-right movement that has supported him so vigorously. It was further reflected in a cluster of three racist or ethnocentric conspiracy theories that were critical to Trump’s rise: His “birther” attack on Obama’s legitimacy as America’s first black president, his false allegations of a Mexican government scheme to send “rapists and murderers” to the U.S., and his multiple anti-Muslim conspiracy narratives, including the false claim that “thousands” of Muslims in New Jersey celebrated the destruction of the Twin Towers on 9/11.
Rosenberg also looks at fake news and research conducted by Joanne Miller, and the surprising fruit of their research:
“On the ideology side and the trust side, we would have expected conspiracy theories to come more from the right, because they were still on the losing side of politics,” Miller said. The role of knowledge is less clear-cut, though it does appear that high-knowledge/low-trust conservatives played a larger role in spreading conspiracies and fake news stories, while lower-knowledge voters may have played an unexpected role in winning key states.
But even more surprising “was just the amount of it — the fake news that largely peddled in conspiracies,” Miller said. “The sheer amount of it is new, absolutely.” There are long-term trends involved, they pointed out, such as declining trust in institutions, erosion of the institutions themselves and the democratic norms they uphold, and the emergence of a coherent authoritarian worldview, as described by Marc Hetherington and Jonathan Weiler in “Authoritarianism and Polarization in American Politics.” But all these factors converged to produce a phenomenon larger than the sum of its parts.
You owe it to yourself to read the entire thing.
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Copyright 2017 Liberaland
5 responses to Welcome to Conspiracy Nation in the age of Trump
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amersham1046 January 1st, 2017 at 17:03
It will be easier for him to feed his followers all these conspiracies than to face up to the realities of the real world
Caroleccullen January 2nd, 2017 at 06:21
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Obewon January 1st, 2017 at 17:12
The dimmest PEOTUS to reporters 12/31/16: “No computer is safe. I don’t care what they say” Trump, who rarely uses email or computers despite his frequent tweeting, has repeatedly cast aside allegations by US intelligence agencies that Russia tried to influence the presidential election through hacking.
“It’s very important, if you have something really important, write it out and have it delivered by courier, the old fashioned way because I’ll tell you what, no computer is safe,” Trump responded when asked about the importance of cybersecurity, Trump told reporters during his annual New Year’s Eve bash his Mar-a-Lago club. http://thehill.com/blogs/blog-briefing-room/news/312334-trumps-solution-to-cyberattacks-write-it-down-and-send-it-by
‘It’s obvious (trump) knows very little about the issues’-(R-Ky) McConnell.
bpollen January 1st, 2017 at 18:07
Yup, no computer is safe, so it’s computers’ fault that the DNC got hacked, not my good buddy Pootie! (Know to his friends as “Pootietang!”)
Red Mann January 1st, 2017 at 20:29
Here’s a conspiracy theory, the oligarchs are behind all of this fake news and dumbing down of education and have been for decades, They have used religion as a tool, faux patriotism as a tool, anything that will sway the gullible. How many billionaires have spent huge sums backing up far right causes? Keeping the population confused and uneducated suits their desire to maximize profits by electing Republicans with their policies to do away with regulations, cut taxes for the rich and encourage religious interference in government.