Much as I'm usually in favor of blaming religion for things, religion in the US is
actually in decline. Pillowsky also ignores that the movement which brought Trump to power is really a world-wide movement that started in Russia and Eastern Europe and has now spread (assisted by Putin's espionage agencies) to some degree in many Western European countries as well as the US.
Marxism
did collapse and the movement we're seeing is not really a revival. Marxism depended on large numbers of people believing that an economic theory that didn't really work in practice was actually working. As the gap in wealth between the Marxist countries and capitalist countries grew wider (and as technological advancements made it impossible for the government to completely control the flow of information to its citizens), this became no longer tenable.
What we're seeing now is a new form of government, which we don't have a good name for yet. Maybe Pseudo-Democratic Authoritarianism is a good name. This basically works as follows. At some point in time the people of a country are unhappy (the 2008 economic crisis was a trigger for this in many places, but any possible cause is okay). A movement funded by the country's wealthiest oligarchs takes advantage, gathering popular support by railing against "the establishment" and blaming immigrants or minorities for the general unhappiness. Once in office, the movement takes advantage of weaknesses in the country's legal structure (or enforcement structure) to entrench themselves, making sure they cannot be easily removed in the next election. They maintain the trappings of a democracy, but in practice they are nearly impossible to dislodge. Unlike Marxist states, they do not really try to "control the media" -- instead, the oligarchs create a "fake media" that simply makes up outrageous lies while the leadership demonizes the independent media (calling them "fake news" or insinuating that they are controlled by Jews or some other unpopular group). The effect of this is not so much to convince people as to confuse people -- causing them to give up trying to parse truth from falsehood and decide that every party is just as bad as any other and stop trying to be politically involved. The government's law enforcement arm will reinforce this position by prosecuting (or at least leaking rumors that they are investigating) the leadership of any opposition party, so the population as a whole thinks "they are all corrupt" and doesn't rise against the leadership.
This is Vladimir Putin's sort of government, and has taken power in many former communist states (Hungary is often cited as an example). Similar parties won elections in Austria and Italy. The same sort of tactics may have been involved in Brexit in the UK, and were a factor in the French election (where an authoritarian party finished second in the presidential race) and Germany (where Merkel could maintain power only by forming a coalition with her party's traditional rivals, leaving the authoritarian AfD as the primary opposition). Of course, we see the same sort of government in the USA, where the Republican party under Trump's leadership is doing all the same sorts of things.
The US Constitution obviously has its issues (it's 200+ years old after all) but this particular problem is a quite recent one. And other countries have problems too (Viktor Orban could basically rewrite Hungary's constitution at will after he took power, which isn't a great arrangement either). And Americans have been more religious than Europeans for decades, yet this sort of thing took root first in Europe.
So why is this happening, and why is it happening now? I think there are a few big factors:
- Leadership (both political and economic) no longer feels an obligation to the country as a whole. Some of this is a lack of natural enemies (the cold war is over), some of it is due to extreme aggregation of wealth (a natural process over time, but we had a "reset" for the big world wars that made society more egalitarian), some of it is a set of new economic theories by Milton Friedman et al that preach "greed is good" which was not what business leaders believed decades ago.
- News media has become more fractured and its easier for people who just make stuff up to get a wide following. Social media (Facebook, Twitter, etc) is a big part of this. While this has brought down some old-school dictatorships that tried to truly "control the media" it has enabled the new "confuse the population" approach.
- We've had a series of more complex crisis arise, from global warming to terrorism, where there's no simple solution. This makes it easier to deny reality and shift blame than perhaps it's been in the past.
Adam W. Meyerson
a.k.a. Appeal Without Merit