Discussion about this post

User's avatar
Megan Gafford's avatar

Dan — I thought this piece was so insightful that I just included it in my "Ideas Worth Drawing For" series, in which I make a pencil drawing + write a reflection for excellent essays. Please take a look if you have time:

https://open.substack.com/pub/megangafford/p/on-dan-gardners-the-counterculture?utm_source=share&utm_medium=android&r=2vr1o

Expand full comment
Seth Finkelstein's avatar

I think it's much simpler: Trump is appealing to his base. Public vulgarity is in part a "class marker" (not every instance of course, but very much overall). I'm fascinated by the way Trump gives off all sorts of "lower class" signals, which is very odd since he came from wealth. But he acts like he's a blue-collar tradesman. He does not talk in the idiom of the educated professional, which almost all politicians do. This really seems to befuddle pundits, who are of course almost by definition all educated professionals. And further, venerate such class markers. Because in their world, anyone who fails to master that idiom, is very unlikely to succeed. But yet, Trump has reached some of the highest levels of political power (US President), and has a reasonable chance of doing so again. It simply does not compute in that mindset. I suspect this is a big part of where opposing Trump fails. He's able to feed off the resentment generated by any class-based attacks.

Expand full comment
46 more comments...

No posts