Saturday, December 30, 2023

THE CULT OF PERSONALITY INVADES AMERICAN DEMOCRACY

 

“They kiss on the ring, I carry the crown….I'm the man and nothing can break me down”

The Man, song by The Killers

The idea of a “cult of personality” is a long-standing concept of authoritarian rule that has existed since the time of the Roman Emperors in antiquity. In modern history, the term became popular after Nikita Khrushchev gave his 1956 “secret speech” to the Russian Communist Party. Khrushchev criticized the recently deceased Joseph Stalin for his propaganda machine, which for decades had focused on getting the Russian people to love and honor him at all costs.  In fact, Stalin’s cult of personality was a mirage that covered up his many missteps and abuses of power. His actions directly caused the death of millions of his own people.

Since the end of the Cold War, political observers have used the cult of personality to describe numerous authoritarian leaders. Russia, China, Iran and North Korea are all dictatorial regimes that are governed by a leader who utilizes this autocratic approach. These leaders support each other both economically and militarily to remain in power.  

In Russia, Vladimir Putin has resurrected Stalin’s cult of personality by telling his citizens that the war in Ukraine is a struggle for survival against the West and that only his efforts can save them. Dissent is not tolerated.   Putin has worked to convince the Russian people that they must endure corruption and the violation of their own rights or things will get worse.

Before Donald Trump, no one believed that the cult of personality could take hold in a constitutional democratic republic like the United States. Our Founding Fathers sought to guarantee that American citizens and their governing officials would follow established rules. The Constitution divided our federal government into three branches of equal weight to provide checks and balances.  It was designed to prevent any one individual or group from easily controlling all political power. Competitive elections, civil rights for all citizens, and the proper rule of law have been the keys to preserving our balanced democracy. Only a decade ago, it seemed impossible that a single individual could threaten all these established rules, norms and institutions.

Many people lose sight of the fact that liberty and democracy are not the natural political order.  For most of human history, the strong have dominated the weak and stamped out freedom. Moreover, societies have always chosen the authoritarian cult of personality as more acceptable than anarchy. In modern democracies, the rise of someone like Donald Trump was never far from the surface.

Political scientists and psychologists now question how tens of millions of Americans are fully prepared to reelect a man like Donald Trump as president. After all, his many transgressions and degraded moral character are in the open and repetitive. Why do Trump supporters embrace him with such religious zeal?

For some answers, I turned to a book by Steven Hassan, The Cult of Trump. As a teenager, the author was recruited to join the Unification Church, a religious cult. After freeing himself, he made it his life’s work to study all the traits that are responsible for cult behavior, including the cult of personality.

Hassan points out that the personality traits of leaders who exercise the cult of personality are eerily similar. They are often paranoid and demonstrate “delusions of grandeur.” They humiliate others and demand obedience. Each leader exercising the cult of personality exhibits a sense of entitlement and a predisposition for dominance and aggression.

Hassan believes that Trump has employed classic indoctrination techniques to build devotion from his supporters. The tactics include spreading repetitious untruths until the “big lie” becomes accepted as fact. Trump never beleives he is wrong, and he projects his shortcomings onto others. His speeches and social media are a nonstop reminder of his “chosen one” status that spreads the divisive message of us vs. them. Biased cable channels help to spread the Trump message 24/7 and solidify the message.

If Trump were elected to a second term, what measures would he likely take to advance his cult of personality? A review of well-entrenched authoritarian governments, as well as Trump’s own statements, provide some probable actions.

First, he would fill government agencies with employees who have signed a loyalty oath to support his authoritarian agenda. Second, Trump would turn the Justice Department into the “department of revenge” to bring legal action against the media, and all perceived political enemies, including Republicans. Third, he would use executive orders to strengthen his presidential power to undermine other branches of government. Fourth, Trump would exploit his enhanced executive powers to rig our election system to guarantee that his brand of governing remains in place. Lastly, he would seek a constitutional amendment to remove limits to his term, or simply refuse to leave office.

As the presidential election season gets under way, former conservative Wyoming U.S. Representative, Liz Cheney, has forewarned the voting public of the dangers of a second Trump presidency. She has addressed the issue in an excellent new book, Oath and Honor: A Memoir and a Warning. For those without the time to read the entire treatise, Cheney’s 12/14/23 op-ed in the Wall Street Journal is a summary of her position.

Ms. Cheney concludes, “Those who try to dismiss the risk of a second Trump term do our country a grave disservice.”

 

 

 

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