Donald Trump, it has often been said, is simply a backlash to the election of Barack Obama.
The swing of the pendulum.
Watching the folks lined up behind Mr. Trump at his Kentucky rally a few days ago, it was easy to see the point. Right here in Hampton, watching people arrive to vote at the polls for the recent town elections, we have people in New Hampshire who look just like those Trump backdrop people.
They have stepped right off the pages of "What's the Matter with Kansas," the Thomas Frank 2004 book about how conservatives won the heart of America. One of the portraits Frank presented in that book Mad Dog has never been able to shake was the invective from a man who said his son, who can competently re-wire his home, who has rebuilt truck engines on his farm, who changes out the water heater, uses a computer to plow the fields and who can hit a 90 mph fast ball, could never get into Princeton because his SAT scores aren't high enough and he barely eked out a "C" in Spanish and he flunked calculus. So his son, according to Princeton, just doesn't have the smarts to merit admission to Princeton.
Nicholas Lemann, now a professor at Columbia, writing in the March 16th New Yorker describes his father driving him as a little boy to Princeton:
"We'd stand on Nassau Street and drink in the magnificence of the campus, as if it stood for everything great, and also distant in the world. Today Princeton is even more magnificent, with beautiful modern buildings scattered around the Colonial and Gothic ones, and elegant stores lining the street across from the Campus."
Students on campus tours with their parents absorb the message: This is the place where success is made, where the tickets to high paying careers are handed out, where superiority reigns, where merit is rewarded and where lack of merit disqualifies you from a future among the aristocracy. It is the classic embodiment of, "If you work hard and have God given talent, you will prosper. If not, it's your own damn fault."
It is where the tyranny of meritocracy reigns.
Barack Obama was the epitome of all this--the child of a Black man and a white woman--who raised him as a single mother--who, through hard work got from Hawaii to Occidental College in California, then to Columbia University in New York City, then to Harvard Law.
His father was not a rich real estate icon. Obama, a physical specimen, lithe, graceful, played basketball as men play basketball, and he was eloquent, inspiring, everything Mr. Trump is not.
But then, under Obama's administration his Department of Education went off the rails, and he did nothing to rectify that. The Department intervened in the operations of universities, insisting that on campus sexual assault allegations be handled by new protocols which stripped the accused boys of their right to question their accusers, to due process and a fair trial.
At Brown, an engineering student in his third year, found a drunk co-ed in his bed in the wee hours of a fraternity party and he had sex with her. The details have been scarce, but apparently, as reported in the Brown Alumni Monthly, they awoke the next morning, exchanged telephone numbers. When she got back to her dorm, her roommates heard the story and told her she had been date raped. Nobody ever asked if the boy had been drunk, and nobody ever said whether, if he had, that would have made the slightest difference to his defense before he was expelled, losing three years of hard work in the Department of Engineering, having to pick up the pieces of his shattered career.
This became part of the cloth of "Believe the Woman," where due process went out the window.
At Penn, a male swimmer, who had an undistinguished career, underwent transgender therapy and then competed as a woman swimmer, smashing all records and winning Ivy League championships. Nothing wrong with this, according the the great minds in the Ivy League.
When the President of Harvard was asked by a Harvard alum (Rep. Elise Stefanik) whether she would tolerate on campus calls for the genocide of the Jewish people, the President, Claudine Gay, replied it would depend on the context. In what world is the advocacy for genocide of any people a matter of context? This is not a difficult or trick question Stefanik said. Of course, you do not need a Harvard diploma to know that much.
After thousands of people lost their homes in the financial crisis of 2008, men went to jail for their roles in the scams which precipitated the fiasco, in Iceland, Denmark and Scandinavia. But President Obama did not send a single man to jail in the United States.
Speaking together, in "The Wire," two political campaign managers throwing down drinks at a Baltimore bar bemoan the choices made by their successful candidates. "You work so hard for them. You may even come to believe in them. But when they win, they always disappoint you."
So, do we have the failures of Barack Obama to blame for the successes and excesses of Donald Trump?
Yes, partly we do. We see the failure of the winning liberal coalition to discipline and moderate its own members, to prevent those who worked for the winning team from doing really stupid things.
But, in some measure, Trump may have been inevitable after the triumph of liberalism--it was bound to go off the rails, just as Trump has been doomed to go off the cliff.
The problem now is, how do we get the pendulum headed back in the other direction?



















