I’ve been thinking about the fact that I was very lucky to have lived most of my life in fairly peaceful times in a prosperous, safe country. There are a lot of people my age on this planet who weren’t so lucky. There has been much cultural tumult in the US in the post WWII years, of course, and plenty of drama, but as far as big world-changing events that shift the firmament of your existence, I think the last 20 years have been the most consequential for Americans, first with 9/11 and now the pandemic. (Obviously, climate change is the big kahuna but it’s been happening in slow motion so hasn’t been acutely felt — but it’s starting to.)
This piece by Greg Sargent brilliantly explores this question in light of Trump’s phony appropriation of the anti-war position even as he exploits and revels in all the excesses that 9/11 wrought on the culture:
After the Sept. 11 attacks, Time magazine’s cover vividly captured the explosive force pulverizing the first Twin Tower — a photo that, strikingly, was ringed by a black border. Nineteen years later, the magazine’s new cover powerfully memorializes the nearly 200,000 Americans who have died of coronavirus — in an image that’s again ringed by a black border.
With President Trump and challenger Joe Biden both commemorating the anniversary of the 2001 attacks on Friday, that bookending of the post-9/11 era captures something essential about our current moment: In a way, it exposes the entire mythos of the Trump presidency as an utter fraud to its very core.
The story Trump and his mythologists tell runs something like this: After 9/11, the country was essentially destroyed by a combination of neoconservative and liberal internationalist elite failures — by a hyper-militarized overreaction to the attacks, and by excessive diplomatic and economic engagement with the world.
This led to a series of catastrophic elite policy disasters that were sold with lies, the tale continues, including “Mideast Forever Wars” that killed thousands of Americans and globalized economic policies that destroyed the white working class through competition with immigrant labor and China.
Trump has brought his business smarts and personal knowledge of elite corruption to the task of extracting our country from these international entanglements — which were stupid and wasteful and only enriched elites — and put the American people first again.
In just about every way, this story has fallen to pieces. And the anniversary of 9/11 should drive this home.
Trump is now presiding over his own form of massive elite policy failure, one that has killed more Americans than 9/11 and the militarized overreaction to it many times over. Just like the Iraq War, it, too, was initially sold and is getting covered up with unrestrained official propagandizing and lying.
Meanwhile, some of the very worst abuses and pathologies of the Trump presidency represent continuations of our overreaction to 9/11. He has exacerbated the Islamophobia it helped unleash to an extraordinarily explicit degree, and he has politically weaponized the post-9/11 homeland security bureaucracy in just the way its initial critics feared.
We saw this when Trump endorsed a virulently Islamophobic congressional candidate, only the latest example in his long history of open anti-Islamic bigotry. And we’re seeing this now with extraordinary abuses at the Department of Homeland Security, which was birthed amid the post-9/11 climate of fear. While it committed serious abuses under former president Barack Obama, it has now been corrupted by Trump and his cabal in just about every conceivable way.
This goes far beyond immigration. We just learned from a DHS whistleblower that top officials appear to have manipulated intelligence to help fabricate the existence of an organized leftist domestic terror threat for Trump to run for reelection against. That comes after DHS sent armies of law enforcement into urban protest zones to provoke the civil conflict that Trump believes will boost that case.AD
All this rank Islamophobia and all this corrupt weaponization of DHS to target domestic dissidents and help manufacture Trump’s reelection agitprop are in many ways crucial aspects of our national 9/11 legacy. They will not be discussed at Friday’s commemorations.
Joe Biden, too, represents aspects of these post-9/11 failures. He supported the Iraq War, and he was a supporter of opening up China to trade, though the story there is complicated.
Trump is using these facts to continue casting Biden as a member of that failed, corrupt, militaristic, globalist post-9/11 elite, and himself as their scourge. When military officials leaked that Trump called our war dead “losers,” he positioned himself as an opponent of the military-industrial complex’s war lust.
But Trump cannot credibly tell this story. His trade wars with China are a disaster. He spent weeks covering for China’s coronavirus failures to sustain the lie that he had it mastered here. Biden, not Trump, is proposing concrete policies for rebuilding U.S. manufacturing.
Biden’s balance on China — build international coalitions to confront unfair trade practices while seeking cooperation on climate change and global pandemics — will prove far better. As a terrific New York Times piece chronicled, his approach is rooted in learning from his long and complex series of interactions with China, which included much good and bad. Trump cannot learn.
What’s more, Trump did not actually oppose the Iraq War. And the Trumpist vow to undo our post-9/11 militaristic excesses has always been mostly nonsense — he regularly boasts of building up the military and even talks about maximal weapons sales abroad as good business for the United States, which it has long been.
And while Biden’s brand of hawkish liberal internationalism badly needs a rethink, we are now seeing Trump’s own supposed hostility to hyper-militarization morph into hideous domestic abuses of the national security state right before our eyes.
Above all, Trump is responsible for the most catastrophic elite policy failure of the modern era.
When we learned Trump privately knew the airborne coronavirus threat was far deadlier than he publicly allowed — and that he admitted to publicly downplaying it — it exposed his disastrous mishandling of the pandemic in a new way.
When this is understood as exactly the sort of massive elite policy disaster — buttressed by extraordinary willful deception and deeply depraved unconcern for the lives of untold Americans — that the Trump mythos created as his foil, that mythos implodes further.
As the nearly 200,000 deaths help illustrate, Trump and his cronies have turned out to be a stupider, more corrupt, more incompetent, more dishonest and more depraved elite than even the caricature version of pre-Trump elites he created as a foil to gain power. Trump has carried forward the very worst of our post-9/11 pathologies.
Much of this will be taboo for our politicians on 9/11’s anniversary. But it shouldn’t be for the rest of us.
America’s 9/11 response was very, very bad and the ramifications of that failure will be felt for many decades. But Trump’s original and unique exploitation of that should be a wake-up call that the dynamics we all thought governed our country could be turned inside out.
It’s important to stay flexible of mind in times like these. It’s very, very easy for things to go sideways if you insist on continuously fighting the last war.