After yesterday's thread on Trump's techniques for destroying Democracy (here, if you missed it:
people asked if Trump knows what he's doing.
@elindburg
@karenzazz
Yes, he does.
First I'll try to persuade you that Trump knows what he’s doing.
Next, I’ll tell you how to counter the effects and save Democracy.
How is that for a grand ambition?
Remember: The techniques aren't hard.
@jasonintrator, Yale professor, believes Trump is purposefully and “cynically using a set of fascist tactics to gain and maintain power."
You start by creating a world in which facts don’t matter. This is easy for Trump, who,“naturally and gracefully inhabits a world of fiction.”
Quote from another Yale professor, @TimothyDSnyder ⤵️
Trump keeps everyone's attention where he wants it to be.
He can create so much shock and outrage that people hardly notice if he's accused of rape.
@TimothyDSnyder agrees. He says Trump is a “talented” politician.
(This is me, backing my opinion with authority 😉)
Trump is a natural at this.
People make fun of how much TV he watches. Well, of course he has to watch TV. How else will he plan his game?
He keeps everyone busy paying whack-a-lie.
In Michael Cohen’s testimony before the House Oversight Committee, he described how Trump signaled to him which lies he was supposed to tell.
politico.com/f/?id=00000169…
time.com/5531604/andrew…
McCabe understood Trump expected him to “adopt” this lie. . .
time.com/5531604/andrew…
This is evil, but not stupid.
Cohen explained how he was drawn in for more than a decade: “Being around Mr. Trump was intoxicating. When you were in his presence, you felt like. . .
politico.com/f/?id=00000169…
People underestimate Trump.
Maybe Trump wants to be underestimated. It's easier to con people if they underestimate you.
Putin-style fascist techniques are like bowling.
Every time Trump throws a heavy ball to the ground, people think he’s screwing up.
Nope. He’s playing a different game.
The Center for Strategic International Studies issued a report on how to counter these attacks.
csis.org/analysis/count…
How? By “increasing public understanding of the threat” and “strengthening our commitment to democratic institutions.”
If they feel frustrated that “nothing is being done,” explain that due process—like democracy—is slow and laborious.
If you don't believe democracy is slow, requiring compromise . . .
The alternative is tyranny. Dictatorship moves quickly. There are no checks and balances, and no need for compromise.
“My way or you go to jail,” gets things done fast.
We need to help everyone fall back in love with representative government, even with its flaws (and slow pace).
If you want to know what else you can do, see my list: terikanefield-blog.com/things-to-do/
end/