Adam Serwer 🍝 Profile picture
Jun 26, 2021 8 tweets 3 min read Read on X
A few years ago I wrote an essay titled "The Cruelty Is The Point" on Trump's approach to politics and policy. On Tuesday, my book sharing that title is being published. Today in the @nytimes, I explain why Trumpist politics didn't end with his defeat. nytimes.com/2021/06/26/opi… Image
Cruelty is a part of human nature; we're all capable of it. But in American history, its elevation to a virtue in politics is strongly associated with attempts to deny people their fundamental rights, from the Founding, to Reconstruction, to the Civil Rights Movement to now.
The greatest threat to American democracy has always been the drive by some of its leaders to deny human beings the basic rights outlined in the Declaration of Independence, because people want to be free.
Today, the parties are highly polarized along racial lines. And once again the largely white party fears true democracy as a perversion of the nation's true heritage, seeing the rival party not merely as competition but as an existential threat to the nation as it must be.
As in the past, the ability to exploit countermajoritarian levers in the system, and appeals to white identity by casting multiracial democracy as a threat, fuels a politics of cruelty, exclusion and dehumanization.
To justify extreme measures like disenfranchisement after all, you have to convince your base that the rival party's constituencies want to "replace" you, that they are "citizen-aliens" and not "Real Americans," like you are. That the apocalypse they represent is imminent.
This is why the cruelty remains the point, even with Trump defeated. It was never just him. It was the ideological course of the GOP, and a political system that made that course a viable one. To change this, you have to change the system.
I wrote the book to offer a record of the ideological, historical, and structural factors that led to this, one that shows why they continue to shape our politics even without Trump. You can read more about this in the book, which I hope you'll pick up. penguinrandomhouse.com/books/665171/t…

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More from @AdamSerwer

Sep 20, 2022
Good morning. Today the paperback of THE CRUELTY IS THE POINT hits shelves. When I wrote the piece that shares its name with the book, I hoped that the phrase would become obsolete. But unfortunately it remains a relevant descriptor in our politics. randomhousebooks.com/books/665171/
The CRUELTY IS THE POINT is an essay collection about the historical and ideological roots of the Trump era. The softcover contains new material on the conservative-dominated Supreme Court and the future of Trump-style politics.
For ambitious Republicans, the best way to win the affection of primary voters and positive coverage from right wing media is to prove your loyalty is by using state power to target the people they hate and fear. Which is why both the book and the phrase remain sadly relevant.
Read 5 tweets
Jan 13, 2022
This is idiotic. People do not have to go to sporting events. They do have to go to work. supremecourt.gov/opinions/21pdf… Image
There’s really no difference between Trump tweeting executive orders at his television while watching fox news and this.
By the way all of the justices who signed onto Gorsuch’s concurrence citing a Ron Klain *retweet* also signed onto Roberts’ opinion in the travel ban case that Trump’s public statements about muslims were meaningless because the lawyers cleaned it up.
Read 4 tweets
Jul 10, 2021
Today, the statue of Confederate leader Robert E. Lee was removed from Charlottesville, Virginia, after years of protest. It was the inspiration for 2017's white supremacist rally, where activist Heather Heyer was killed. This is long overdue. nbcnews.com/news/us-news/r…
The true Lee has long been hidden behind a fog of nostalgia. Months prior to the rally, I wrote about Lee's canonization as a reluctant, anti-slavery Confederate—part of the postwar propaganda push to whitewash secession and justify the Jim Crow system. theatlantic.com/politics/archi…
I revisit this essay in THE CRUELTY IS THE POINT, because the Lee mythology was the reason the white supremacists believed they could use him to mainstream their cause—and they were delighted with Trump's defense of the rally. theatlantic.com/politics/archi…
Read 8 tweets
Jul 9, 2021
I write about this in THE CRUELTY IS THE POINT but once black men could no longer vote it drastically changed the character of the party and if this disenfranchisement project succeeds the Dems will change substantially as well.
The point of this project is not simply to insulate their power from the public, it is to engineer the electorate to be narrow enough that even when they lose the rival party is restrained by the character of the populations who retain meaningful political influence.
*drastically changed the character of the republican party. You get the idea.
Read 4 tweets
Jul 7, 2021
This left wing political correctness is getting out of control
Starting to think that maybe these guys aren’t as big on free speech and rigorous factual inquiry as they said
Anyway the *founders* knew the founding was flawed and we know that because they left us their conflicted thoughts on slavery for posterity. An ostensibly patriotic person would know this, a nationalist in the Orwellian sense would deny it or refuse to even learn.
Read 4 tweets
Apr 30, 2021
I am very excited to share the cover for my forthcoming book: The Cruelty Is The Point: The Past, Present and Future of Trump's America, which is coming out on June 29. You can preorder here: bit.ly/3psRSrr

I hope you'll buy a copy and encourage others to the same!
TCITP contains some of my Atlantic essays, but is mostly new material, including new pieces on the politics of police unions and the myth that European immigrants at the turn of the century came to America "the right way," among others.
A strange kind of denial greeted Trump's ascension, and a similar one is setting in after his defeat, both about what he did and represented, as though he were just an aberration, rather than a manifestation of beliefs that have plagued American democracy since the founding.
Read 6 tweets

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