Ben Rhodes Profile picture
Aug 25 15 tweets 3 min read Twitter logo Read on Twitter
During my 20 years in politics, two destructive trends stand out: the steady radicalization of the Republican Party and the trivialization of politics, particularly the way it is covered by US media and how politicians respond to that dynamic.
The Republican debate stands out for how unsurprising it was that a stage full of people acted like a bunch of kids trying to get admitted to some fascist costume party. Kill people at the border! Prohibit women from any agency over their bodies! Side with Putin! Etc. Etc.
The bridge between radicalization and trivialization (as always) is Trump. Last night, a group of accomplished adults refused to condemn someone who has broken laws related to overthrowing the U.S. government, stealing classified information, violating campaign finance laws, etc
If I told you 20 years ago that a guy who was facing 91 felony charges, including trying to overthrow the U.S. government, would be the overwhelming favorite for the Republican nomination and none of his opponents would dare to criticize him, well...
There's a lot to say about the radicalization of the Republicans. I've written two books that were largely about that. Frankly, there's nothing more to say. We have a radical right-wing party. It is what it is now.
But the trivialization of politics demands as much attention and is just as important. Because without it, the radicalization would be impossible.
Last night, for instance, the GOP frontrunner talked at length on this platform about vicious mosquitos, conspiracy theories, and general nonsense. A man who said those things in a job interview for just about any other position in the world wouldn't get hired.
Trump's hack of political media has always been that he mirrors their complete lack of interest in any substance, in favor of political optics, news cycle stupidity, and performative bullshit. He is both a creation - and conductor - of the stupidity of political coverage.
It is jarring to consider how impossible Trump would have been 20 years ago. He is only possible because of a Republican party that descended into grievance based insanity after the Obama election, and too much (not all) political media that cares only about performative nonsense
Consider the fact that Vivek Ramaswamy, a man who has precisely zero interest in performing any functions of the U.S. presidency, is heralded for a performance in which he mainly demonstrated his complete lack of fitness to run for any office, nevermind the most powerful one.
Meanwhile, what's at stake? The livelihoods of Americans. A world in which there is the biggest European war since World War II and the potential for a war between nuclear-armed superpowers in East Asia. The survivability of the planet.
Until we see that these things are not trivial or entertaining; that they are serious challenges to the underpinnings of our Republic and global stability, then the radicalization will continue.
A common thread to these two trends is money - the enormous amount of money poured into corrupting our politics since Citizens United has served to fuel both radicalization and nonsense in order to serve very specific ends. That, too, is hiding in plain sight.
Meanwhile, many Americans suffer a crisis of belonging, a vulnerability to conspiracy theory, an understandable inability to make sense of it all. Because the blending of radicalization (Us v Them) and trivialization (nothing matters) leads to the destruction of objective truth.
To defeat both radicalization and trivialization, we need to get back to a democracy in which debate, disagreement, and even division can be based upon an objective reality that recognizes the stakes involved. Because all of this DOES matter. A lot.

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More from @brhodes

Aug 23
Keep in mind there's no political party or ideological project like Communism propping up the Russian kleptocracy. It's not the CCP or USSR. It's just Putin killing anyone who crosses him and wrapping it in nationalism.
For a while there was plenty of money and the illusion of individual, oligarchic power to go around. But now Putin has catastrophically miscalculated in Ukraine, the money and perks are harder to come by, and more people are getting killed
In the absence of a system or party that needs to perpetuate itself, how long does what passes for the Russian elite see this as a deal that works for them? Anyone knows they could be next to fall off a balcony or die in a plane crash.
Read 7 tweets
Jul 25
AIPAC wants unconditional support for: "a finance minister who has described himself as a proud homophobe, a security minister who was convicted of racist incitement, and an ultra-Orthodox party that proposed fining women for reading the Torah" nytimes.com/2023/07/24/wor…
Democrats need to decide whether democratic values are things that they only talk about when it's easy. Is this a government that should continue to get a blank check coupled with platitudes about democracy?
We stand up against autocratic power grabs in our own country. Meanwhile, we offer platitudes about shared values while Bibi and his extremist coalition persecute Palestinians as a matter of policy and erode Israeli democracy in full view of the entire world.
Read 4 tweets
Mar 1
One elephant in the room here given how murky this has always been is whether the Trump Administration used "Havana syndrome" to rollback the opening to Cuba knowing that there wasn't evidence of the Cuban government being responsible.
In any event, the U.S. clinging to the last vestiges of a failed hardline Cuba policy which has fueled a humanitarian and migration crisis, done nothing to advance human rights, while alienating us in Latin America and the global south looks even more nonsensical today.
Spoiler alert: a failed hardline policy doesn't help Democrats win in Florida either, so there's no political or policy rationale for it. There's a huge opportunity to help Cubans by improving their lives and growing their private sector.
Read 6 tweets
Nov 7, 2022
It's pretty depressing when "free speech" is about really rich powerful guys wanting to say whatever the fuck they please and not about people saying whatever the fuck they want about people in power.
Nevermind US politics. Let's see what the "free speech" avatars in Silicon Valley have to say about MBS or Xi or Modi or MBZ.
It makes people really, really cynical. Which is kind of the point. As Navalny pointed out to me: the goal of a guy like Putin is not to convince people he's not corrupt, it's to convince people that everyone is corrupt.
Read 5 tweets
Jul 22, 2022
The Hawley video is fun to laugh at (and we should!). But it is important because it speaks to a mindset within the entire Republican Party: it's ok to burn it all down so long as we survive.
It's true as a matter of public safety, as they've demagogued everything from life-saving vaccines to gun safety measures to fill their rallies with conspiracy theorists and their campaign coffers with checks.
It's true as a matter of public policy as their agenda has shrunk to go-to items like taking away peoples' health care and redistributing wealth to the richest people and corporations (including their contributors). Like the 1/6 rioters, their base gets left holding the bag.
Read 8 tweets
Jun 24, 2022
The current SCOTUS majority has an extreme degree of illegitimacy when you consider how it came to be.
Bush v Gore itself elevated George W. Bush to the presidency after he lost the popular vote and with Florida still contested. That in turn led to the appointments of Roberts and Alito.
When Scalia died, Republicans in the Senate denied even a hearing for an Obama nominee in an historic break from norms. That allowed a President - Trump - who lost the popular vote to make three appointments.
Read 7 tweets

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