National Opinions

Rx for conservatives with Trump trauma

Conservatives, at least old-fashioned Burkean ones, have it right about at least one big thing: the importance of  maintaining healthy private and local lives, especially in times of political upheaval.

Now is a good time to take  a vacation from political news, amid the chronic craziness of the launch of the Trump regime, which is not "conservative'' but a personality cult brought into power by the willful suspension of disbelief  so common in America's celebrity/television/social media culture.

Take comfort in knowing that the worst of Trump's promises are unlikely to be implemented and that, anyway, he doesn't really have any  coherent ''program'' other than staying at the center of attention, expanding his family's wealth and influence, and being applauded by his core constituency, assuming that it doesn't evaporate as the extent of his election-campaign con job becomes evident even to them.

The steady disclosure of his lies and hypocrisy will be oddly comforting because they will demonstrate that Donald Trump is no ideologue. He's mostly just a rich narcissist,  materialist and demagogue who, in his search for adulation and validation, may do some good things. After all, he is terrified of being labeled a "loser.''

Skip politics for awhile.

Walk out of your political room and stroll into your nonpolitical room, soundproofed from the minute-by-minute circular speculations about the future of the Republic or at least of the Democratic Party. For the next few weeks, ration the political stuff you consume and go for long walks, preferably in the countryside but in the cities and suburbs if that's where you live. On your walks,  mull the sweep of history and how much bigger nature is than political cycles. Read long novels that show characters going through life, learning and improvising. Watch old movies. Watch winter become spring. Look at the night sky. Order seeds; gardening strengthens patience. Write on a computer without an internet connection. Better, write with a pen on paper. Clear your mind by withdrawing  from a lot of social media.

[Proud old Republican senator and World War II vet repudiates Trump]

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Mull life's transience, its cycles of growth, decay and regrowth, and the little pleasures that help make it worthwhile. And realize that the older you get, the faster time will go by. Christopher Fry, the British dramatist, observed, "After the age of 80, you seem to be having breakfast every five minutes.'' The Trump administration will soon be over.

Remember what lasts.

To retain or regain your equilibrium after this bizarre election, focus on what you have around you in that blessed place known as private life. First, your family and friends, even those you're angry at because they voted for Trump. Try to repair your ties to them if they are frayed. White House occupants come and go; your personal circle ought to continue as  the most important part of your life.

Participate in those local institutions that do so much good for you and your community, and in which you can do some good. These  include clubs, charities, religious organizations, schools, libraries, parks and so on.

Alexis de Tocqueville famously wrote about the special importance in America of community organizations for a healthy civic life, "The health of a democratic society may be measured by the quality of functions performed by private citizens.'' Liberals, and the citizenry in general, place far too much faith in government, and especially the federal government, as a source of happiness.

Even worse, they invest far too much hope in, and assign far too much praise and blame to, one person — the president.

Professional journalists, especially as their ranks have been slashed in the past 20 years by that great plagiarism-and-fraud factory called the internet, make this inevitable over-investment worse by paying far too much attention to the president and far too little to other parts of government and wider society. Obviously, it's  much easier (and usually more fun) to cover the daily melodrama around one powerful celebrity than move around to see what's happening in the various gears of a whole government.

Now let's give thanks for American federalism, even though its Electoral College has put a sociopath in the White House. Federalism means that, however awful the government in Washington, the states are free to go their own way to some extent. Some,  of course, are badly and/or corruptly governed, often for the benefit of special business interests (e.g., coal in West Virginia). But some are honestly and humanely run. Likewise for the towns and cities, those legal children of  the states.

A bad president and/or Congress remind us of the dangers of an overly unitary national government and of the  benefits of geographically diffused powers in  the world's most complicated country.

Act locally.

Focusing on what you can change locally will give you a stronger foundation from which to push for national change. Justice Louis Brandeis wrote, "A man is a better citizen of the United States for being also a loyal citizen of his state and of his city; for being loyal to his family and to his profession or trade; for being loyal to his college or his lodge."

As the nature of Trump's administration becomes clearer,  even to many of his gullible and corrupted fans, join those national projects — political or otherwise — that might  help stem Trumpist abominations while remembering that he raised some socio-economic issues that need to be addressed, although he is unlikely to seriously address them himself.

Yes, Trump was politically smart — and correct — during the campaign to say that "the working class'' has gotten the shaft. It has. (To "represent'' these sad citizens he has named a collection of multimillionaires and billionaires to his Cabinet. …)

Andy Smarick, in an essay ("With Smugness Toward None …'') in  the Nov. 18 Weekly Standard, the neocon magazine, should provide some solace to liberals from a conservative. He writes:

[Trump's emerging Cabinet is looking more conventional than many had expected]

"Conservatives are deeply skeptical about governing strategies that presume too much about our capacities — for instance, centralization, muscular government, expert administrators and grand schemes. This naturally leads the conservative to seek to limit the authority of others: decentralization, the separation of governmental powers into branches, trusting small voluntary associations over compulsory state bodies, putting faith in markets over central plans. But — crucially — this humility extends down to the self and shapes how the temperamentally conservative individual engages in the public's business: I am limited. I may be wrong. I need to trust others.''
And, as conservative columnist George Will wrote a couple of months back: "The beginning of conservative wisdom is recognition that there is an end to everything: Nothing lasts. If Trump wins, the GOP ends as a vehicle for conservatism.''
"Pessimism need not breed fatalism or passivity. It can define an agenda of regeneration, but only by being clear-eyed about the extent of (civic) degeneration, which a charlatan's successful selling of his fabulousness exemplifies.''
For the time being, as in Voltaire's "Candide," "It is necessary to cultivate our garden.'' Do what you can, where you can (close to home, certainly) and when you can. And accept the infinite capacity of everyone in political power, right and left, to deeply disappoint.

Robert Whitcomb is a former editor at The Wall Street Journal and International Herald Tribune and currently president of Guard Dog Media, in Boston, as well as a weekly columnist for GoLocal24.com and a partner at Cambridge Management Group. He wrote this for InsideSources.com. Email, rwhitcomb51@gmail.com.

The views expressed here are the writer's and are not necessarily endorsed by Alaska Dispatch News, which welcomes a broad range of viewpoints. To submit a piece for consideration, email commentary@alaskadispatch.com. Send submissions shorter than 200 words to letters@alaskadispatch.com. 

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