LTMMC
Really Experienced
- Joined
- Jul 19, 2020
- Posts
- 251
… then read one of the best books ever written about this strange aberration of the human species. How Americans became what they are today. Author is an American, Kurt Andersen, title of his book "Fantasyland" – How America Went Haywire – a 500-year history.
IMHO, if one searches for an explanation, for why close to 50% of Americans have voted for Donald Trump – after knowing beforehand who he is – one will be at a loss of understanding this phenomenon. Unless one reads Andersen's rationale.
His explanation: the hyper-individualism of Americans, coupled with the freedom to believe anything and everything. Including fables and fairy tales, demons, Satan and angels on earth. And quack religions of all kinds. Stuff that civilized people in other parts of the developed world have long since discarded, when they entered the age of Enlightenment, and became secular societies.
Not so in the US of A; it's unbelievable what Americans consider worthy of believing in and following. So unfortunately minds encumbered by organized religion – in the 21st century, mind you! – easily conjured up two guiding principles:
#1: Everybody is entitled to his own facts, and there is no such thing as a common truth. A truth based on science and rational thinking, which prevails in grown-up nations.
#2: Righteous people like them (holier than thou) are not only allowed to become missionaries for the rest of the world. No, such people have a God-given duty and obligation to become Billy Grahams or Pat Robinsons or Rush Limbaughs for/to their fellow Americans.
It looks right now like the tide has been stemmed almost, short of engulfing the USA completely, but just barely. And maybe with a lot of luck, America might someday become a secular nation. Like the Founding Fathers had hoped, like that is common for the rest of civilized nations. Other societies have reached this step, so why should Americans not make it also? But it seems to me it will still take a lot of time for this to happen.
My two cents worth, at least, for explaining Trumpism is America.
IMHO, if one searches for an explanation, for why close to 50% of Americans have voted for Donald Trump – after knowing beforehand who he is – one will be at a loss of understanding this phenomenon. Unless one reads Andersen's rationale.
His explanation: the hyper-individualism of Americans, coupled with the freedom to believe anything and everything. Including fables and fairy tales, demons, Satan and angels on earth. And quack religions of all kinds. Stuff that civilized people in other parts of the developed world have long since discarded, when they entered the age of Enlightenment, and became secular societies.
Not so in the US of A; it's unbelievable what Americans consider worthy of believing in and following. So unfortunately minds encumbered by organized religion – in the 21st century, mind you! – easily conjured up two guiding principles:
#1: Everybody is entitled to his own facts, and there is no such thing as a common truth. A truth based on science and rational thinking, which prevails in grown-up nations.
#2: Righteous people like them (holier than thou) are not only allowed to become missionaries for the rest of the world. No, such people have a God-given duty and obligation to become Billy Grahams or Pat Robinsons or Rush Limbaughs for/to their fellow Americans.
It looks right now like the tide has been stemmed almost, short of engulfing the USA completely, but just barely. And maybe with a lot of luck, America might someday become a secular nation. Like the Founding Fathers had hoped, like that is common for the rest of civilized nations. Other societies have reached this step, so why should Americans not make it also? But it seems to me it will still take a lot of time for this to happen.
My two cents worth, at least, for explaining Trumpism is America.