The Left has learned nothing from the election of Donald J. Trump.
The hysteria of the progressive crybullies, infected with a vicious case
of Trump Derangement Syndrome, grows unabated. The smearing of anyone
who disagrees with “racist,” “sexist,” and “bigot,” has depreciated the
meaning of the words, lessening their sting. The constant usage of such
labels has exposed the Left as being filled with hacks.
The Democrats are the “There You Go Again” Party in everything but name.
But that is not the main message that
Benjamin Weingarten offers in his Conservative Review piece.
While the Left has failed to learn any lessons, those on the Right must seize on the lessons of the 2016 election.
We ought to take a page from the playbook of Trump, who has almost singularly provided us with a golden opportunity to redefine the terms of battle, no longer fighting on leftist ground.
For Republicans and conservatives has been liberated from the PC
thought police. We are free to fight back when vicious charges are
leveled at us designed to instill fear and chill dissent.
As former speaker Newt Gingrich has perceptively noted, Trump has
been a masterful media manipulator, getting media members to chase
so-called “shiny objects” — “Can you believe Trump said X!?” ad nauseam.
Mr. Trump’s version of stray voltage
has a number of effects beyond just causing chaos and distracting his
opponents. When everything is an outrage, nothing is an outrage. And
when everything is an outrage, you expose yourself as a purely partisan
actor, turning off large swaths of the American public.
Trump’s lack of fear of touching politically incorrect third rails
that millions of Americans felt, but which had not been articulated so
bluntly by a national politician, served him well. Incidentally, it also
allowed him to shift the Overton Window on critical issues like
immigration and Islamic supremacism.
When attacked for taking these positions, unlike those to come before
him, Trump did not avoid the fray. Rather, he jumped into it,
counterpunching.
Lulled into a false sense of security by Republicans who fought with
their hands tied behind their backs, constrained by suicidal rules of
political engagement for decades, the Left did not know how to react
when hit.
Leftists could not believe that a political opponent had the gall to actually fight tooth and nail.\
Trump does not give an inch to his critics, and neither should any
other Republican. He defines the rules of engagement, and so should all
on the Right.
Watching the confirmation hearings to date, we see many on the Left
jabbing as if we are in a pre-Trump world. Their questions all hew to
the same old narrative that if you are not a racist, sexist, or bigot,
then you are an out-of-touch plutocrat or a shill for some special
interest or other.
Like Trump, Republicans should challenge these charges head on. They
should take issue with the Left’s premises from the start, showing that
it is the Left who is projecting when it tries to discredit those who
believe in capitalism, the power of the individual, and the sanctity of
the individual’s rights, the rule of law, national sovereignty,
federalism, and the Judeo-Christian morality on which the country is
based.
When leftists attack an attorney general designate because he is a
white male from the South, they should be attacked for judging based on
color of skin (rather than content of character) and for trying to
bruise an appointee who will not stand for open borders, selective law
enforcement, and politicized justice.
When leftists attack a secretary of education designate because her
family is wealthy, they should be attacked for their anti-capitalism and
hypocrisy, and their real desire to bloody an appointee because she
believes that the Left’s own constituents — and indeed all Americans —
should have the opportunity to send their kids to superior schools,
rather than being doomed to a subpar education because it mollifies a
teachers union.
These attacks are designed to put not only the appointees, but also
all right-thinking people on the defensive — to fear reflexively a false
premise because those premises have prevailed among the progressives
who dominated media, academia, and government for decades.
We should no longer live in fear — for the Left thrives when we self-censor and accept its baseless premises.
Trump did not, and he won the highest office in the land.
Yes, the Left will continue to claim scalps. People will be fired for
contributing to one cause or another or committing a thought crime in
the eyes of progressivism. But the more we resist, thwart, and turn the
Left’s fire back around on itself, the more the Left will be outraged,
marginalized, and alienated from sensible Americans.