"Oh Lord, please don't 
let me be misunderstood" 
by David Benjamin
“As members of the winning team, Trump supporters have no urgent need to understand the other side.”
                                   — Amanda Hess, The New York Times
PARIS
 — Pundits — especially the sensitive, liberal ones — keep telling me 
how important it is to understand the complexities, anxieties and pain 
of the “angry” nihilists whose votes put Donald Trump in the Oval 
Office, in his bathrobe at 4 a.m., with the nuclear button an inch away 
from his twitchy little finger.
I’ve heard, ad nauseam, 
from experts on the op-ed page, trolls on Facebook and drunks in bars 
that I’m powerless to pierce the mystery that shrouds all those 
pissed-off white guys who think they’re somehow special for just being 
white, who barely passed high school (or didn’t), who can’t find a 
fulltime job and if they did they couldn’t hold it, and they haven’t 
read a book voluntarily since the onset of puberty.
Understand? 
Why?
I have yet to meet a white nationalist who wants to understand me.
I’ve
 never encountered a machine operator, a loading-dock hand, or a cashier
 at Walgreen’s who wanted to plumb my psyche and peer into my soul.
In
 all the months I worked at Addison Steel in Orlando, not one of the 
welders, fitters, painters, truckers and rednecks there showed any 
interest in the range and depth of my burgeoning intellect.
My 
career at Beacon Auto Radiator flew by without an inkling of concern, 
from my fellow autoworkers, about my spiritual well-being or emotional 
needs. Nothing!
In my two summers at the cannery in Waunakee, I 
fielded not one single probing question from my blue-collar peers about 
my philosophy of life, my favorite poet, my preference between Miro and 
Picasso. They just didn’t seem to care.
This pattern seems to run
 pretty much the whole gamut of all the factories, car washes, 
warehouses, kitchens and farms where I worked, hauled, crawled and 
mopped to pay my way through, high school, college and alimony.
Is
 it me? Do I seem unapproachable? Did my erstwhile co-workers secretly 
ache to know, to understand me, but they were shy, tongue-tied, 
intimidated by my steely gaze, my Freudian beard and my 69 inches of 
stature? Or did they just not give a shit?
Perhaps they pity me. 
In recent encounters with these horny-handed sons of toil about politics
 or Trump, I always re-discover how naive and childlike I am, how 
unschooled, compared to them, in the ways of the “real world.” I’m soft,
 effeminate and cloistered, they explain. I have no grasp of reality. 
I’ve never had to fight for anything, never had to get my hands dirty, 
never looked into an empty pantry with two kids hungry and three days 
’til payday.
I “don’t get it.”
Get what? What’s to get? And why is it so hard to get?
Over
 the years, often to keep my job, I’ve had to “get” some pretty hard 
stuff. I’ve had to to understand — and then explain to people even more 
ignorant than me — issues in the law, for example, or physics, 
education, polymer chemistry, beta blockers, electronics, assembly-line 
technology, finance, sports, journalism, ethics, religion, Jerusalem in 
the first century, food, travel, art, microwave radiation, pottery, 
computerized tomography, exercise physiology, photography, cellular 
telephony, just-in-time inventory control, Japanese gangsters, 
literature, poetry, music, the law of diminishing marginal returns, and 
the migration of ions through a semi-permeable membrane. I wrote a whole
 book about sumo.
So… as a lifelong know-it-all, I find 
particularly galling the charge that I cannot grasp the angst of a 
restive throng who wear their grievance on their bumpers, on t-shirts 
and on the front panel of their adjust-o-band baseball caps.
Besides, they’re wrong about me. I get it. I understand.
Most
 of us understand. It’s not rocket science to appreciate and empathize 
with the anguish of folks who’ve been denied, foreclosed, fired, 
demoted, red-lined, evicted, stopped, frisked or otherwise screwed by 
the system. After all, most of us — more than Trump’s true believers can
 possibly understand — have also been screwed by one system or another.
You live long enough, you’re gonna get screwed.
Just
 about everyone where I grew up in Tomah — neighbors, friends, family, 
classmates — got screwed somewhere along the way. The grownups all 
around me had worked hard, with their hands, on their knees, up ladders 
and down holes every day. For all this, they barely got by, squeezed 
every nickel, and never took a vacation longer than two weeks or farther
 than the back yard.
Every man I knew in my childhood was a white
 working class male, in a white working-class town in flyover, 
trailer-park America. My grandfathers were a plumber and a machinist. 
Neither had ever seen the inside of a high school. Dad was a bartender. 
Mom was a high-school dropout single parent who sold washer-dryers, 
waited on tables and cheated on the Welfare Department to keep food in 
the fridge.
All the women and men whom I knew, admired, loved and
 trusted — except my teachers — were undereducated. Most were 
underemployed, at jobs that insulted their innate intelligence. They 
sweated all their lives and ended it all with a pittance. All along, 
they knew they’d been handed the shitty end. They knew that the wealth 
earned by their work would mostly serve to enrich a handful of strangers
 living in towers in faroff places who didn’t give a rat’s ass who these
 people were and whether their jobs would give them cancer and kill them
 before their time.
They understood that the system, as Bernie 
and Trump revealed to no one’s surprise, is rigged. Always was. In the 
mantra of my grandfather, Archie: “Them what has, gets.”
Despite 
this fate, those forebears — my role models — fought it out. They kept 
struggling, set aside a few dollars and a lot of hope for their kids, 
and they survived. At times, they even thrived, because they chose not 
to let the system break their spirit. They never looked for someone to 
blame — at least not when they were sober. They never succumbed to 
self-pity.
Then, at some point after Vietnam, that spirit 
dissolved. America became a nation of victims. Battered by oil sheiks 
and ayatollahs, by housing bubbles and the Great Recession, by 9/11 — 
especially 9/11 — and egged on by demagogues waving the dark flag of 
fear, fear and fear itself, we accepted our national defeat.
There’s
 a familiar pathology to victimhood. Victims have few friends and many 
enemies, most of whom they’ve never met. They’re isolated, like the 
solitary lush at the end of the bar weeping into his Miller. Bring them 
together and they form not a team, but a mob. They chant, roar, curse, 
throw stuff and look for someone to beat up, lynch, stone, burn at the 
stake.
Victims don’t ask questions, don’t seek answers, don’t 
expect solutions. There are no solutions. They’ve given up. The best 
they can hope for is catharsis.
Donald Trump is a giant bladder 
swollen with catharsis. He articulates their self-pity, magnifies their 
paranoia and validates their bellyache. He’s a face on a t-shirt, with 
no answers longer than 140 characters. His followers will remain 
victims. Their only consolation will be a pack of lies direct from the 
White House. He’ll screw them and they’ll love him, as they blame others
 for their plight and feel oh, so sorry for themselves. 
They say we should try to understand this.
We already do.
To hell with understanding.
For
 the sake of their children and our democracy, we have to rescue these 
ignorant yahoos from their abyss and welcome them back to the America 
they’ve forsaken.
The only way to do that is to beat them.
Tuesday, March 14, 2017
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1 comment:
Ouch. Sounds like this Paris trip isn't going as well as it could?
Beat them how?
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