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Bloomberg is a bigger threat to democracy than Trump

Justin Ward
9 min readFeb 19, 2020

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(Gage Skidmore / CC-BY-SA 3.0)

Donald Trump is a threat to American democracy. It’s hard to disagree with that statement. However, too often we get hung up his tin-pot dictator theatrics while ignoring some of the less obvious side-effects of his presidency. A lot of the focus is on specific things that he has done to debase the credibility of the office or ways in which he has violated any number of sacrosanct values. But less attention has been given to how Trump has created a state of what sociologist Emile Durkheim called “anomie,” or “normlessness,” broadening the boundaries of what we ourselves deem acceptable.

His status as the greatest of evils has made the threshold for relative good extraordinarily low. All that’s necessary to be considered one of the “good guys” is to be against him. Media critic Adam Johnson dubbed this phenomenon “Trumpwashing.”

After 2016, the architects of the very same cruel Republican agenda that Trump has faithfully implemented—austerity, tax cuts for the wealthy, border militarization—were brought into the fold of the #Resistance.

Suddenly, everyone had warm feelings about George W. Bush, who lied to the American public to make the case for a $6 trillion war that was responsible for the deaths of half a million Iraqis. All the pundits who helped sell that war were rehabilitated as “Never Trump”…

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Justin Ward
Justin Ward

Written by Justin Ward

Journalist and activist. Founder and co-chair of DivestSPD. Bylines at SPLC, The Baffler, GEN, USA Today. Follow on Twitter: @justwardoctrine, @DivestSPD

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