Doug Casey on What Trump’s Victory Means Going Forward

Guest Post by Doug Casey

The Trump victory is very good news for the US—relative to a win for Hillary, which would have been an unmitigated disaster. So I’m happy he won.

Will Trump winning mean a real change in direction for the US? Unlikely. Don’t mistake Trump for a libertarian. He has all kinds of stupid notions—torture as official policy, killing families of accused terrorists, and putting on import duties. He has no grasp of economics. He’s an authoritarian. His cabinet choices, so far, are all neocons and Deep State hangers-on. He’s likely to treat the US as if it were his 100% owned corporation.

On the bright side, he has real business experience—although of the kind that sees government as a partner. I doubt he’ll try, or be able if he does, to pull up any agencies by the roots. He’ll mainly be able to set the tone, as did Reagan. But, hey, something is better than nothing.

THE POLITICAL FUTURE

A brief word on US political parties. I’ve said for years that the Demopublicans and the Republicrats are just two wings of the same party. One says it’s for social freedom (which is a lie), but is actively antagonistic to economic freedom. The other says it’s for economic freedom (which is a lie), but is actively antagonistic to social freedom. Both are controlled by members of the Deep State.

I still think that’s an accurate description of reality. But, in truth, it’s a little unfair to the Republicans. The creatures who control the Republican Party are one thing—and they were massively repudiated by the victory of Trump. Good riddance. But the people who gravitate towards the GOP are something else. To them, the GOP mostly represents a cultural club they belong to.

Rank and file Republicans don’t have any cohesive philosophy binding them together. They’re just sympathetic to “traditional” values. They like the picture postcard version of America. The 1950’s style “Father Knows Best” family. The world of “American Graffiti”. A house in the suburbs, or a small, neat farm. Thanksgiving dinners with relatives. The exchange of Christmas cards. Going to church on Sunday. The husband having a job that allows him to support the wife and kids. Chevrolets and Fords. A relatively small, non-predatory government. A friendly neighborhood cop. A basically decent and stable society, which doesn’t tolerate crime, or overly outlandish behavior, where social norms are understood and observed.

You get the picture. It’s a cultural thing, not an ideological or political construct. Unfortunately, it’s no longer a reality. It’s more and more just an ideal, about as dated as a Norman Rockwell painting on the defunct Saturday Evening Post.

The Democrats are quite different in outlook. They see themselves as hip and sophisticated, and see traditional values as “square”. They’re for globalism, not American nationalism. Forget the clean cut Mouseketeers; the fat and loathsome Lena Dunham is the new role model. Political correctness rules. White men are automatically despised. Black is beautiful. Women are better than men. The very idea of America is in disrepute, and held in contempt. Multiculturalism overrules home-grown values. Etc. Etc.

You’ll notice that there was very little discussion about policy in this election. It was almost all ad hominem attacks, mostly pushing emotional hot buttons, not intellectual points. It’s all about a culture clash. It’s a non-violent civil war. These two groups no longer have very much in common. And they don’t just disagree, they hate each other.

Is a real civil war possible? Unlikely. The electorate is too degraded to actually get off their couches to fight, apart from the fact few know how to use a gun any more. Besides, 25% of the US is on antidepressants or other psychoactive drugs; they’re too passive to want radical change. Almost half the country is on some form of the dole; they fear having their doggy dishes taken away. More than half the country is obese; fat people tend to avoid street fights. The median age in the US is 38; old people don’t usually get in fights. Anyway, everybody lives on their electronic devices, not the real world.

You’ll notice that voting for Trump and Hillary broke along cultural lines. The Republicans won the rural areas (which are dropping in population); the Democrats won the cities (which are growing). The Reps are white (and becoming no more than a plurality); the Dems have most of the so-called “people of color”, who used to be called “colored people” (and are becoming a majority). The Reps did better with males; the Dems better with females, who tend to see the world in softer and gentler shades. The Reps are favored by native-born Americans; the Dems are favored by immigrants, who often have very different values. The Reps represent the diminishing middle-class; the Dems represent the growing underclass. The Reps did better with older people, who are on their way out; the Dems did better with younger people, indoctrinated by academia and the media, who are on their way up.

None of this looks good for the future of traditional American culture. In fact, Hillary won the popular vote. That means, demographics being what they are, the Republicans are in more trouble next time. With current immigration and birth patterns, the constituency of the Democrats should gain about 2% every four-year election cycle in the future. Even more important, as we leave the eye of the storm that started in 2007, and go into the trailing edge of the economic hurricane, the Trump administration will be blamed. There will, therefore, be a radical reaction away from what it’s believed to represent in 2020.

It used to be the Reps and the Dems differentiated mostly on ideological grounds. Now it’s much more on cultural grounds. Allow me to identify the elephant in the room, and spell out the real nature of the Democratic Party.

The Democratic party is a cesspool filled with leftist social engineers, academics, busy-body pundits, the “elite”, cultural Marxists, race baiters, racial “minorities” who see race as their main identity, radical feminists and LBGT types, entitled underachievers, statists, the soft-headed, the envy-driven, the stupid, professional losers, haters of free markets, and people who simply hate the idea of America. I can’t imagine anyone of good will, or even common decency, being a member of today’s Democratic Party. It needs to be flushed. But it will only get stronger in the near future, for many reasons.

But it’s an honest party—they generally say what they believe, even if it’s repulsive to anyone who values things like liberty. Interestingly, there are no Dinos—unless they’re Stalinists or Maoists who think the others aren’t going far enough. The party has absolutely no redeeming values.

A real battle for the soul of the country is shaping up. But I fear it won’t be heroic, so much as sordid. The knaves versus the fools. The Dems are the evil party, but the Reps are just the stupid party.

Why? Trump and the Trumpers have no ideology except a vision of a vanished world. They’re understandably angry, but don’t know what to do about it. They have no real program, except to say the Dems have gone too far. No coherent philosophy, just a nebulous belief that the Democrats are wrong. They’re justifiably fed up with the Establishment that gave them non-entities like Dole, McCain, and Romney.

Why did Trump win? Two reasons.

First, “Cultural Americans” know that their culture is dying, and their standard of living is declining. They sensed—correctly—that this would be their “last hurrah”, their last real kick at the cat. Trump is likely the last white male President. Unless a rabid statist like Tim Kaine is elected in 2020, with promises of a new and more radical New Deal. Or ongoing wars tilt the odds towards a general, most of whom are still white males.

Second, don’t forget that Trump wasn’t the only protest candidate in the primaries. There was Bernie. His supporters know that Hillary and the Dem insiders stole it from him, and they’re still very unhappy. Many abstained from voting for Hillary because of the theft. A few probably voted for Trump out of spite. Or because they wanted to burn the house down. Nobody says this.

Perversely, they’ll get their wish. The Greater Depression will deepen under Trump, even if he makes the right moves. Which will play into the election of someone from the Democrat cesspool in 2020. So maybe the Trump victory isn’t such a good thing after all.

But let’s look at the bright side. All things considered, we’re in for some wonderful free (kind of) entertainment.


Editor’s note: Every month, Doug shares his unique insights in The Casey Report, our flagship publication. If you sign up today, you’ll get complete access to all our archived content, including recent essays by Doug on the Greater Depression, the migrant crisis, and technology. You’ll also receive actionable advice to help you protect and grow your wealth during these difficult times.

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19 Comments
Old Guy
Old Guy
November 12, 2016 5:14 am

Ardent Trump supporter here. Hope he heeds those who are telling him overt compromise is poison.
He needs to make history. Not repeat it. I don’t even want to be cuing up “won’t get fooled again” one more time. I believe that would seriously piss me off.

starfcker
starfcker
November 12, 2016 5:17 am

An astonishingly incoherent misread of the situation. Casey, like many of his ilk, is only capable of seeing the situation in one one way. Kind of interesting that he accuses mainstream america of clinging to a dated view, yet is completely unaware that the america he is comfortable in is the one that’s about to vanish. Better get you some gloves, sissy boy, i’ll bet those hands are tender

Llpoh
Llpoh
November 12, 2016 5:37 am

Casey says “He has no grasp of economics.” That is total bullshit. He may be wrong, but he is not stupid. And he is well educated.

Economics is not a science. Nothing is certain. I believe in the Austrian School, but it is a belief, not a dead certainty.

starfcker
starfcker
November 12, 2016 5:59 am

Great post, llpoh. Trump has a blue chip education, and has been doing big things for better than forty years. People don’t realize how easy it is to lose money in business, or get eaten alive by overhead. New York city is full of liberal busybodies who throw as much in the path of developers as they can. To survive in that environment, you can’t just be tough, you have to be good. You have to be able to read people, and figure out, do I mollify them, or crush them. I Think he is going to shock the world at how much he gets done, and how quickly.

mike in Ct
mike in Ct
  starfcker
November 12, 2016 2:00 pm

We can only Hope & Pray….Mike

hardscrabble farmer
hardscrabble farmer
November 12, 2016 7:29 am

“He has no grasp of economics.”

Why would he say something so obviously incorrect? Economics is, after all, knowledge of the production, consumption and transfer of wealth. Trump is a billionaire. Is that not wealth?

Pfft.

And then this classic-

“Trump is likely the last white male President.”

?

TJF
TJF
  hardscrabble farmer
November 12, 2016 7:41 am

Jim Quinn 2020!

razzle
razzle
  hardscrabble farmer
November 12, 2016 12:21 pm

Hardscrabble… maybe this whole time they’ve all been speaking in code.

Maybe when certain people ‘in the club’ refer to “The Economy” and “Economics”… they are talking about child trafficking and how threatening this person is to “the economy”.

Not painting Doug personally with that brush but it wouldn’t shock me if a segment of the political class has ALWAYS been talking about their internal economy and when they express concern about the economy it’s their internal economy they know that their “friends” know they are talking about.

BB
BB
November 12, 2016 7:55 am

Big Injun Chief of the clouds, Australian economics is the only economic theory that works in the long run.

Trump,needs to stop all immigration ( both legal and illegal , build the Damn wall ) . That’s the only hope for long term survival of Western Civilization.If he doesn’t stop immigration we will turn into another banana republic.?

David
David
  BB
November 12, 2016 5:40 pm

Yep, they will all come here and vote to make here more like there. I would love to read a history book from a couple hundred years from now.

Rdawg
Rdawg
  BB
November 14, 2016 10:48 am

BB:
“Australian economics”
God, you really are the village idiot!

Anonymous
Anonymous
November 12, 2016 8:57 am

“He has no grasp of economics.”

I stopped reading here.

Unless and until Casey can show at least the same degree of economic success as Trump obviously has I have to assume he knows not that of which he is speaking.

Constman54
Constman54
November 12, 2016 9:23 am

Intellectual elites, like Casey, continue to amaze me. Whether on the left or right they always “know better” and what’s best. They can read into everything and tell you exactly what you are thinking. He knows Trump better than Trump knows himself.

IQ does not equal wisdom and never will. There is a wisdom that comes from a man with calluses on his hand that 99% of the intellectual elite will never know.

Suzanna
Suzanna
November 12, 2016 10:36 am

I am no fan of Doug Casey. He’s “been around” as we say,
but I largely see him as a flim flam salesman. He wants
us to buy his news letter to get the info on the “secret gold law.”

“Will Trump winning mean a real change in direction for the US? Unlikely. Don’t mistake Trump for a libertarian. He has all kinds of stupid notions—torture as official policy, killing families of accused terrorists, and putting on import duties. He has no grasp of economics. He’s an authoritarian. His cabinet choices, so far, are all neocons and Deep State hangers-on. He’s likely to treat the US as if it were his 100% owned corporation.”

BS and more BS. I think Trump is going to do his best to move us into the transition
from dollars as king to what is coming. I for one am eager for this to turn America
toward the future in a positive way. We have children and grandchildren to consider.

The “greater depression” is coming one way or another and not because of Trump.
The upheavals are due, and will occur, even if God had been elected president.

Suzanna

Anonymous
Anonymous
November 12, 2016 11:29 am

The reason he talks like that is he is a damn commie just not man enough to say so. Let the county burn if not now 4 more yrs it well burn. I and a lot like me see no reason to not go to war, The kids that say burn baby burn are in for a surprise, We will not have rubber bullets. Sick of this crap and I will go down kicking ass, I hate all ticks in office, so many lies they don’t know what they said. Build the damn wall put the army down there shoot to kill, then they will stop coming in, no free school. food, or anything else, if they die so what, and for busiess if you leave the country so you can make a better bottom line I would not let you sell here again, I could go on and on but it don’t matter if you liked Hillary I will never trust you or turn my back on you and going to help you will let you die in the st.

CT
CT
November 12, 2016 12:04 pm

Casey is both wrong and correct. He’s right about the extreme demographic danger. Everyone here knows that. But he’s ignorant of Trump and the people around him. Worse yet, Casey seems entirely unaware of the emergence of the Alt-Right, a movement displacing and replacing conservatism in America. Too little, too late? We’ll have to see….

Mark
Mark
November 12, 2016 12:58 pm

Cassy misses on the impact of a big Blue State going bust first such as Illonoise and their pension crisis. Being that it’s a shity state to live in even if you are rich , people will be leaving it in droves leaving the entire state with the exception of huge corporate farms a Detroit state wide.

They’re going to have trouble with in the 4 year time frame. So their is hope in their misery.

Tucci78
Tucci78
November 12, 2016 5:14 pm

It’s so special to watch the progtards whine.

Don’t these goddam idiots get it yet? Those of us in the U.S. citizenry who own the preponderance of personal firearms in our republic – and that includes most of the semi-automatic large-box-magazine longarms suitable for combat – have voted for Mr. Trump.

“Every society rests on a barbarian base. The people who don’t understand civilization, and wouldn’t like it if they did. The hitchhikers. The people who create nothing, and who don’t appreciate what others have created for them, and who think civilization is something that just exists and that all they need to do is enjoy what they can understand of it — luxuries, a high living standard, and easy work for high pay. Responsibilities? Phooey! What do they have a government for?”

— H. Beam Piper, Space Viking (1963)