Cynicism, Then Revolt

Guest Post by The Zman

A popular line from libertarianism is that the state is violence. Another way of stating this is the state has a monopoly on violence. The implication is that the state imposes order, the order of those who control the state, with the threat of violence or through actual violence, in the case of law enforcement. It is a Hobbesian view of society, in which order is imposed, but an inaccurate one. Society, even authoritarian ones, rely on consent and a shared set of rituals and symbols to perpetuate consent.

Even the most authoritarian of societies, the prison, where the members have no control over their bodies, relies on consent and ritual to maintain order. The regularization of prison life, along with predictable symbols of authority, keep the prisoners from revolting against the guards. Without cooperation from the inmates, a prison would be ungovernable. The cost of housing and feeding humans in perpetual revolt against their captors would be prohibitive. A prison requires consent.

In a western liberal democracy, order tilts in the other direction, where the state relies more on ritual and symbol to encourage the consent of the governed. Elections are a big part of the ritual, where the people are made to believe their concerns are considered by the office holders. Every western nation has symbols and rituals to remind the voters that they live in a democracy. In America, patriotism is used to manipulate the people into supporting the system, despite their misgivings and distrust.

Order in America relies on the balance between the state’s monopoly of violence, the consent of the people and the maintenance of symbols and rituals that are the physical manifestation of the American creed. As long as the people trust and respect those symbols and rituals, they will support the current order. More precisely, as long as they believe those rituals, like elections and civic participation, support the American creed, they will respect the institutions of the state that maintain order.

Most likely, the process by which a liberal democracy moves from order to disorder, is like walking through a submarine. The people start in the compartment of high trust, but events lead them to leave that compartment and move to the next compartment called doubt or distrust. Once there, the door closes behind them. This is where the people begin losing faith in the office holders. The next compartment from there is cynicism, where the people have lost all trust in the system and the ruling class.

In this phase of social evolution in a liberal democracy, there is some remnant of consent and some tug of patriotism. The emotional connection between the citizens and the state is vestigial. It is a memory and a sadness at the onset of political cynicism, but then slowly builds to an anger at what has been lost. This is what Darren Beattie fears is right around the corner for America, if Trump’s agenda fails due the deliberate thwarting of the public will, by the people controlling the state.

It is safe to assume that the marginalized supporters who came out to vote for Trump will be forever divorced from the shared consent of the people. They will stop voting and stop thinking their future lies with democratic solutions. Just how many of Trump’s voters will fall into this state is hard to calculate. On the other hand, the coalition of the ascendant will be energized by this, so the general level of cynicism will be offset to some degree by enthusiasm from the coalition of the ascendant.

The truth never mentioned in the Beattie column, because it is forbidden, is populism is just code for white. What Trump represents is the white population, who think it is still possible to hold onto heritage America. If we just get immigration under control and fix some of the trade deals, things will slowly get back to normal. Oddly, this is the one thing the Left gets right about Trump. He does want to make America white again, if not demographically, certainly culturally and institutionally.

There is no question that many whites in America have moved from the compartment of distrust to the compartment of cynicism. Beattie is wrong to assume this process is not already underway. It started a long time ago as a trickle on the Right and now the pace is accelerating. This is evident in the growth and persistence of the dissident right, which has thrived despite the authoritarian tactics of the ruling class. Despite having more political prisoners than ever, we have more dissidents than ever too.

Still, Beattie is not wrong to assert that the failure of popular causes, like immigration controls, will push many more people into the cynicism compartment. The result will be an America where consent begins to fade and is replaced by coercion. White people will continue to follow the rules, not because they respect those rules, but because they fear reprisals from the state. The authority of the ruling class will no longer be based in their legitimacy to rule, but their control of the monopoly of violence.

In the trenches, soldiers will fight and die for their comrades, despite the rotten conditions their leaders create for them. In human society, the people will tolerate great deprivations in support of their neighbors. That social capital, upon which authority relies, will help maintain order, even when the rulers have failed in their duties. In a land where everyone’s neighbor is a stranger, there can be no foundation of social capital upon which to rest authority. The people must trust and respect their rulers.

That’s the next compartment after cynicism. When Trump’s agenda fails, as it sure will, white cynicism toward the system will grow. It will reach a point where the ruling class can only maintain order through coercion. They will live in fear of crisis, as the people will have no reason to sacrifice and no trust in the system to see them through the difficult times. The relationship between ruler and ruled will be like an old married couple hanging on until the kids are grown. The divorce is inevitable.

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11 Comments
steve
steve
June 1, 2019 5:10 pm

“Power concedes nothing without a demand. It never did and it never will. Find out just what a people will submit to, and you have found out the exact amount of injustice and wrong which will be imposed upon them; and these will continue till they are resisted with either words or blows, or with both. The limits of tyrants are prescribed by the endurance of those whom they oppress. Men may not get all they pay for in this world; but they must pay for all they get.” Frederick Douglass, August 3, 1857

niebo
niebo
June 1, 2019 5:19 pm

When Trump’s agenda fails, as it sure will, white cynicism toward the system will grow. It will reach a point where the ruling class can only maintain order through coercion.

I think that “we” were at that point before the election, that a lot of people had had enough of the BS, the endless lying from the mouthpiece of the globalist puppeteers, and the ongoing (perpetual, seems like) fleecing of the American taxpayer by .gov, and that Trump’s candidacy and election actually dissuaded some the cynicism that was boiling to the surface – and had HRC been elected, we would today be having a very different conversation, something along the lines of “The Chair is against the wall. Repeat. The chair is against the wall.”

And it seems to me what has inspired more cynicism than even Trump’s failings is the “witch-hunt”. As in “if the left does not give up the crybaby shit, they are going to find themselves with something to cry about.” People are getting fed up again, and not with Trump. And if they win in 2020, oh gawd . . .

Anonymous
Anonymous
June 1, 2019 6:41 pm

The state has a monopoly on violence, until it doesn’t.

Jack Lovett
Jack Lovett
June 1, 2019 7:39 pm

I have always been the dimmest light in the room but I have never in my life have been so stupid as to “vote”
These pathetic sicko’s the demoncrats vs the publecreeps, sorta make me sick.

sheliak
sheliak
June 1, 2019 7:41 pm

I agree with the author’s premise of phases of disillusion on the part of US citizenry but disagree with this analysis vis a vis Trump. Trump has not been thwarted; rather he has not even attempted to take action on many previous campaign promises: executive orders on anchor baby scam, diversity lottery, remittances to Mexico, reducing legal immigration, ending DACA amnesty, ending sanctuary cities and so on not to mention winding down foreign US military interventions across the planet. I assert it is the mendacious self-inflicted failures of the Trump presidency itself, those not thwarted by hostile political forces, pushing many legacy americans beyond the cynicism phase of disillusion.

gatsby1219
gatsby1219
June 1, 2019 9:46 pm

“In this phase of social evolution in a liberal democracy”

What is a Constitutional Republic, for $500 Alex.

splurge
splurge
  gatsby1219
June 2, 2019 11:44 am

Something we really haven’t had since the war between the states. We’ve lost more of it since then (the seventeenth amendment certainly did not help and neither did the nineteenth). The voting rights act presaged an aggressive assault on republican values and a press toward pure democracy .

robert h siddell jr
robert h siddell jr
June 2, 2019 7:21 am

I think Conservatives are in a Hammer and Anvil situation where the Democrats and Rinos are the hammer and the rest of Leftist Society is the anvil. We will have to work like Hell and maybe even have to fight to survive as Conservative Citizens of a Republic with Constitutional Rights.

Not Sure
Not Sure
  robert h siddell jr
June 2, 2019 8:25 am

Says the metal to the hammer as it is beaten into whatever form the owner of the hammer and anvil want it to become.

Not Sure
Not Sure
  Not Sure
June 2, 2019 10:39 am

No disrespect, just if your going to plan on surviving, maybe pick a better analogy.

How about the lead that stops the hammer?

Just a Medic
Just a Medic
June 2, 2019 3:35 pm

Even the most authoritarian of societies, the prison, where the members have no control over their bodies, relies on consent and ritual to maintain order.

@Zman Intruiging premise for your article but not sure I buy it. Consider expounding on this idea.