Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

Media Elites, Not Trump Supporters, Are Disconnected From Reality
The Federalist ^ | December 2, 2020 | John Daniel Davidson.

Posted on 12/02/2020 9:13:48 AM PST by Kaslin

It’s not Trump supporters who are living in a fantasyland, but members of the corporate media who sense their power and influence waning.


With the end of Donald Trump’s presidency fast approaching, we’ve seen a surge of columns and posts asserting that Republicans and Trump supporters have lost touch with reality. After four years of marinating in “falsehoods” and “disinformation”—a term that really just means “information I don’t like”—Trump’s backers are all turned around, we’re told. They believe much that isn’t so.

David Brooks of The New York Times explains that these poor saps, most of whom, he says, are uneducated, uncredentialed people who don’t live in prosperous cities, have retreated to conspiracy theories to explain their misfortune and unhappiness. “People in this precarious state are going to demand stories that will both explain their distrust back to them and also enclose them within a safe community of believers,” he writes. Trump, QAnon, and Alex Jones “rose up to give them those stories and provide that community.”

Over at The New Yorker, editor David Remnick ponders the grave costs of Trump’s “assault on the press and the truth,” asking how many COVID-19 victims “died because they chose to believe the President’s dismissive accounts of the disease rather than what public-health officials were telling the press? Half of Republican voters believe Trump’s charge that the 2020 election was ‘rigged.’ What will be the lasting effects on American democracy of that disinformation campaign?”

These are just representative samples, but across the mainstream commentariat the gist is all the same: if you support Trump, you’re likely a poor person who believes conspiracy theories and is dangerously disconnected from reality, partly because you resent successful people like Messrs. Brooks and Remnick. You live in a fantasyland because it assuages your feelings of inferiority, which are mostly justified. You’re paranoid because you’re powerless, and the alternate reality you’ve constructed for yourself gives you a sense of power and agency in a confusing, unsettled world.

But here’s the thing. Everything these media elites say about Trump supporters can more properly be said about media elites themselves. Who really has been living in a fantasyland these last four years? Is it the ordinary Americans—including a lot of educated, white-collar professionals—who voted for a president they felt would shake up the sclerotic status quo in Washington, or a press corps that perpetuated an actual conspiracy about Trump-Russia collusion for years?

It was Remnick’s New Yorker, after all, that published a serious-seeming essay in September 2018 that claimed Facebook had been weaponized by “Russian agents who wanted to sow political chaos and help Trump win” in the 2016 election—an effort, the author said, that had an “astonishing impact.” Never mind the preposterousness of claiming that a couple hundred thousand dollars in Facebook advertising had an “astonishing impact” on the outcome of the 2016 election, there has never been a shred of evidence that “Russian interference” changed or altered even a single vote in 2016.

A New Yorker staff writer named Evan Osnos wrote that article. Osnos won the National Book Award in 2014 and in 2015 was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize. He’s won many other prizes and worked all over the world, and, just before the election, published a flattering book about former Vice President Joe Biden. Osnos is the sort of fellow Brooks has in mind when he talks about “professional members” of the “epistemic regime”—the people who know what’s real and tell us so, a job for which they are richly rewarded.

What else has this supposedly enlightened member of the epistemic elite told us? In June, he compared Trump’s White House, which had a temporary fence around it after Black Lives Matter protests turned into riots, to the Zhongnanhai, the seat of China’s communist government in Beijing, where “people are more accustomed than Americans are to the notion of leaders who live and work secluded from the public.”

Earlier that month, Osnos dashed off a post that described—falsely, as it turned out—protests in Lafayette Square on June 1 as “peaceful.” We all know, even if the media refused to report it, that the protesters were not at all peaceful, and in fact were hurling “bricks, frozen water bottles and caustic liquids” at police.

This isn’t really about Osnos, his hackery notwithstanding, but about his professional class—a class that fervently believes much that isn’t so. Despite mountains of evidence to the contrary, members of Osnos’ class still believe that Trump got substantial help from Russia in 2016. They believe, still, that Trump is a dangerous authoritarian who might just destroy the republic. They believe, still, that the only reason tens of millions of Americans would support Trump is that they are racists or rubes, or both.

Osnos and Remnick and the rest of our media elites believe these things for the same reason Brooks thinks Trump supporters are conspiracy theory-addled suckers: they are becoming irrelevant, they are losing power and influence, their status as members of the epistemic regime is uncertain—indeed, their entire regime seems to be collapsing, and they know it.

It’s not too much to say, quoting Brooks, that “people in this precarious state are going to demand stories that will both explain their distrust back to them and also enclose them within a safe community of believers.”

So we will continue to see stories and commentary from the epistemic regime that soothe men like Brooks, Remnick, and Osnos, assuring them all is well, that credulous, mendacious Trump supporters have been put in their place, and that after a harrowing four years, all is once again as it should be.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: coastalelites; davidbrooks; davidremnick; media; mediabias; mediacriticism; newsbias; newyorker; trumpvoters

1 posted on 12/02/2020 9:13:48 AM PST by Kaslin
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | View Replies]

To: Kaslin

2 posted on 12/02/2020 9:16:20 AM PST by BenLurkin (The above is not a statement of fact. It is either opinion or satire. Or both.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Kaslin

So you’re saying, in essence, that since the media elites have completely lost their minds, then they are incapable of the mental capacity to recognize their lack of mental capacity?

I am 110% in agrement!


3 posted on 12/02/2020 9:20:16 AM PST by Perseverando (Antifa, BLM, Libs, Progs, Islamonazis, Statists, Commies, DemoKKKrats: It's a Godlessness disorder.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Kaslin

I’ve heard of liberals seeing the light and becoming conservatives. George McGovern is a good example. He switched after he starting trying to run a business. I can’t think of an example of any Conservative switching back to liberal. (Maybe Barry Goldwater but only after dementia set in)


4 posted on 12/02/2020 9:44:48 AM PST by Nateman (Democracy dies with vote fraud darkness.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Kaslin

The refusal to take commonsense precautions with the pandemic is a GOP thing that I strongly suspect started out as Lefty disinformation (See Robert F. Kennedy, Jr.).

The refusal by the Proggies to acknowledge that people don’t like what they are trying to cram down all our throats goes well beyond “out of touch” and is instead more about a power dynamic that puts them at the top and everyone else (us) beneath them. It’s not out of touch so much as thwarted egomanicalism that is of course going to try again to instruct us all to know our place and do as we are told.


5 posted on 12/02/2020 10:27:55 AM PST by BlackAdderess (The more ways you figure out to divide people the less they are going to be able to accomplish)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: BlackAdderess

COVID-19 Vaccines May Be Risky for People with Chronic Illness — Pain News Network https://www.painnewsnetwork.org/stories/2020/11/20/covid-19-vaccines-may-not-be-recommended-for-people-with-chronic-illness


6 posted on 12/02/2020 10:50:52 AM PST by GailA (I LOVE OUR GUTSY PRESIDENT TRUMP)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 5 | View Replies]

To: Kaslin

I’m unsure if they are zealots or just idiots who believe that you can have a functional society with fifty bazillion little prickly tribes of Identity Politics with very elaborate social rules and regulations governing every possible interaction. Everybody will be so busy trying to secure/maintain/figure out the pecking order that nothing else will get done.

They aren’t out of touch, there is a plan, it’s just a really stupid plan. (But this time it will work, don’t cha know!)


7 posted on 12/02/2020 10:58:37 AM PST by BlackAdderess (The more ways you figure out to divide people the less they are going to be able to accomplish)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Kaslin

bookmark


8 posted on 12/02/2020 11:56:32 AM PST by GOP Poet (Super cool you can change your tag line EVERYTIME you post!! :D. (Small things make me happy))
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Kaslin

Ayn Rand described them perfectly in the persona of Ellsworth Toohey — in “The Fountainhead.” Shakespeare’s Iago in “Othello” is also this same kind of character. They’re never the principals, but pride themselves on their ability to manipulate the thinking of everyone else.

And then in Atlas Shrugged, we see the sequel of rampant incompetence.


9 posted on 12/02/2020 12:40:19 PM PST by MikeHu
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Kaslin
Who is separated from reality?!


10 posted on 12/02/2020 2:02:56 PM PST by Rummyfan (In any war between the civilized man and the savage, support the civilized man. Support Israel.d)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson