Donald Trump is 'gaslighting' all of us
Is Donald Trump really a "big fan" of the intelligence community, as he claimed on Twitter, or did he disparage intelligence professionals when he repeatedly referred to them and their work in sneer quotes about "Intelligence" briefings and the "so-called 'Russian hacking'"?
Did Trump mock a disabled reporter, or did your eyes, and the Hollywood elite make you think he did?
Did he convince Ford not to move a car plant to Mexico, saving American jobs, or was it all a fabrication for publicity?
Did he win the election with a historically narrow victory, or did he score a "landslide"?
The
questions are endless, and the answers, unless you're paying very close
attention -- all the time -- can require significant effort to
ascertain. Reality is becoming hazy in the era of Trump. And that's no
accident.
The fact is Trump has become America's gaslighter in chief.
If you've never heard the term,
prepare to learn it and live with it every day. Unless Trump starts
behaving in a radically different way after he becomes President,
gaslighting will become one of the words of 2017.
The term comes from the 1930s play "Gas Light" and the 1940s Hollywood movie version (Gaslight)
in which a manipulative husband tries to unmoor his wife, played by
Ingrid Bergman, by tampering with her perception of reality. He dims the
gaslights and then pretends it's only she who thinks they are
flickering as the rooms grow darker.
That's
only the beginning. He uses a variety of truth-blurring techniques. His
goal is to exert power and control by creating doubts about what is
real and what isn't, distracting her as he attempts to steal precious
jewels.
Mental health professionals have made much of the practice, said to be a favorite of narcissists
and abusive spouses. But more recently the tactical tampering with the
truth has become a preferred method of strongmen around the world.
Gaslighting by other means was always a common feature of dictatorships,
but it has found new vogue as a more subtle form of domestic political
control even in countries with varying degrees of democracy.
Now Trump has brought it to the
United States. The techniques include saying and doing things and then
denying it, blaming others for misunderstanding, disparaging their
concerns as oversensitivity, claiming outrageous statements were jokes
or misunderstandings, and other forms of twilighting the truth.
Recall the presidential campaign. By early summer, Trump had already accumulated a long list of statements he made and then denied making; enough that fact-checkers could hardly keep up. He told his supporters to "knock the crap out" of protesters at his rallies, adding "I will pay your legal fees." When confronted with the statement, he responded: "I didn't say that."
After mimicking a disabled reporter and seeing the video used as evidence against him, he repeatedly denied it, claiming his opponents should be embarrassed to say he did. "I would NEVER mock disabled. Shame!" The denials continued after Meryl Streep brought up the subject this week at the Golden Globes. With the video easily available, Trump's argument boiled down to "Who do you trust, me or your lying eyes?"
When Trump says something that
outrages a portion of the population and pleases one segment, he can
have it both ways. Voters eager for a tough guy president may be happy
with the bully, while those who don't like it might be appeased by the
denial. In the end, few people can keep up with all the facts all the
time. And as he tries to undercut the credibility of serious
journalists, he makes it even harder for everyone else to find an easy
path to the truth.
Just before Friday's intelligence briefing on Russian hacks, Trump approvingly tweeted about Julian Assange's statements
denying Russian involvement. When he was criticized for trusting the
head of WikiLeaks more than US intelligence professionals, he accused the "dishonest media" of claiming he agreed with Assange.
The fact is, many people hear only Trump's version of events, and polls show many people believe even the most obvious distortions of the truth.
He's just getting started, but compared with the man he admires so much, he's a rank amateur at gaslighting.
In
Russia, the truth became a matter of opinion under a strategy
implemented by a clever aide to President Vladimir Putin, Vladislav
Surkov. Surkov, who has a background in the arts, orchestrated a kind of
political theater in Russia, creating a gauzy façade where no one knew
which group was a creation of the government and which wasn't.
He reportedly financed liberal groups and neo-Nazi skinheads.
Russian politics became theater, and Putin gradually gained almost
total control, with the independent media gradually disappearing as an
alternative to journalists loyal to the government.
Russia's false reality then moved from the domestic arena to global theater. When "little green men" made their appearance in Ukraine's Crimea,
Russia denied that there were Russian operatives in unmarked uniforms.
And when pro-Russian militias emerged in Ukraine and elsewhere, Moscow
claimed they emerged spontaneously in a quest for independence, even as
Russian military forces moved into position in a sovereign country.
Russia even tried to gaslight US voters, as intelligence agencies concluded, trying to undermine their faith in the democratic process.
And when Moscow thought Trump would lose, it planned to promote the
view that the election was stolen, under the #DemocracyRIP banner, a
plan whose seeds Trump had already planted.
The
challenge will be a steep one for journalists and for all Americans,
when so much of what comes from the next president has to be checked and
double-checked. The first step is to establish when there is a
gaslighting operation in progress.
Then comes the battle to hold on to the facts.
hmmmm thats
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