(1) Against Kabuki Normality - by Jonathan V. Last - 0 views
www.thebulwark.com/...against-kabuki-normality
normality exclusion disqualification candidate norms political culture trump history

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What could a presidential nominee do that would merit his exclusion from an Al Smith dinner?
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How do you draw those lines?It’s useful here to think in the abstract. Instead of trying to adjudicate each of Trump’s depredations, come at the question from the other side.
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Just as a for-instance, if a Republican presidential candidate said that Catholics were demonic and that priests should be rounded up and imprisoned, then I would hope and assume that Catholic Charities would not invite him to speak at their fundraiser, just because it was a matter of tradition.
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In this case, I think we can agree—again—that these objections would be insufficient and that Catholic Charities would be right to exclude such a person even just based on his words. And even if 47 percent of the country supported him.
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But what about free speech?! And after all, those are just words. It’s not like the Republican had actually jailed priests. Maybe this was just campaign rhetoric. Maybe it was just his unorthodox manner of speaking. Maybe Catholics should take him seriously, but not literally.
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How about actions? Are there actions a presidential candidate could take that would merit exclusion?
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Again: I think so. If a presidential candidate had physically assaulted a priest, or been convicted of rape, or sexual abuse of a minor, then I can’t see Catholic Charities inviting him to the Al Smith dinner, just because he won a nominating contest.
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Now maybe you think that convictions on felony fraud and being found liable for sexual assault and being under indictment for dozens of other crimes don’t rise to the same level.
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Point being: Civic institutions that support democracy in normal times can be used to undermine it in abnormal times.
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What the elites who put together events like the Al Smith dinner do not seem to understand is that this—[gestures broadly]—is not normal.
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I’m sure the Germans had some version of an Al Smith dinner in 1932. Should they have invited members of both the Social Democrats and the Nationalist Socialist German Worker's Party to the event to gently roast one another?1
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Can we agree that there are some scenarios in which a society should be willing to suspend traditional graces to political actors? Let me give you a couple of examples, just to illustrate the idea that lines can be drawn.
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Which means that we agree in principle that when it comes to these kabuki events, lines should be drawn.
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The only question, then, is whether or not Donald Trump rises to the level of exclusion. Does he clear the threshold for malignancy at which society should refuse to participate in normalizing him?
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I understand that reasonable people can differ on this question. But I want to underscore that it simply isn’t enough to say, “Trump must be included because he is the nominee of a major party and 47 percent of the country will vote for him.”
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If 47 percent of the country was going to vote for secession from the Union, we wouldn’t get into tuxes and rub elbows with them while making jokes.
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The people running the dinner thought they were using Trump to raise money for Catholic Charities. The reality is that he was using them to normalize his authoritarian project.
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Donald Trump has inverted this proposition. His presence at the Al Smith dinner last night turned the event itself into kabuki theater, in which everyone participating pretended that the man who attempted a coup, says he wants to be a dictator, calls his opponents “vermin” and “the enemy within,” and has raised the possibility of using the military against American citizens is normal.
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The message of the Al Smith dinner was that politics is kabuki theater and our differences are actually quite small.