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Manufacturing crisis: Chris Ogden on the challenge of Trump 2.0’s ‘power in chaos’ for other democracies

Public Policy / opinion
Manufacturing crisis: Chris Ogden on the challenge of Trump 2.0’s ‘power in chaos’ for other democracies
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Donald Trump. Image: Getty Images.

By Chris Ogden*

On the eve of Donald Trump’s presidential inauguration, the world is braced for more of what has been described as his instinct for “weaponised chaos”.

During his previous presidency, Trump upended political convention and created a sense of “permacrisis” – “the dizzying sense of lurching from one unprecedented event to another”.

In the past, crises have traditionally been seen as occasions that will make or break governments. Some leaders, such as Britain’s Harold Macmillan in the 1960s, saw them as negatives, famously saying “events, dear boy, events” were any leader’s greatest challenge.

Other perspectives say crises offer the chance to turn challenges into opportunities. These can offer positive outcomes, “bury” bad news or precipitate wars.

But there is now a sense of crisis being an everyday feature of our lives. According to European observers, this means “volatility, uncertainty, and a prolonged sense of emergency have become the new normal”.

This view sees crises as being uncontrollable, to which leaders and populations can only react. For many now in power, however, creating crisis has become a form of politics in itself.

Manufacturing crisis

Over the past 25 years, Russia’s Vladimir Putin has been adept at using crises to his advantage. He used the 1999 Moscow apartment bombings to crack down on Chechen separatists, the 2002 Dubrovka Theater siege to clamp down on the media, and the 2004 Beslan school hostage crisis to remove the direct election of all state governors.

At the same time, Putin’s Russia has been at the forefront of manufacturing crisis. Vladislav Surkov, a former avant-garde theatre director and later main Kremlin insider, was a key protagonist of such ideas who “directed Russian society like one great reality show”, according to one profile.

Rather than governments trying to control the narrative and reality, scholars Catherine Happer, Andrew Hoskins and William Merrin argue, Surkov “promoted multiple realities and an instability of the real, where anything could mean something else and where nothing was certain”.

These tactics were first used in Ukraine and Crimea in 2014 to blur the lines between truth and falsity, creating a climate of complete uncertainty.

According to the Rand Corporation think tank, this involved deploying a “firehose of falsehood” to “overwhelm audiences with a relentless flood of disinformation, partial truths, random facts and social media speculation”.

Blurred lines: Russia’s Vladimir Putin has been expert at exploiting crises to his own advantage. Getty Images,

Anything becomes possible

The firehose was imported into the US by Steve Bannon, Trump’s former chief strategist. Specifically targeting the mainstream media, he said “the way to deal with them is to flood the zone with shit”.

This approach was then used against all parts of the established order, to invoke widespread polarisation, discontent and havoc. Once normalised, such upheavals are used to create a kind of “power in chaos”.

With nothing being certain, and long-held traditions broken, anything becomes possible. Author Peter Pomerantsev describes it as

a strategy of power based on keeping any opposition there may be constantly confused, a ceaseless shape-shifting that is unstoppable because it’s indefinable.

Trump’s nominations for key roles in his upcoming administration are characteristic of such strategies. They seem designed to provoke bewilderment and distraction before they are even appointed.

Each nominee also has the capacity to cause serial, rolling crises once in power. Republican voters, according to the BBC, are “hailing them as much-needed disruptors to what they see as a corrupt establishment”.

A political shock doctrine

The author Naomi Klein famously described the dynamics of “disaster capitalism” in her book The Shock Doctrine. But Trump’s second term looks to be defined by a widespread political shock doctrine of what could be called “disaster politics”.

The potential is for fragmented social cohesion, attacks on minorities and the spread of misinformation to the detriment of democratic values. It would be a blueprint for current and aspiring autocrats across the world.

At its heart, Trump is the crisis, personifying instability, uncertainty and fear. For him and his followers, permanent crisis is the means and the ends to achieving particular aims and normalising such a political ecosystem.

It is also a conduit for autocratic power, as a dazed population searches for meaning in the “omnishambles” that typifies a “kakistocracy” (rule by the worst).

Disaster politics has the potential to pull other countries – democratic or authoritarian – into its orbit, with others trying to emulate Trump’s approach.

It also means being affected by the wider fallout of Trump’s plans to deport millions of immigrants or impose high trade tariffs. Both are seen to be potential triggers for an American and global recession, which will have a clear impact on other countries.

But Trump’s intended approach also offers some cause of optimism. In his previous presidency, when he sought to impose tariffs or pull out of major treaties, it provoked new groupings of countries seeking to preserve free trade and globalisation.

Paradoxically, democratic countries that promote tolerance, inclusion, compassion and acceptance could flourish as a positive antidote to a Trumpian model of prejudice, isolation, fear and anger.The Conversation


*Chris Ogden, Associate Professor in Global Studies, University of Auckland, Waipapa Taumata RauThis article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

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28 Comments

Fantastic article, especially about the spread of falsehood and chaos.  Thank you Mr Ogden.

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I have to disagree. It’s a little bit disappointing that an NZ academic is writing this ‘the sky is falling’ sort of article as soon as Trump regains power.

During his previous presidency, Trump upended political convention and created a sense of “permacrisis” – “the dizzying sense of lurching from one unprecedented event to another”.  Ogden couldn’t even provide one link to a crisis that Trump created in his first 4 years.

Apparently ‘Trump is the crisis’ – Ogden is creating a sense of crisis when in reality the US has had a change in government and some change is inevitable.

Ogden seems to discuss almost as much about Putin/Russian behaviour as he does on projecting what Trump will do.

He comes up with an intriguing quote  Specifically targeting the mainstream media, he said “the way to deal with them is to flood the zone with shit”.  But fails to provide any examples of how Trump (or Bannon) had deployed this in the past.

No doubt there will be significant change but deporting illegal immigrants and tariffs is what the people voted for.   Understand that and people can adjust and move forward.

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Awful take. This isn't just the change that naturally happens when another government is voted in. Tech billionaires were given pride of place at Trump's inauguration over elected officials. Facebook and Instagram have now censored any content to do with the democratic party. Trump has withdrawn from the WHO, the Paris Climate Accord, released hundreds from prison who attempted to overthrow the goverment on Jan 6, and has rescinded medicare funding which will increase the cost of some drugs by up to 4200%. Anti-Trump content on TikTok is now banned. Elon Musk uneqivocally did the Nazi salute at the inauguration. Twice.

I know there are a bunch of morons on this website that will perform some impressive mental gymnastics to try to frame the above as a good thing because the right are now sticking it to the left. Don't kid yourself. America is now a tech oligarchy.

NZ is going down the same slippery slope - we already saw the disproportionate influence of money, and the framing of non-issues as crises to be solved at our last election. Plenty of working and middle class people were swayed into voting against their best interests in the exact same way as what happened in America.

 

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Well said. I always laugh when peasants tell everyone that they're invited to the party, when all they've done is clean the toilet or provided flowers for the table.

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I'm not interested in defending Trump, my concern is about the quality of Ogden's article.  You haven't changed my mind.

As for Musk, if that was an attempt at a nazi salute then it was poor - I'm guessing it was more likely a wave to trigger the woke - Musk knows he has haters and he doesn't give a damn. 

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Do your eyes not see?

https://imgur.com/MzUJP9B

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Have you listened to the speech this was pulled from? He literally said "my heart goes out to you" immediately after making that gesture. This is a classic example of priming by the media. People will believe what they want though. 

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Thanks FOTC

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"Paradoxically, democratic countries that promote tolerance, inclusion, compassion and acceptance could flourish as a positive antidote to a Trumpian model of prejudice, isolation, fear and anger."

Could....but are hampered by the fact they do not issue the worlds (current) reserve currency.

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My name is Ozymandias, King of Kings:
Look on my works, ye Mighty, and despair!"
 

Nothing lasts forever, deal with it.

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Te Kooti,

A great poem. Indeed nothing lasts forever, the only problem being that Ozymandias ruled for some 66 years. Now even the Great Donald won't be around for that long, so can we foresee a Trump dynasty in the making? Depending on your views, that is either greatly to be desired or abhorred. 

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Can't blame the US founding fathers for not foreseeing a lot of modern issues, but they really should have known to bake something into the core of the constitution banning family dynasties. Would have also avoided the mess of Hilary running and setting up Trump's first win, not to mention Bush 2 who has done far more damage than Trump likely ever will.

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"Bush 2 who has done far more damage than Trump likely ever will."

You ain't seen nothing yet, it's been less than a day for Trump.  Give him 4 years, and he will definitely "win"… the award for the most destructive president ever, by a very long shot.

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Our views are irrelevant, this is cycle of politics.

I certainly don't lament the end of the Biden/Harris regime and those running the Democrat party. They opened the borders to flood the country with voters and silenced the press and free speech. On numerous occasions Biden has gone back on his word including pardoning Hunter and premptively pardoning the rest of his family and Fauci etc. Biden had no compunction pursuing Trump via the judiciary.

Zuckerberg was very clear about how they were manipulated by Biden. 

 

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Trump committed crimes. He is a convicted felon by jury trial. When you commit crimes, you get pursued and convicted. Don't blame Biden for that.

How did the Democrats silence the press and free speech? I know Trump has actually sued multiple networks for not saying what he wanted them to say in the recent election coverage.

Zuckerburg was at the Trump inauguration, along with other big tech billionaire oligarchs. That is not a good sign. And if it were Biden inviting them, many would be up in arms about it.

Trump lies all the time about everything. No comparison at all to what Biden or Harris did or do. I get sick of people downplaying Trumps flaws, and holding the democrats to a super high bar.

If your a Trump supporter just say it, don't try and justify it with whataboutism. Just understand you are onboard with the team whose main backer literally did a Sieg Heil salute at their inauguration speech. There was a war against those types not too long ago, and they didn't win.

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Zuckerberg recently talked at length about the Biden regimes attempts to censor Meta. I really don't care what you believe, not should you what I - but that's not the way of the hard left.

https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/politics-news/mark-zuckerberg-joe-roga…

https://www.pbs.org/newshour/politics/zuckerberg-says-the-white-house-p…

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OK, so when there is was an unprecedented worldwide pandemic the government tried to pressure social media companies to stop spreading mis-information to help save peoples lives. In the case you pointed to, the government asked Facebook to do something, and Facebook said no. So not even taking them to court to force them to do something, just asking. Then some members of the public tried to stop the government talking to social media companies, and lost.

Contrast that with Trump's actual lawsuits against media companies, based solely around Trump's self interest: https://www.reuters.com/world/us/donald-trumps-lawsuits-against-media-c…

So one was intervention for the people's benefit, and the other solely for Trumps. One time the official asked the media company, the other time they took them to court.

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"Our" views are almost certainly irrelevant, yet Trump's actions and the US's direction are 100% consequential to us. 

NZ's current geopolitical security is a direct result of the world order est. after WWII. Trump is feeding on it's bowels.

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Perhaps we have been free-riding off of the US and will now be asked to pay our way? What is our defence spending as a % of GDP compared to the US and other allies? Where is the perpetual obligation of the US to protect us?

Trump hasn't been in power 24 hours. 

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I think it's the US who has massively benefited. Who's been the world's largest economy for decades. And was able to have it's own way whether by way of the dollar or CIA.

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Someone visit grandpa before facebook/X/Fox/OAN turns him full Qanon

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"Paradoxically, democratic countries that promote tolerance, inclusion, compassion and acceptance could flourish as a positive antidote to a Trumpian model of prejudice, isolation, fear and anger."

Except those that have aimed to do that are not flourishing, despite having many opportunities to get it right. They're looking like destructive pockets of incompetence, where leaders burnish their liberal credentials ahead of their own people, or even their own national interest. UK and Europe come to mind.

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I see Trump's plan as a "state capture" situation. Essentially it's happened already. In four years it'll be rigged elections in half of the States. Wow. By the time his base work him out it'll be too late. 

If Trump has territorial plans for Greenland (and Panama) etc, look out for China taking Taiwan sooner rather than later.

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I could see that happening absolutely. Trump, Xi and Putin getting together to carve up the remaining free world. Look on the bright side, no wars and booming stock markets!!

Lolz.

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The best strategy for dealing the stream of the orange one's geriatrically deranged rantings is to ignore what he says completely. It's a stream of bombastic drivel.

But do focus on what his minions are actually doing.

They are the real danger.

And be aware, MSM, which is largely owned by the billionaires backing this obscenity of government, will ignore what the minions are doing because MSM loves the drama and chaos created by the Master of Drivel.

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Yeah, President Musk and VP Trump looking like an interesting proposition now.

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Wait a minute. I thought the MSM was lefty liberal drivel? 

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You've made this claim multiple times on this site. Can you provide any evidence that MSM have ever supported Trump? From everything I've seen they can't stand him and even Fox abandoned him as far as I'm aware. 

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