Donald Trump is a political outsider fighting the establishment on behalf of ordinary Americans rather than a wealthy celebrity who spent decades cultivating relationships with the same political, media, and financial elites he now claims to oppose, whose policy record in office primarily benefited corporations and high income households, and whose personal history of wage theft, fraud, and predatory business practices targeted many of the working class people who form his base. Convenient because it converts a rich Manhattan real estate developer into a tribune of the people without requiring examination of the gap between the populist performance and the actual policy record.
The 2020 election was stolen through systematic fraud rather than lost through the normal operation of an electoral system that Trump’s own Justice Department, his own appointed judges, his own election security officials, and sixty plus courts found to have functioned without the fraud required to change the outcome. Convenient because it converts a democratic rejection into a conspiracy, protects Trump’s status as the rightful leader of his coalition, and provides a grievance that can be sustained indefinitely because its unfalsifiability is a feature rather than a defect.
Trump’s legal prosecutions are entirely politically motivated weaponization of the justice system rather than cases built on documented conduct that would have been prosecuted regardless of the defendant’s political identity. Convenient because it allows supporters to dismiss every legal accountability mechanism as illegitimate without engaging the specific evidence in any of the cases, converting factual questions about conduct into political questions about motive.
Trump’s coarseness, cruelty, and norm violations are refreshing honesty rather than character defects that would disqualify any other candidate his supporters would apply conventional moral standards to. Convenient because it reframes behavior that supporters would condemn in a Democratic politician as authenticity, requiring a moral framework that applies only to Trump and whose selectivity is never examined.
Trade deficits represent America losing to foreign countries rather than the accounting identity they are, reflecting among other things that Americans have high enough incomes to buy more than they sell and that the capital account surplus that accompanies a trade deficit means foreigners are investing in America. Convenient because the losing framing generates the grievance that justifies tariffs whose costs fall on American consumers and businesses while the benefits flow to specific protected industries whose political support Trump cultivates.
Immigration is primarily a crime and economic displacement problem rather than a complex phenomenon whose net effects on wages, public finances, innovation, and social cohesion are empirically contested and vary substantially by type of immigration, receiving community, and economic conditions. Convenient because the crime and displacement frame generates fear and solidarity without requiring engagement with evidence that complicates the picture, and because immigration restrictionism consolidates a coalition that might otherwise fragment over economic policy.
Mainstream media is entirely fake news whose reporting on Trump should be dismissed rather than institutions with real editorial failures and genuine biases whose specific claims nevertheless require engagement on their individual merits. Convenient because it provides a blanket epistemological escape from any inconvenient factual claim, converting evidence into propaganda by source rather than by content and making the belief system self-sealing against correction.
America’s alliances, international institutions, and diplomatic relationships are bad deals that exploit American generosity rather than arrangements that serve American strategic interests, were largely designed by Americans, and whose costs are substantially lower than the unilateral alternatives. Convenient because it frames burden-sharing disputes as exploitation, generates the nationalist sentiment that consolidates the coalition, and justifies transactional behavior toward allies that happens to benefit the authoritarian governments whose approval Trump visibly values.
Deregulation and tax cuts produce broad economic growth that benefits everyone rather than primarily transferring income and wealth upward while producing growth effects too small and too slow to offset the distributional consequences for the working class voters whose support the policy requires. Convenient because it allows donor class economic priorities to be packaged as populist economics, requiring supporters to evaluate the policy by its stated intentions rather than its documented effects.
Trump alone can fix the problems facing America and his personal authority should be expanded rather than constrained by institutional checks that the founders designed precisely to prevent the concentration of power in a single figure. Convenient because it converts authoritarian impulses into heroic necessity, frames every institutional resistance as obstruction rather than constitutional function, and requires supporters to believe that the same government they distrust on every other question can be trusted completely when Trump controls it.
- https://PayPal.Me/lukeisback
"Luke Ford reports all of the 'juicy' quotes, and has been doing it for years." (Marc B. Shapiro)
"This guy knows all the gossip, the ins and outs, the lashon hara of the Orthodox world. He’s an [expert] in... all the inner workings of the Orthodox world." (Rabbi Aaron Rakeffet-Rothkoff) LATEST POSTS:
- I Can’t Remember A Leader As Unpredictable As Trump
- Allen Guttmann and the Myth of Rational Secularization
- The Illusion of the Sovereign Imagination
- The Myth of Cosmopolitan Transcendence
- Lionel Trilling and the Liberal Imagination
- Mearsheimer’s Wager on Human Nature
- Edward Wadie Said (1935-2003)
- Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak
- Fredric Jameson
- Homi K. Bhabha
- Howard Lutnick and the Two Terrors
- Full Faith and Credit
- The Conquest of the Creature
- The Index of His Father
- The Hero System That Says Its Name: Moshe Hillel Hirsch and the Greatness of Man
- Who Keeps the People Alive: A Hero-System Essay on Rabbi Dov Lando
- The Man Who Priced The Long Run
- The Return
- Redemption Has an Address: The Hero System of Bezalel Smotrich
- Itamar Ben-Gvir and the Two Terrors
BEST POSTS:
* American Epistemics (1-19-26)
* The Most Socially Toxic Inconvenient Truths (1-18-26)
* The Luke Ford Genre (1-18-26)
* The Filkins Pivot: Legacy Prestige and the Fracturing of the Chattering Class (1-16-26)
* Decoding The Trump Doctrine (1-4-26)
* If Tatiana Schlossberg were “Tatiana Smith” (12-30-25)
* ‘I’m So Trained’: How The Credential Society Burned Down the Palisades (12-28-25)
* Status Closure and The Lost Generation (12-25-25)
* The Bondi Massacre (12-15-25)
* Sydney Jews Learn That Their Aussie Social Contract Has Become A Suicide Pact (12-15-25)
* Terror in Sydney: Analyzing the “Chanukah by the Sea” Massacre (12-14-25)
* Decoding Nick Fuentes (11-2-25)
* The Landscape of Emotional Sobriety (10-29-30)
* The Rise & Fall Of Air Supply (10-19-25)
* No Kings, No Results: How Elite Pride Replaced Real Progress (10-19-25)
* You Are An Important Soldier In A Great War (9-7-25)
* The Revolt Of The Masses (8-31-25)
* The Covenant of Ashwood (8-24-25)
* If you can’t trust central bankers, then who can you trust? (8-23-25)
* Why Is The Elite Media Singing From The Same Hymnal About The Trump-Putin Summit? (8-17-25)
* Why Do Smart News Operations Sound So Uniformly Dumb So Often? (8-16-25)
* Nobody Is Coming (8-10-25)
* When Elites Restrict Our Speech, It’s Because They Love Truth, Freedom & Democracy (8-3-25)
