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It’s visible right here on this forum. ===== There is no executive order too authoritarian, no lie too blatant, and no action too extreme for the MAGA base to defend. To understand why, one must dig deeper than party politics. MAGA is not merely a right-wing movement, it is a full-spectrum identity ecosystem built on loyalty, grievance, and manufactured narratives of moral clarity. Trump's most recent executive order, "Restoring Truth and Sanity to American History," is a case study in how propaganda becomes policy. It seeks to overhaul museums, public monuments, and the Smithsonian Institution itself, casting any mention of systemic racism, gender identity, or structural inequality as a dangerous ideological distortion. It does not merely revise history, it replaces pluralism with a state-sanctioned narrative that criminalizes complexity and centralizes the cultural narrative under one ideology. And MAGA loves it. The Authoritarian Blueprint, Seize the Culture Paulo Freire warned of the oppressor's need to control cultural institutions to shape how the oppressed see the world. In Pedagogy of the Oppressed, he argued that once dominant forces dictate the terms of education and culture, the oppressed internalize their role, often fighting to preserve the very systems that subjugate them. This is exactly what Trump’s executive order does, it forces federal institutions to frame American history not as a story of progress through struggle, but as a seamless celebration of exceptionalism. In doing so, it violates the core tenets of historical inquiry and replaces it with myth. This act is not simply about pride, it is about engineering consent. As Golec de Zavala (2020) describes, collective narcissism emerges when a group sees itself as exceptional but under siege. MAGA doesn’t want an honest retelling of the past, it wants a curated myth that proves America has always been right, and that they, as its defenders, are righteous. This sense of victimized exceptionalism feeds directly into why they perceive criticism of the past as an existential threat to the present. Cognitive Armor, Why MAGA Can’t Let Go This loyalty is not accidental. It is scaffolded by a mix of psychological traits and media reinforcement. Right-Wing Authoritarianism (RWA), Social Dominance Orientation (SDO), and collective narcissism work in concert. RWA creates a desire for strong leaders and rigid social order. SDO creates comfort with inequality as long as the hierarchy benefits them. And collective narcissism transforms Trump from a politician into a totem of cultural survival. In Understanding Peace and Conflict through Social Identity Theory, McKeown et al. (2016) explore how identity threats can entrench group loyalty. To the MAGA base, any criticism of Trump is not a political disagreement, it is a personal attack. Trump embodies their sense of justice, power, and cultural primacy. His humiliation is their humiliation. His success, their vindication. As a result, they engage in motivated reasoning, reversing the direction of logic so the conclusion always supports their loyalty, and any fact that contradicts it is viewed as propaganda. This is why even when Trump is caught lying, indicted, or contradicting past statements, the base rushes to protect him. Their defense isn’t rational, it’s existential. And that existentialism is rooted in fear: fear of change, of equality, of perceived loss. That fear becomes the fuel that binds them emotionally to the narrative, no matter how contradictory or unsupported. Why Defending Trump Feels Like Morality When Trump passes an order demanding that museums stop displaying systemic racism as historical fact, the MAGA base doesn’t see it as censorship. They see it as moral clarity. This is how authoritarianism disguises itself. It doesn't arrive wearing jackboots, it comes cloaked in the language of virtue. As described in Democratic Resilience (2021), when democracy weakens, political actors often appeal to moral panic to consolidate power. Trump’s framing of exhibits like “The Shape of Power” at the Smithsonian as anti-American is not based on historical critique, it’s a strategy to recast inclusion as subversion. Moreover, the rhetoric of “protecting children” and “restoring sanity” taps into moral foundations like purity and loyalty—core values in conservative psychology as outlined in Moral Foundations Theory. By reframing pluralism as moral decay, MAGA supporters see erasure of complexity not as ignorance, but as virtue. In this light, authoritarian control is seen as a correction of a moral imbalance, not as oppression. The Justification Engine Every Trump scandal is met with deflection or justification: Indictments? "It’s a witch hunt." Executive overreach? "He’s restoring order." Censorship of history? "He’s protecting children from hate." As shown in When Do Parties Lie? (Tornberg & Chueri, 2025), the more ideologically isolated a population becomes, the more likely it is to see truth as a threat. Within the MAGA echo chamber, Trump’s contradictions are not weaknesses, they are evidence of strength. He can do what others can’t. That makes him special. That makes them special. Research from Democratization (2019) reinforces how political loyalty to populist figures thrives not in spite of inconsistency, but because of it. By constantly shifting reality, strongmen like Trump keep followers disoriented and dependent on the leader’s narrative. Uncertainty becomes a feature, not a bug. It’s a loyalty filter. Their minds, shaped by SDO and RWA, are trained to respond not to truth but to strength. To moral dominance, not moral consistency. Authoritarianism as a Comfort Zone There is also the emotional lure of authoritarianism. As discussed in Pedagogy of the Oppressed, fear and alienation lead people to embrace paternalistic figures who promise safety in exchange for obedience. Trump's executive orders offer a fantasy, a stable past, an unchanging identity, and clear moral binaries. These are irresistible to those overwhelmed by a world that feels complex and uncertain. This is why they mock Palestinians who turned to Hamas in desperation, claiming it’s weakness or moral failure, while failing to recognize that their own emotional motivations for defending Trump arise from the same place: fear, abandonment, and the desperate need for a savior. The contradiction doesn’t register, because the authoritarian follower doesn’t evaluate from logic but from instinct, driven by existential threat perception. Democratic Resilience echoes this insight. In times of perceived decline, whether from economic instability, demographic shifts, or social liberalization, support for authoritarian solutions spikes. The call for “law and order,” “restored tradition,” and “truth in history” are less about policy and more about psychological reorientation. It’s not governance—it’s therapy for the disoriented. The New EO and the Destruction of Pluralism Let’s be clear, the March 27, 2025 executive order is not just about statues or school exhibits. It is a direct assault on intellectual freedom. It empowers the Vice President and OMB to defund museums that display anything critical of the U.S. legacy. It mandates that only a narrow, sanitized version of history be displayed. It even bars the recognition of transgender women in the American Women’s History Museum. This is not a return to tradition. It is the state controlling the narrative, reshaping memory to serve power. MAGA justifies it by saying, “We’re just telling the truth.” But their truth is cherry-picked mythology. Historical complexity becomes treason. Social justice becomes ideology. Education becomes indoctrination, unless it serves them. This is reminiscent of Orwell’s warning in 1984: control the past, and you control the present. Conclusion, The Loyalty is the Point Trump doesn’t have policies. He has performances. Each new executive order, scandal, or rhetorical bombshell is a loyalty test. The base must contort itself to defend him, not because they are brainwashed, but because they are emotionally invested in the belief that their power, identity, and morality hinge on him. This is why MAGA defends everything Trump does. Not because it’s right. Not because it’s effective. But because letting go would mean confronting what they’ve enabled, and for many, that’s a psychological reckoning they are unwilling to face. Understanding this doesn’t excuse it. But it does make it possible to confront it, by targeting not just the misinformation, but the emotional infrastructure that keeps it alive. | ||
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One of Us |
I figure that's a cut & paste article. I could be wrong, but you didn't give the source. Anyway, that's what I've been saying. I think there are some conservatives who participate herein who have and are confronting it. Others still don't get it and make excuses and false equivalences. Some are all-in on it. Who would have thought the nation could be caught up in this sort of thing? It's been fomenting for a long time. Some say it's a reactionary thing to the left's radicalism. I say that's an excuse made up to avoid the truth. ************* “Those who control the present, control the past and those who control the past control the future.” George Orwell, 1984 https://www.google.com/search?...sclient=gws-wiz-serp Degenerate 1:1 1 Then Trump said, "Let Us re-make a Nation in MY Image, after My likeness, to rule over everything in the Nation, and over all the earth itself and every creature that crawls upon it". Degenerate 1:2 2 Then Trump said, "Vengeance is mine, I will repay on your behalf." Degenerate 1:3 3 "My Kingdom come, My will be done." "When fascism comes to America, it will be wrapped in the flag and carrying a cross." - Sinclair Lewis O.J. Trump aka Trumpism's Founding Farter, aka Farter Martyr. "Be careful. When a democracy is sick, fascism comes to its bedside, but it is not to inquire about its health." - Albert Camus | |||
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The very second he started threatening to "take" Panama & Greenland he should have been ostracized & abandoned by every decent human in this country. Those who hang on are no different than Hitler's loyal Nazis. | |||
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Trump is an acknowledged rapist. Rapists take what they want with no consideration for their victims. As Elon Musk famously said, he sees empathy as a weakness. In other words, care for nobody but yourself, and that is his (and Trumps) modus operandi. These are people that are beyond reprehensible. | |||
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These passages are particularly telling and descriptive of most of our the Trumpeteers here. With their egos invested in enabling Trump, they disregard the results of the critical thinking that may serve them elsewhere in life. And so they duck and run when confronted with logic, reason, and truth. | |||
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Like ME said I do not know if you wrote this or this was taken from somewhere else, either way it is very well written. This is exactly what I have been saying for a long time. I just cannot say it as well. I just call it a cult. All the items in the article really do define the basic definition of a cult. Cults rely on believe, total blinding believe in the leader. One of the real interesting things about cults members is intelligence for the most part does not play a role. Cult members come from all walks of life from people who are not very intelligent to very intelligent people. As sad as the whole thing is I also find it fascinating watching the whole thing play out. Watching the dynamics of the members of this forum go at each other is fascinating. I would love to get some of the main people on this forum in a big room and just watch. It would be great entertainment. | |||
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