This week, with so many American liberals and leaders abroad worrying about what a second Trump term will mean for them, Matt and Brian examine the many political differences between fear and fearlessness. For instance:
If Trump’s threats have become more literal and less figurative, how can liberals most effectively oppose him without sounding like panicky wimps?
Have Trump-curious business elites taken leave of their senses, or do they really think Trump can’t possibly harm American capitalism more than huge corporate tax cuts will “help”?
Do progressives agree that Trump is an existential threat to democracy? And if so, are they receptive to muscular “bring it on” politics, or are crisis and doom the only appeals that speak to them.
Then, behind the paywall, Brian and Matt take a look at global and domestic developments—from the Mexican election to diplomacy in the Middle East and the zombie border bill in Congress—to assess how actors with everything on the line are changing their behavior and contingency planning for a second Trump term. If they’re freaking out, why shouldn’t we be? If the situation is so dire, shouldn’t Biden entertain more drastic measures? Can U.S. leaders be simultaneously clear eyed in planning for the worst and resolute (rather than cowering) in their resistance?
Answers to all those questions, plus the full Politix archive are available to paid subscribers—just upgrade your subscription and pipe full episodes directly to your favorite podcast app via your own private feed.
Further reading:
Matt, on how Trump’s scams will only get worse in a second term.
Brian on why progressive activists should lay off murder-suicide threats as “leverage.”
Greg Sargent on the Trump movement’s many sadistic fantasies.
Jamelle Bouie on the people (immigrants) who will bear the brunt of this sadism.
Listen to this episode with a 7-day free trial
Subscribe to Politix to listen to this post and get 7 days of free access to the full post archives.