IN GOD WE TRYST

Donald Trump prophesized massive voter fraud months before the elections, and 
so it came about.

A great many supporters, proclaiming that they act in God’s name, have elevated 
Trump to a figure of biblical portent. It is urgent to interrogate this 
modern-day stranglehold of fundamentalist religion over society in the US (and 
elsewhere).

If God did exist, Donald Trump would represent a particularly accomplished 
brand of godlessness. Who knows if he even believes in God - in all likelihood, 
the only divinity he recognises is his own. Whereas Jesus was capable of 
turning water into wine, Trump is capable of turning falsehood into fact. Thus 
he probably believes profoundly, sincerely, that the election was rigged in his 
disfavour. How could he not have won? How could it have been otherwise?

Fundamentalist churches that turn a blind eye to Trump’s moral high jinks are 
spared no critic for their hypocrisy. It is worth it for what they get in 
return, such as a Supreme Court loaded with ultra-conservative judges. Bundled 
with pro-gun, pro-life, climate denying, racist, white suprematist politics. 
Yet the stakes are much higher than such mere earthly concerns, for the 
church’s indulgence towards Trump is part of a far greater plan, in which the 
ex-president was to play a prophetic role as an agent of the Second Coming, no 
less. Thus Trump is identified with the Persian king Cyrus who, according to 
the Bible, released the Jews from exile in Babylon. Trump’s support for Bibi 
Netanyahu is projected onto a vision of a Greater Israel that accords with 
biblical prophesies announcing the advent of the Last Judgement. (The 
prevalence of antisemitism in fundamentalist circles, along with the fact that 
Jews will have to accept Jesus as their saviour in order to be included, does 
not seem to bother the Israeli right.)

For those who traffic in such fantasy (for many in the church, it would appear, 
with sincerity), and base foreign policy on it (Trump, manifestly, by 
opportunism), then fake news, alternative truths, become the common fare of a 
magical reality that they can impose with the gravitas of conviction. For 
devout people, for whom the scriptures are to be interpreted literally, for 
whom miracles happen and prayer has agency, who adhere to the “fact” of the 
universe being created in six days or Jesus being crucified and resurrected to 
expiate their sins, such beliefs are elevated to the rank of incontestable 
truth. And the same, biblically-sanctioned “truthification”, applies to QAnon’s 
insane fictions slandering Hilary Clinton and the Democratic Party.

For rational people, such religious belief is not to be taken seriously, it is 
the butt of jokes. The modern scientific world-view has rendered the 
divinely-mediated, faith-based worldview terminally obsolete. Those who believe 
such things are fools; those who purvey them disingenuous manipulators 
profiting from the myth that they are God’s right hand men.

But what about “irrational” people for whom biblical myth constitutes not a 
fiction, but a God-sanctioned, unadulterated historical foundation that informs 
and guides the realities and events of present times? How big a part does 
religion really occupy in the lives of people in the US? What part does 
religion play for those who stormed the Capitol? Might one postulate that 
certain populations are under the sway of a sort of Sunday School mindset, 
which competes against the rationality conveyed by secular schooling? People 
who, though they may for the most part not be overtly religious, did at an 
early age become intimate with a Sunday School transmutation of God, kindly and 
vengeful, childish and parental, that got under their skin and colonised their 
minds with a presence, an assurance that God would always be on their side…

The extreme right is referred to as fascists, and this has me wondering, for 
though they share certain attributes in their suprematist beliefs and thuggery, 
how assimilable are they to the original Fascism of the mid-twentieth century? 
The basis of Fascism is the individual’s absolute subordination to the state, 
quite the anathema given the libertarian penchants of these groups, whose 
version of “Make America Great Again” has little to do with political grandeur, 
and very much more with a tribalist nationalism promoting Donald Trump as its 
warlord.

Perhaps, in terms of fascism, fundamentalist religion is what is being 
substituted for the state. Aiming for the victory of a totalitarian Kingdom of 
God where libertarians might happily hold sway.


Stay safe, Joe.



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