Saturday, October 29, 2022

The Martian Perspective

One of the useful big picture ideas I remember picking up from Moldbug is that one should strive to understand the present in the way that a historian of the future would understand our time. That is, suppose you were living on Mars in 200 years time, so not only would the events not affect you, but all the players are dead and gone, as are the countries and institutions they represent.  Maybe even 500 years. The ideal is to imagine a space sufficiently distant that you don't even feel you have an intellectual dog in the fight, rather like an atheist trying to understand the 30 Years War between Catholics and Protestants. You just want to understand the truth, having gotten to the point where none care whether it prevail or not

This is always an aspirational ideal, of course. You never really know what the future historian will think (in part because they have seen the end of the story, and you haven't), but also because intellectually it's very hard to fully escape the present tense. For one thing, you can never have our hypothetical atheist's indifference when you're actually on the receiving end of things (put an atheist back in time to the middle of the 30 years war, and suddenly they will have to care about religion, or at least act like they do). But there's also a sheer difficulty in perspective. It may be that nothing in the past five years even makes their list of stuff to bother about. It may be that nothing in your whole lifetime does! (You should be so lucky). 

So while this perspective is hard, if you at least aim at this, you are likely to get a better sense of the actual importance of events than if the idea never even occurs to you. And the sense of what might seem important on a 200 year time line may be vastly different to what the newspapers are covering today. It might be something the average person isn't paying any attention to at all (like developments in AI, for instance). But it also might be events from the present that take on a bigger significance than people at the time realize.

For instance, by now, most of you have probably watched the famous video of Hu Jintao being gently but firmly escorted out of the Chinese Communist Party Congress



When Americans watch this video, they have a clarity of vision as to what is going on. A former president is frogmarched out of the room, publicly, by the current president, to God knows what fate. While it may be overblown, the cynical presumption is that he'll end up like Tank Man, never seen again.

It's worth noting that there's an alternative reading of all this, that Hu Jintao is kind of senile and either was, or was threatening to, wander awkwardly off script. And, hence, that escorting him out was actually an embarrassing loss of face to everyone involved, rather than a deliberate political flex. 

But one thing is for certain. Supposing he in fact gets charged and convicted of corruption, for taking bribes back in 2005. The average American will view this as almost entirely incidental to the important facts in the video above. Did he take some kind of bribe during his presidency? Almost certainly. Is that what this is actually about? Not on your life. If he gets charged instead with tax evasion, or murder, or covid violations, would that change anyone's perspective on the matter? Not at all. What he gets charged with is irrelevant. Whether he even broke the law is basically irrelevant. They certainly will not spend much time digging into the details of the allegations. This is a naked power consolidation. This was also considered in America to be big news for what it revealed about China, and how power works there.

So far so good. 

So what does the average American make of this:
FBI searches Trump's Florida home as part of presidential records probe

PALM BEACH, Fla., Aug 8 (Reuters) - Former President Donald Trump said FBI agents raided his Mar-a-Lago estate on Monday and broke into his safe in what his son acknowledged was part of an investigation into Trump's removal of official presidential records from the White House to his Florida resort.

The unprecedented search of a former president's home would mark a significant escalation into the records investigation, which is one of several probes Trump is facing from his time in office and in private business.


Is this the same thing as what happened to Hu Jintao? Is it a related thing? Is it a totally unrelated thing?

You'll have to decide for yourself. 

And the answer that lots of Americans come to is that, well, you see, this is actually about the crucial issue of violations of the Presidential Records Act, something that they had literally not heard about until August, but now think is an essential lynch-pin of our whole form of government. It's actually part of a large legal campaign against the former president on all sorts of fronts. 

Which is to say, they look at this and see only the things he's been charged with, from which we need to have a serious debate about whether he did or did not breach said Act. They don't at all see any bigger picture here. The Hu Jintao perspective, for want of a better term, is completely and utterly absent. 

(It is worth pondering whether the average person in China, to the extent that they know about the Hu Jintao story, view it as the mirror image of the Trump story - he obviously broke some important law that the papers will no doubt tell us about soon.)

But for the Trump story, if the average American does chance to see a bigger point, such as if they're a Fox News Republican, they'll probably just see one more example of the outrages of the Democratic Party, and are apt to list the above event alongside every other regular complaint about how the country is run, from illegal immigration, to woke trans activism in schools, to black lives matter leading to defunding of the police. Or, if they're on the left, one more aspect of the corrupt contempt for the democratic process by the Republicans, like Voter ID laws and the January 6th protests. 

What might the historian of 200 years' time make of this story? Well, here's one perspective. 

The single biggest fact in favor of American democracy, and democracy in general, is not that it selects wise leaders, or leaders who are legitimate in the eyes of the public, or anything like that. The primary thing in its favor is that it allows, nominally, for smooth transitions of power. Within the current sclerotic regime, of course, which outlaws all kinds of views and actions. And if you push it too far, like the South found out in 1865, you'll be crushed militarily. But within the operating envelope that the system is meant to work in, nobody has to be playing for keeps. Because while your guy may be in today, their guy may be in tomorrow, and you're stuck in a repeated game. So you have strong incentives to play nice.

Which is to say, for 230 years, America has had an unwritten gentlemen's agreement that former presidents are allowed to live out their lives in peace. It didn't matter if they were magnanimous and disappeared from public life, like George H. W. Bush. It didn't matter if they decided to run leftist alternative foreign policy missions, like Jimmy Carter. It didn't even matter if they were impeached for potential crimes, like both Richard Nixon and Andrew Johnson. Nixon is the classic here. Sure, Gerald Ford pardoned him for Watergate. But what's the chances that this was the only law he broke during his presidency? That an aggressive Carter White House couldn't have found something else to charge him with, after enough digging? No, that just wasn't how things were done. Former presidents get to live their lives in peace. Even Jefferson Davis was held only for two years, never ultimately charged, and allowed to live out the remainder of his days as a free citizen.  

That agreement is now gone. 

To which the dumb but common answer is that Trump's actions are so flagrant that they breached the agreement first. 

The nature of gentlemen's agreements is that the finer details aren't always written down, so this is hard to say for sure. But to judge this, you need an estimate of what the baseline level of past violations of the same kind might be. And there's decently strong evidence that this kind of thing is pretty common. What Trump did looks, to me, not nearly as bad as what Hillary Clinton did with her janky private email server while Secretary of State. Or, to take another example, we know that Sandy Berger, a Clinton advisor, was convicted of stealing documents from the National Archives after Clinton's term was over. What do you think the probability is that he was the only member of the Clinton White House to have breached some kind of records law, if the FBI were sent around to raid everyone else's house too?

In other words, to me, this looks more akin to Putin's charges against Boris Berezovsky  In that case at least, was he guilty of the illegal things they said he did? Absolutely. Did this distinguish him from any other oligarch? Not at all. The real crime, which everyone knows, was challenging Putin's power.

In the case of Trump, I really don't know what the sacred text of the Presidential Records Act requires, and whether Trump's actions may be in violation of it. For the purposes of the argument, I am entirely willing to believe he is in breach of it. He does not strike me as a stickler for detailed record-keeping, nor a scrupulous adherent to all kinds of process laws (he's a former New York real estate developer, for crying out loud. If you think there's a single one of them who's never broken any fiddly laws that they thought were getting in their way, buddy, I don't know what to tell you).

But my strong sense is that this is about as relevant as the question of what exactly Hu Jintao is charged with. Former presidents are simply not raided and arrested like they're some run of the mill citizen who fell afoul of a slightly too aggressive Assistant DA. Charging them is everywhere and always an explicitly political act. Especially in this case - can you imagine the Martian historian in 2222 opining about the crucial question of records storage? I can't. I think they'll say that this was part of an obvious longstanding campaign against Trump by whatever term they'll give to what we unsatisfactorily refer to as "the Deep State".

Why do I say this?

Because the FBI already was illegally wiretapping the Trump campaign during the 2016 election, before Trump was even elected! They procured the ridiculous Christopher Steele dossier, presented it to a FISA court, lied about where it came from, and used it to wiretap Trump advisor Carter Page. Nobody went to jail over that, of course. 

Is this the same thing? Is it a related thing? Is it a totally unrelated thing?

I think the argument for "totally unrelated" is absurd. So we're only left with the question of how related they are. And even if one forms the view that this time, Trump's actions really were terrible and illegal, we see the same ferocious politically targeted persecution even when there was no crime. Even when he was still just a private citizen.

This is not a "Can you believe the injustice?" post. Politics is usually ugly, nasty and stupid, and people at high levels play it seriously indeed. This is certainly not a "those disgraceful Democrats!" post. As MiddleEarthMixr savagely put it: "And how’s that working out for ya, imagining if the roles were reversed?"

Fifteen years ago, maybe even ten, I probably would have written something along these lines. But I am long past such perspectives, and no longer find them remotely useful. They are the furthest extreme from the Martian historian's creed.

Rather, this is merely to note that whether you are a fan of democracy, or whether you view it as absurd and past its use-by date, there is a serious reading that the whole campaign against Trump is a dangerous escalation and breach of prior norms, from which further counter-escalations seem likely. 

One of the advantages of living in 200 years time is that events that might be half a lifetime apart are easy to draw threads between, in a way that isn't quite as apparent at the time. It is altogether too easy to imagine future wikipedia articles that read something like this:


The Great Unravelling: 1970 - 2035

The term "the Great Unravelling" was first used by historian Michael Wallesteimer in the early 22nd century to describe the series of sequential breaches of previous unwritten political norms, in a cycle of escalation and counter-escalation that lead to an increasing distrust between the Democrats and the Republicans, and eventually the Great Breach of 2032 (Main Article). Wallesteimer defined the key events as not just those which were political advances by one party, but specifically changes that would subsequently be re-used by opponents afterwards.  Subsequent historians have disputed the original Wallesteimer list, both in terms of charting an original first course, and which events justify inclusion. But the general pattern is now broadly agreed to represent the increasingly fractious civic breakdown. The original Wallesteimer list is:

-The Supreme Court decision in Roe v Wade. This not only set off a large component of the culture war, but set a new standard in deliberate misreading of constitutional texts for political aims. Robert Axelford disputed the inclusion of this, noting that the court cannot be said to be explicitly part of the political apparatus at this time. But it paved the way for the increasingly Republican Court to overturn both all racial preferences in Wichita State University v Connors, and substantive portions of the administrative state in Rothstein v Gibbons, which even if more textually defensible, were viewed by the left as extreme judicial activism. 

-The Senate refusing Robert Bork's Supreme Court nomination. Up until this point, presidents had mostly gotten their Supreme Court nominations uncontested. This marked a discontinuous shift after which the vast majority of appointments became politically contentious, leading to the eventual packing of the court in 2026.

-The Kenneth Starr investigation. This set the precedent of open-ended Special Prosecutors targetting sitting presidents - "starting out investigating dodgy land deals in Arkansas, and ending up investigating blow jobs in the White House", in Anthony Reichenford's phrase. Special Prosecutors would be later used both against Scooter Libby, and by President DeSantis against speaker of the House Alexandria Occasio-Cortez.

 -The Clinton Impeachment. This set the precedent of impeaching presidents over pure process crimes, where there was no other underlying crime (in this case, perjury over testimony regarding sexual relations, when such sexual relations were not otherwise a crime). This was reciprocated when Donald Trump was charged and later convicted of violations of the Presidential Records act, something Trump described at trial as "chicken shit".

-The Trump Russiagate FBI wiretap. This set a precedent of explicit use of the permanent civil service and law enforcement to target a presidential campaign. This violation is considered more notable because of the lack of crimes uncovered by the campaign, which were significantly less than the wiretaps themselves. While the Republicans never succeeded in reciprocating via law enforcement, the subsequent politicization of the military by President Carren in 2031 is viewed as a counterescalation. 

-2020 Election Fraud. Wallesteimer described this as a "shadow breach", because its gravity was only fully appreciated after the fact during the audit of 2025. It is more viewed as part of a continuum of increasingly flagrant election fraud, eventually on both sides, that marked a further step in breakdown in belief in democracy. Relative to the other steps, this was considered more of a notional marker apparent in hindsight than a structural break, but was important additionally for its role in triggering the obvious breach of the January 6th protests. 

-The January 6th protests. While these are now viewed as chaotic and unstructured "acting out" without any serious risk against regime security, they established a precedent that the losing party in presidential elections would respond with mass protests, then with small scale violence, then ultimately with complete insurrection. 2016 is noted as the last of the "peaceful election transitions era". 

-The Arrest of Donald Trump. This ended the famous "gentlemen's agreement", as Wallesteimer described, that former opponents now out of power would be left alone. He viewed this as the most serious escalation, and an important step towards the arrest of President Carren and the Insurrection of 2034. 

You will need a little imagination to visualize what other future events might make the list. But the history of late Republican Rome offers some possible guidance. 

Or put it this way. Suppose that you were Ron DeSantis. How much would you have updated your belief that, if you got elected president, that you or your family would end up in jail if you lost power?

DeSantis is a smart guy. I'm not sure he would think the answer is yet "high". But it's certainly a fair bit higher than it was a year ago, and a lot higher than it was seven years ago.

Indeed, one might easily imagine the conclusion of the chapter above:

As Wallesteimer described the atmosphere in the mid to late 2020s, "From here on out, both parties' leaders began to suspect that if they lost power, they were liable to lose their freedom, if not their lives. After reaching this conclusion, they began to justify their own escalations as being a necessary precaution against the presumed intentions of their opponents. This in turn justified those opponents in their own beliefs, and their own escalations. Once such beliefs became widespread, democracy was not long for this world." 

1 comment:

  1. "From here on out, both parties' leaders began to suspect that if they lost power, they were liable to lose their freedom, if not their lives."

    This is certainly true but with one caveat: If you threaten somebody you'd better make sure you destroy them or else they will destroy you.

    Trump threatened to "drain the swamp" but he was such a horrible leader he misread the fear and loathing he created in his enemies. He should have gone in and laid waste to hundreds of executive branch political appointees. He should have gotten Washington insiders to make deals. Instead, he actually hired people who worked against him.

    The next Trump will walk softly and carry a big stick.

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