As alarming as his record is, though, it would be a serious mistake to think of Trump as the only or even the principal enemy of truth and truth-tellers. There is a large army out there churning out false information, using technology that lets them spread their messages to a mass audience with minimal effort and expense. But the largest threat to truth, I fear, is not from the liars and truth twisters, but from deep in our collective and individual human nature. It's the same threat I glimpsed all those years ago at George Wallace's rallies in Maryland and on that factory floor in China: the tendency to believe comfortable lies instead of uncomfortable truths and to trust our own assumptions instead of looking at the evidence.
That widespread and deep-rooted failure of critical thinking in American society today has helped make Trump and his enablers, like other liars before them, successful in the war against truth. In the words of the mid-twentieth-century cartoonist Walt Kelly's comic-strip character, Pogo the Possum, "We have met the enemy and it is us." That's a powerful enemy. Whether there's an effective way for the forces of truth to oppose it is far from clear.
Arnold R. Isaacs, a journalist and writer based in Maryland, spent 18 years as a reporter, national and foreign correspondent, and editor for the Baltimore Sun. He is the author of From Troubled Lands: Listening to Pakistani and Afghan Americans in Post-9/11 America and two books related to the Vietnam War. He is a TomDispatch regular. His website is www.arnoldisaacs.net.
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Copyright 2018 Arnold R. Isaacs
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