Why it鈥檚 wrong to refer to the 鈥榗ult of Trump鈥

Why it鈥檚 wrong to refer to the 鈥榗ult of Trump鈥

By Sharday Mosurinjohn,

January 20, 2020

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Donald Trump
President Donald Trump is welcomed by Vice President Mike Pence as he is introduced during a rally. (Photo by History in HD / Unsplash)

The recent events in Iran have led many to rail against a supposed 鈥.鈥

But suggestions that supporters of U.S. President Donald Trump are isn鈥檛 helpful in an era of significant political polarization.

As those of us who study new religious movements often say, 鈥 and that pertains to political parties too.

Since Benjamin Zeller, an American scholar of new religious movements, published 鈥溾 last fall, allegations that Trump has spawned a cult are appearing more frequently in the media.

One journalist called upon his peers to 鈥.鈥

There鈥檚 a #TrumpCult hashtag on social media platforms.

And Steven Hassan, a former member of Sun Myung Moon鈥檚 Unification Church who is now a self-described cult deprogrammer, that Trump is a cult leader.

What does it accomplish to allege a Trump cult?

Generally, it substitutes a value judgment in place of a sorely needed argumentative analysis of how voters generate their own political feelings, fantasies and attachments. And this feeds the cycle of polarizing political identities and political institutions.

鈥楤谤补颈苍飞补蝉丑别诲鈥

Examples from Twitter, the media and in Hassan鈥檚 The Cult of Trump highlight instructive differences in how the cult concept is being used 鈥 and its impact.

Hassan argues that Trump supporters have been 鈥渂rainwashed鈥 by a charismatic leader. He sees them as deluded zealots who need his help to 鈥渨ake up from the Cult of Trump.鈥

Hassan鈥檚 approach ignores their agency as well as decades of public education from organizations like , an independent educational charity that provides information about minority religions and has done important work on discrediting concepts of 鈥渂rainwashing,鈥 鈥渄eprogramming鈥 and 鈥渃ults.鈥

It鈥檚 worth remembering that the suggestion that Republican leaders were 鈥渃hosen by God,鈥 as former energy secretary Rick Perry recently described Trump, is nothing new. It was and other Republican politicians who have catered to evangelicals.

Without question, Trump鈥檚 insistence that 鈥溾 in the upcoming 2020 presidential election poses a problem for journalists and for public life.

But to describe the entire party as a cult lead by Trump is problematic. If journalists are going to heed calls to refer to the party as a cult and its supporters as cultists, they must define what 鈥渃ult鈥 means. Otherwise, they are assuming that a cult is some obvious phenomenon and everyone knows what the word means.

The term cult is used frequently by Trump critics on social media. As he criticized former United Nations ambassador , one commentator tweeted:

鈥淧retty telling that it鈥檚 a rite of passage into the Cult of Trump and the modern Republican Party that you have to publicly legitimize the Confederacy, a racist, treasonous, nightmarish dystopia founded on white supremacy and stark economic hierarchies.鈥

In this example, the cult comparison is incidental to the commentator鈥檚 argument about Republican ideology and partisanship. He isn鈥檛 arguing that Trumpism is a cult in any serious sense. 鈥淐ult鈥 serves as shorthand for Trump鈥檚 base that simply adds a rhetorical flourish to a condemnation of Trump supporters on the grounds of their political beliefs.

Moral denunciation

But whether literal or figurative, 鈥渃ult鈥 discourse hurts critics鈥 ability to understand Trump鈥檚 appeal. The 鈥渃ult鈥 diagnosis isn鈥檛 a reasoned argument, or even an objective description: it鈥檚 moral denunciation.

There鈥檚 no question Trump policies that hurt people and endanger the world should be denounced. But the 鈥渃ult鈥 epithet doesn鈥檛 speak to those policies; it draws a line between Trump opponents and Trump supporters. And it oversimplifies the way people think and feel about their own beliefs and those on the other side of that line.

So why is it used so often?

It turns out that avoiding the temptation to make in-groups and out-groups 鈥 鈥 is very difficult.

U.S. politics professor and recently argued that in people, and lead them to become hostile towards the out-group.

Indeed, the fact that we鈥檙e all susceptible to this kind of in-group/out-group thinking shows that politics is not just about reason, it is also about emotion. Political emotions are often layered with religion for Trump-supporting evangelicals who believe in a for America.

To dismiss such people as being under the sway of a cult misses what Trumpism offers them. It therefore makes it harder to understand Trump鈥檚 power. It also makes it more difficult to understand the circumstances of Trump supporters鈥 lives. It makes other people鈥檚 feelings seem foreign, when they may be fundamentally common.

In conclusion, while there are many legitimate ways to critique Trump, demonizing his voters doesn鈥檛 help us understand why they are attracted to him, how their worldview has developed and how to do something about it.

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[ Deep knowledge, daily. . ]The Conversation

 is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Cultural and Religious Studies at 澳门六合彩开奖现场.

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