Interesting. Wildly swinging Donald Trump as the embodied aftermath of the Uranus square Pluto (2011-2016) (controlled?) demolition of money matrix “reality”? Moment by moment, Uranian lightning strikes political and other Pluto in Capricorn structures.
This French Philosopher Is the Only One Who Can Explain the Donald Trump Phenomenon
September 14, 2015
by Judd Legum
thinkprogress, via cousin Ben
Donald Trump has political pundits stumped.
They’ve been predicting his imminent downfall for months. Every “gaffe” that was supposed to destroy his support has only made him stronger. “DON VOYAGE: Trump Toast After Insult,” a headline in the New York Post blared nearly two months ago. The insult at issue, questioning John McCain’s military service, is so many insults ago that it isn’t even mentioned any more.
Meanwhile, Trump still dominates the polls, leading the GOP field by about 14 points nationally. With the exception of one poll in John Kasich’s home state of Ohio, Trump has led every state and national poll since the beginning of August.
You won’t find Roland Barthes on the Sunday morning roundtables dissecting the presidential race. Barthes is a French philosopher who died in 1980. But his work may hold the key to understanding Trump’s popularity and his staying power.
Barthes is best known for his work in semiotics, the study of signs and symbols. But he wasn’t limited to lengthy, esoteric treatises. Rather, Barthes published much of his work in short, accessible pieces breaking down elements of popular culture. The New York Times described Barthes as the godfather of the TV recap.
His most famous essay, published in his 1957 book Mythologies, focuses on professional wrestling. Could an essay about professional wrestling hold the key to understanding Trump’s appeal? It’s worth noting that, before he was a presidential candidate, Trump was an active participant in the WWE. In 2013, Trump was inducted into the WWE Hall of Fame.

In his essay, Barthes contrasts pro wrestling to boxing.
This public knows very well the distinction between wrestling and boxing; it knows that boxing is a Jansenist sport, based on a demonstration of excellence. One can bet on the outcome of a boxing-match: with wrestling, it would make no sense. A boxing- match is a story which is constructed before the eyes of the spectator; in wrestling, on the contrary, it is each moment which is intelligible, not the passage of time… The logical conclusion of the contest does not interest the wrestling-fan, while on the contrary a boxing-match always implies a science of the future. In other words,wrestling is a sum of spectacles, of which no single one is a function: each moment imposes the total knowledge of a passion which rises erect and alone, without ever extending to the crowning moment of a result.
In the current campaign, Trump is behaving like a professional wrestler while Trump’s opponents are conducting the race like a boxing match. As the rest of the field measures up their next jab, Trump decks them over the head with a metal chair.
Others in the Republican field are concerned with the rules and constructing a strategy that, under those rules, will lead to the nomination. But Trump isn’t concerned with those things. Instead, Trump is focused on each moment and eliciting the maximum amount of passion in that moment. His supporters love it.
The key to generating passion, Barthes notes, is to position yourself to deliver justice against evil forces by whatever means necessary. “Wrestlers know very well how to play up to the capacity for indignation of the public by presenting the very limit of the concept of Justice,” Barthes writes.
Trump knows how to define his opponent — China, “illegals,” hedge fund managers — and pledges to go after them with unbridled aggression. If, in making his case, he crosses over a line or two, all the better.

For a pro wrestler, energy is everything. A wrestling fan is less interested in what is happening — or the coherence of how one event leads to the next — than the fact that something is happening. On that score, Trump delivers. He is omnipresent on TV. When he can’t make it in front of the camera, he’ll simply call in. When he’s not on TV, he’s tweeting boasts, insults, and non-sequiturs. When he runs out of things to tweet, he retweets random comments from his supporters.
Along those lines, Trump’s favorite insult — which he has employed repeatedly against Jeb Bush and, more recently, Ben Carson — is that his opponents are “low energy.”
Frenetic action is suicidal for a boxer, or a traditional politician. But Trump is not bound by those limitations. The crazier things get — Trump suggesting a popular Fox News host asked him a tough question because she was menstruating, for example — the more Trump’s supporters love it.
Some fights, among the most successful kind, are crowned by a final charivari, a sort of unrestrained fantasia where the rules, the laws of the genre, the referee’s censuring and the limits of the ring are abolished, swept away by a triumphant disorder which overflows into the hall and carries off pell-mell wrestlers, seconds, referee and spectators.
But why can’t voters see that what Trump offers is just an act? As Barthes illustrates, that’s asking the wrong question.
It is obvious that at such a pitch, it no longer matters whether the passion is genuine or not. What the public wants is the image of passion, not passion itself. There is no more a problem of truth in wrestling than in the theater.
This analogy reveals why the attacks on Trump are so ineffective. Recently, Rand Paul and others have taken to calling out Trump as an “entertainer,” rather than a legitimate candidate. This is as effective to running into the middle of the ring during Wrestlemania and yelling: “This is all fake!” You are correct, but you will not be received well.

One of Barthes’ central points is that boxing — or traditional rules and decorum — is not morally superior to pro wrestling. In fact, for all its artifice, one could argue that pro wrestling today is a more noble pursuit than boxing, which is hopelessly corrupt and currently dominated by a convicted domestic abuser and unrepentant misogynist.
Similarly, Trump is able to take advantage of the obvious dysfunction of the traditional political system. In 2016, the candidates are shadowed by massively funded Super PACs that often rely on just a few donors. Many Republican candidates hold positions supported by this elite donor class but not the electorate at large. Others refuse to answer questions at all.
Compared to this system, the things that Trump is offering — passion, energy, a sense of justice — may not seem so bad.
Does this mean that Trump will be the Republican nominee? No one really knows. But we do know that traditional punditry is incapable of understanding his appeal.
Roland Barthes has been dead for 35 years, but he may be onto something.
0 thoughts on “Is THIS how Trump trumps? Cue Roland Barthes.”
Clueless is the word of the day! The politicians and the media are sitting there with their mouths open and scratching their heads…What is going on they ask? This is what is going on you guys! Wake up! Better yet stay asleep and fade away….VK
https://oneworldmetamorphosis.wordpress.com/2015/09/16/a-message-to-all-politicians/
Great article by the way…thanks…
Reblogged this on Laura Bruno's Blog and commented:
This is such a blast from the past! I have not heard anyone discuss Roland Barthes since I finished my Minor in Art History in 1995. “Roland Barthes has been dead for 35 years, but he may be onto something.” Indeed. So if Barthes is correct, then what would happen if Donald Trump runs with Jesse Ventura as a running mate? Will the US officially turn into the WWF?!
Two days ago while I was setting up power for the house next door, the confirmation rep tried to get me to sign up for cable, too. I explained that I wasn’t sure if I’d use DSL or cable for phone and internet over there. “So you’re just going to keep your TV at your home?” “No, we don’t have a television.” “What?!!!!? Really?” “Yeah. And we won’t be getting cable for TV.” She was so stunned that she actually stopped talking for a moment. Who in their right mind would willingly miss this spectacle? The Fall of the Roman Empire had gladiators, and we’ve got … pro wrestlers?
No wonder I garden and talk with faeries … methinks the so-called “real world” has gotten punch drunk.
For anyone wanting to know the real Trump, they should make some time for this video.
TRUMP: WHAT’S THE DEAL
The film was commissioned in 1988 by Leonard Stern as the first of a series on celebrity businessmen and finished in 1991. Back then, the only way for a film to be seen was on television or in the theater. Donald threatened to sue any broadcaster or distributor that took on the film. In effect, it was suppressed. It was screened twice in back-to-back standing room only showings at the Bridgehampton Community House on July 3, 1991, the same day that Donald announced his engagement to Marla Maples.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5UO3nn7awUk&feature=player_embedded (1h22m)
Thanks for the heads’ up Demitra. Will do!
Ann, IMHO ‘The Donald’ is a main stream media darling as his grand-standing is great for ratings in The Circus that now totally defines the US political process. The ‘shakers and movers’ are laughing all the way to the bank.
How wonderful, this article! I was at a cafe this afternoon, and the wall TV had the pre-debate coverage by a news channel – I can’t remember whether it was Fox or CNN. I remarked to my friend that the coverage was exactly like a WWE spectacle.
After 50 years of watching wrestling, I still run into people who want to point out to me that ‘wrestling is fake’….. like I’m a dope who’d fall for anything. My comeback has always been ‘so is everything else on T.V. The difference is that I know what I watch is fake and you believe a myriad of things Hollywood tells you” A few of the things they believe are:
Tires squeal on dirt roads.
If you point a gun at cop and order him to lay his gun down, he will.
The sheriff works for the mayor.
You can shoot someone with a pistol from 100 ft every time……. if you’re the good guy. The bad guys can’t hit the side of a barn with an assault rifle.
Keep watching that wrestlin’