A critique of pure stupidity: understanding Trump 2.0

对纯粹愚蠢的批判:理解特朗普2.0

The Audio Long Read

2025-10-27

25 分钟
PDF

单集简介 ...

If the first term of Donald Trump provoked anxiety over the fate of objective knowledge, the second has led to claims we live in a world-historical age of stupid, accelerated by big tech. But might there be a way out? By William Davies. Read by Dan Starkey. Help support our independent journalism at theguardian.com/longreadpod
更多

单集文稿 ...

  • This is The Guardian.

  • by William Davies.

  • Read by Dan Starkey.

  • The first and second Trump administrations have provoked markedly different critical reactions.

  • The shock of 2016 in its aftermath saw a wave of liberal anxiety about the fate of objective knowledge not only in the US,

  • but also in Britain.

  • where the Brexit referendum that year had been won by a campaign that misrepresented key facts and figures.

  • A rich lexicon soon arose to describe this epistemic breakdown.

  • Oxford dictionaries declared, post-truth, their 2016 Word of the Year.

  • Merriam-Webster's was surreal.

  • The scourge of fake news, pumped out by online bots and Russian troll farms,

  • suggested that the authority of professional journalism had been fatally damaged by the rise of social media.

  • And when presidential counselor Kellyanne Conway coined the phrase, alternative facts,

  • a few days after Trump's inauguration in early 2017,

  • the mendacity of the incoming administration appeared to be all but official.

  • The truth panic had the unwelcome side effect of emboldening those it sought to oppose.

  • Fake was one of Trump's favorite slapdowns.

  • especially to news outlets that reported unwelcome facts about him and his associates.

  • A booming MAGA media further amplified the president's lies and denials.

  • The tools of liberal expertise appeared powerless to hold such brazen duplicity to account.