Ritual Humiliation: The Favorite Sport of Autocrats
Sen. Tim Scott and Tucker Carlson as case studies
Perhaps Senator Tim Scott (R-SC) thought he would gain favor with former president Donald Trump by showing up at Trump's January 19 campaign stop in New Hampshire. Instead, the former GOP presidential candidate set himself up to be a foil for one of Trump's favorite activities: debasing others, preferably in front of an audience of millions.
"Did you ever think [Haley] actually supported you, Tim? And you're the senator of her state...You must really hate her," a smirking Trump said, referring to Nikki Haley's pledge to support Trump if he becomes the GOP nominee. Scott intervened in the only way he knew to end this embarrassing spectacle: giving Trump what he wanted. "I just love you," he told Trump. "That's why he's a great politician," Trump declared with a self-satisfied smile.
The more publicly submissive party elites have been with Trump, the more he humiliates them, until they perform the game without being asked, for the leader’s sadistic delight. Sen. Scott also fits in here. He had this to say after voting in the South Carolina primary: "I'm far better encouraging and being excited and motivated for Trump than I was for myself."
And, then, after a projected Trump win in SC: “The longer I speak, the less you hear of him.” Sen. Scott has been conditioned by Trump to have no needs and find pleasure only in helping his Leader. This unfortunate behavior is familiar to me from writing about authoritarian regimes, as is its outcome: One day Sen. Scott will regret his words, but right now he is fully immersed in the cult environment.
A world away in Moscow, former Fox anchor Tucker Carlson may have thought he would earn points with Russian President Vladimir Putin during their February interview. Putin, a busy warmonger and kleptocrat, had granted Carlson two hours of his time. Surely this would further Carlson's ambitions to be the Joseph Goebbels of today's global far right!
Instead, Putin burst his bubble, revealing to the world that years ago Carlson had tried to join the CIA but had been rejected. "Maybe we should thank God they didn't let you in... [T]hey have always been our opponents," Putin "joked," implying that Carlson would not have been available for Kremlin propaganda services had he gone into the intelligence business.
The look on Carlson's face shows that he neglected one key area in whatever background research he did: Putin's love of taking down others, using his knowledge of their secrets and weaknesses to deflate them and throw them off guard.
Autocrats are fragile and insecure creatures who are always looking over their shoulder to see who is after them. To build themselves up and deter others from challenging their power, they take others down in public, letting them know exactly where they stand and how much they scorn them.
Ritual humiliation also translates into governmental practices which create an environment in which no one feels safe, no matter how much of the leader’s dirty work they do and how many compliments they bestow on him. And yet these leaders never lack a steady supply of opportunists and profiteers who are all too willing to play his game to the detriment of their dignity. The GOP is the latest example.
Trump has used ritual humiliation to make the GOP his personal tool, and the list of Republicans he has mocked publicly is long. In classic autocratic tradition, the more loyalty Republicans show Trump, sticking with him through impeachments, indictments, and a coup attempt that sent them running for their lives, the more he scorns them, losing few opportunities to cut them down. Nothing they can do, even undermine their power as GOP candidates by pledging support for him, a rival candidate, on live television during the first GOP debate, can make them immune from this treatment.
As willing accomplices in their debasement, GOP politicians likely don't want to know that it is only by taking the opposite tack, standing up to the strongman and exposing him as a fearful individual, that the humiliation will end. If they were ready to disengage from the Trump cult they could take advice from German Chancellor Angela Merkel, who was a veteran of many attempts by Putin to humiliate her publicly. He kept her waiting to see him for hours and once unleashed his dog near her to trigger her fear of canines.
“I understand why he has to do this, to prove he’s a man. He’s afraid of his own weakness," said Merkel of this last episode. "Russia has nothing, no successful politics or economy. All they have is this.”
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Looking forward to Friday's Zoom meeting. This was a great essay on how strongmen use public humiliation and how Republicans capitulate to the bully.
Fascinating Ruth. A strongman has to humiliate others like a schoolyard bully. But why do they have the constant supply of followers willing to be humiliated? Do you know what the dynamic is for them?