The long
read
A
critique of pure stupidity: understanding Trump 2.0
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
Thu 2 Oct
2025 05.00 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/news/2025/oct/02/critique-pure-stupidity-understanding-donald-trump-2
The first
and second Trump administrations have provoked markedly different critical
reactions. The shock of 2016 and 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 counsellor 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 favourite slap-downs, 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. A
touchstone of the moment was the German-born writer and philosopher Hannah
Arendt, who observed in her 1951 book The Origins of Totalitarianism that “the
ideal subject of totalitarian rule is not the convinced Nazi or the dedicated
communist, but people for whom the distinction between fact and fiction … no
longer exists”.
In 2025,
the denunciations have a different flavour. To many of us, the central problem
is that we live not so much in a time of lies as one of stupidity. This
diagnosis has credibility across the political spectrum. In January, the
centrist columnist David Brooks wrote a column for the New York Times titled
“The Six Principles of Stupidity”. The new administration, he wrote, was
“behaving in a way that ignores the question: What would happen next?”
In March,
Hillary Clinton – not, perhaps, ideal counsel – weighed in with an op-ed in the
same paper, with the headline: “How Much Dumber Will This Get?” “It’s not the
hypocrisy that bothers me,” Clinton wrote, “it’s the stupidity.” And in April,
the Marxist writer and intellectual Richard Seymour posted an essay on
“Stupidity as Historical Force”. In place of Arendt, Seymour quoted Trotsky:
“When the political curve goes down, stupidity dominates social thinking” –
once the forces of reaction predominate, so reason gives way to insults and
prejudice.
Trump’s
lying is no less constant or blatant than in 2016, but by now it feels
familiar, already priced in. What more is there to say about the “war on truth”
a decade into Trump’s political career?
Still, at
least two aspects of his second administration are newly and undoubtedly
“stupid”. One is shambolic incompetence of a degree that led the editor of the
Atlantic magazine to be accidentally added to a Signal group chat about US
military operations, a group whose other members included the vice-president
and the secretary of defence. A second is its incomprehensible determination to
press ahead with policies – such as tariffs and the defunding of medical
research – that will do deep harm without any apparent gain, even for Trump’s
backers and clients, still less his voters.
The
spectacle of a prominent vaccine sceptic and wellness crank as secretary of
health and human services goes beyond an abandonment of truth; it feels like an
assault on human progress. Bans on fluoride in tap water, passed by legislators
in Utah and Florida at Robert F Kennedy Jr’s behest, mark a new hostility to
the very idea of evidence-based government. The escalation from Trump One to
Trump Two has seen irrationality spread from the deliberative public sphere to
flood the veins of government.
When we
interpret the actions of others, a basic principle is to assume that people
have reasons for behaving as they do, even if those reasons may be emotional,
shortsighted or cynical. In the wake of the group chat fiasco and the tariffs
upheaval, social media posters made a kind of parlour game of cramming the
Trump administration’s actions into their favoured explanatory paradigm.
Signalgate must have been deliberate; tariffs must be a grand plan to crash the
dollar in the interest of one economic faction or another. The risk is that
ever-more elaborate explanations for stupid actions end up wrongly according
those actions a kind of intelligence – rather confirming the insight of the
political scientist Robyn Marasco that “conspiracy theory is a love affair with
power that poses as its critique”.
Such
speculations are often met with a retort that leans even harder into the
stupidity allegation. No, Trump and his people are not playing four-dimensional
chess, the response goes – we are simply witnessing the consequences of
allowing a deranged man into the highest office, backed by a coterie of dim and
unqualified cronies. When political sociology falls short, medical psychiatry
and an unspoken social Darwinism fill the void.
Not for
the first time, the early months of the second Trump administration drew
comparisons to Mike Judge’s 2006 movie Idiocracy, in which a soldier of average
intelligence wakes up 500 years into the future to discover a US governed by
idiocy. Culturally, technologically and ecologically, the depiction feels
grimly prophetic. Waste and pollution are out of control. The president is a TV
celebrity with the manner and style of a pro-wrestling star. Doctors have been
replaced by clunky diagnostic machines. Consumers sit in front of screens
flooded with ads and slogans that they repeat like memes. When the soldier
advises people to stop trying to irrigate their failing crops using a
Gatorade-like drink and to use water instead, they swiftly abandon this practical
suggestion when the drink manufacturer’s profits collapse. “Do you really want
to live in a world where you’re trying to blow up the one person who is trying
to help you?” the soldier asks in desperation, after people turn on him. And,
yes, it turns out they do.
We might
recognise stupefying consumerism and profit maximisation as symptoms of our own
age of idiocy, but the premise of Judge’s satire is a politically ugly one. The
reason the US has descended into this abyss over the centuries is that smart
people (depicted as neurotic professionals) have stopped reproducing, while
dumb people (depicted as violent trailer-park trash) can’t stop, eventually
overwhelming the gene pool with stupidity. At a time when racial eugenics,
natalist policy and IQ fixation are ascendant once more, this is scarcely a
line of thinking that many liberals or leftists can endorse. Then again, who
can be sure that opponents of reactionary “stupidity” don’t sometimes harbour
eugenicist fantasies of their own? The aftermath of the Brexit vote – like
tariffs, a seemingly senseless act of economic self-harm – witnessed liberal
mutterings that typical leave voters were so elderly that by the time Brexit
finally came into effect, many had already died.
One
needn’t indulge in such dark fantasies to hope that official stupidity
eventually meets its comeuppance. Surely stupid economic policies must lead to
stupid political strategy, resulting in the loss of power. Again, Britain’s
recent experience offers a precedent: when the then prime minister, Liz Truss,
put her own fiscal dogmas above the judgments of the bond markets in September
2022, she was swiftly ejected from office (with the help of the Bank of
England) a mere 49 days after entering it. With Trump, many have looked to the
bond markets as the final backstop of intelligence in a stupid world, the power
that eventually forces idiots to confront consequences. This works up to a
point, especially when financial pain is visited upon corporate executives who
have the president’s ear – but it only trims away at the stupidity, warding off
its worst excesses. Trump’s lack of basic causal understanding, of how policy A
leads to outcome B, is not limited to economic policy, nor to Trump himself.
The
challenge posed by this political crisis is how to take the stupidity seriously
without reducing it to a wholly mental or psychiatric phenomenon. Stupidity can
be understood as a problem of social systems rather than individuals, as André
Spicer and Mats Alvesson explore in their book The Stupidity Paradox.
Stupidity, they write, can become “functional”, a feature of how organisations
operate on a daily basis, obstructing ideas and intelligence despite the
palpable negative consequences.
Yet it’s
hard to identify anything functional about Trumpian stupidity, which is less a
form of organisational inertia or disarray than a slash-and-burn assault on the
very things – universities, public health, market data – that help make the
world intelligible. Trumpian stupidity isn’t an emergent side-effect of smart
people’s failure to take control; it is imposed and enforced. This needs to be
confronted politically and sociologically, without falling into the opposite
trap of “sanewashing” or inflating strategic cunning to the point of conspiracy
theory.
“Since
the beginning of this century, the growth of meaninglessness has been
accompanied by loss of common sense,” wrote Arendt in 1953. “In many respects,
this has appeared simply as an increasing stupidity ... Stupidity in the
Kantian sense has become the infirmity of everybody, and therefore can no
longer be regarded as ‘beyond Remedy’.”
Arendt’s
argument contained a glimmer of hope. Stupidity on a social scale had to be
remediable, if only because it was no longer explicable as a mere cognitive
deficiency among individuals. She believed that people – intellectuals as much
as “the masses” – had stopped exercising their powers of judgment, preferring
to mouth platitudes or simply obey orders, rather than think for themselves.
But what are the social and political conditions that normalise this? One is a
society where people wait for instruction on how to think, which Arendt saw as
a key characteristic of totalitarianism.
This
social model of stupidity – crystallised in the Orwellian image of brainwashed
drones, trained to obey – has a superficial plausibility as a depiction of
contemporary authoritarianism, but it misses a critical dimension of liberal
societies as they took shape in the late 20th century. Judgment was not
replaced by dictatorship, but rather outsourced to impersonal, superintelligent
systems of data collection and analysis.
Over the
middle decades of the 20th century, the neoliberal argument for markets, made
most potently by Friedrich Hayek, always emphasised that their primary function
was to organise a society’s knowledge. Where markets ran smoothly and prices
were set freely, there would be no need for anyone to exercise judgment beyond
their own immediate wants, desires and expectations. The “stupid” person has
just as much potential to thrive in a neoliberal society as the “smart” person,
because the price system will ultimately decide on collective outcomes.
In the
early 21st century, similar arguments have been made for “big data” by Silicon
Valley ideologue and former Wired editor Chris Anderson, and for randomised
control trials by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology economist Abhijit
Banerjee: that they will happily render the theories, judgments and
explanations of human beings – with all their biases and errors – redundant.
Once everything is quantified, right down to nanodetails, not even measurement
is needed, just algorithmic pattern recognition. You don’t need a concept of
“rabbit” to identify the furry thing with big ears; you just design machines to
identify which word most commonly appears alongside such an image.
Thus when
people look to the bond markets to rescue us from stupidity, they are not
expecting the return of “common sense”, but merely that certain behaviours and
policies will receive lower scores than others. Similarly, large language
models, which promise so much today, do not offer judgment, let alone
intelligence, but unrivalled pattern-processing power, based on a vast corpus
of precedents. (Large language models such as ChatGPT are intelligent within
their own limits, but comically stupid when stretched beyond them. Google’s
AI-generated search feature has been asked to explain the meaning of
nonsensical made-up idioms – such as “you can’t lick a badger twice” and “erase
twice, plank once” – which it confidently proceeded to do, producing torrents of
bullshit. Professors will also be familiar with the experience of reading
student essays that are neither very good nor very bad, but that uncanny
combination of the intelligent and the stupid that is the mark of AI writing.)
From the
neoliberal critique of planning in the 1970s to Elon Musk’s Doge, political
attacks on governmental and professional forms of human authority serve the
parallel project of opening space for overarching technologies of
quantification, comparison and evaluation. Yet the technological quest to “go
meta” on the rest of society, thus reducing the role of human judgment, is not
new. In The Human Condition, Arendt identified the launch of Sputnik in 1957 as
a historical turning point, offering the possibility of an unworldly
perspective on worldly affairs, downgrading the latter in the process. The cold
war, which gave birth to the internet and myriad tools of control and
surveillance, was a battle to achieve the most complete global viewpoint. No
behaviour or movement was deemed irrelevant to uncovering the enemy’s
intentions. Musk’s fixation on space (Starlink now has about 8,000 satellites
in orbit) is of a piece with his flippant approach to human judgment. Pressed
on why he falsely claimed, as a pretext for slashing its budget, that USAID
spent $50m on condoms for Gaza, Musk casually responded: “Some of the things I
say will be incorrect.”
The
transition of human activities on to surveillance platforms means that truth
and falsehood, fact and rumour, become mere data points of equal value. False
information and stupid policies can move markets at least as much as accurate
information and smart policies, and so offer equal opportunity to speculators.
One morning in April, the S&P 500 jumped 6% after a viral rumour that
Trump’s tariff policy was being paused – a rumour the Financial Times traced
back to a pseudonymous X user named Walter Bloomberg, based in Switzerland,
with no offline credentials whatsoever. A Hayekian might point out that the
error was quickly corrected – the market dropped 6% again within the hour – but
this was a manifestly stupid turn of events.
In a
fully platform-based world, everything shrinks to the status of behaviours and
patterns; meaning, intention and explanation become irrelevant. One of the most
incisive accounts of this tendency in contemporary US politics comes from
political scientists Nancy Rosenblum and Russell Muirhead, in their analysis of
the “new conspiracism”.
Classic
conspiracy theory (regarding, say, the JFK assassination) rests on an
overelaborate theoretical imagination, with complex causal chains, strategies
and alliances. Its demands for coherence and meaning are excessive, while its
tolerance for contingency is stunted. By contrast, “The new conspiracism
dispenses with the burden of explanation. Instead, we have innuendo and verbal
gesture … not evidence but repetition … The new conspiracism – all accusation,
no evidence – substitutes social validation for scientific validation: if a lot
of people are saying it, to use Trump’s signature phrase, then it is true
enough.”
The new
conspiracism has its technological basis in digital platforms and the rise of
reactionary influencers and “conspiracy entrepreneurs”. Outlandish and
pointless fantasies, such as the conspiracies circulated by QAnon or the
alleged staging of the Sandy Hook school shooting, exist to be recited and
shared, acting as instruments of online influence and coordination rather than
narratives to make sense of the world. They may identify enemies and reinforce
prejudices, but they don’t explain anything or provide a political plan. The
only injunction of the new conspiracist is that their claims get liked, shared
and repeated. Engagement – and revenue – is all.
This
analysis takes us beyond the 2016-era panic over “truth” to help us chart the
current political flood waters of “stupidity”. When Republican politicians go
on TV and make absurd claims about tariffs, vaccines or immigration, is it best
understood as “lying”, or as something else altogether? Often they are simply
repeating lines that have already been circulating, filtering outward from
nodes – Trump and RFK Jr especially – in the conspiracist network. Some claims
act as loyalty oaths (affirmations that the 2020 election was stolen), but more
are just deranged and bizarre, not to mention sick, such as the claim that DEI
hiring policies were responsible for the fires that devastated Los Angeles in
January, and the fatal aircraft collision that killed 67 people that same
month. Taken as judgments or explanations, they raise questions about the
cognitive faculties of the speaker, but perhaps they are better seen as memes.
The individuals might sound stupid, but they are not the architects of a media
sphere in which causal explanation has been sacrificed for symbolic mimicry, to
fill time and generate content.
In the
same essay reflecting on stupidity, Arendt distinguished between “preliminary”
and “true” understanding. Because it involves applying existing concepts to
particular situations, preliminary understanding has a kind of circularity. It
can be clever and correct, but it falls short when confronting the genuine
novelty of human actions. One can escape the most brute form of stupidity, yet
not truly understand the significance of the political and historical moment.
Even the cleverest person or system can get trapped in a “preliminary”
understanding of events.
Arendt
argued that there was a second human faculty, in addition to judgment, that
allowed understanding to progress to a truer grasp of meaning: imagination.
Imagination, for Arendt, is the uniquely human capacity to grasp truth via
speculative leaps, drawing on empathy and creativity in the process, as opposed
to scientific methods. Politics requires us to navigate situations which are
incomparable and immeasurable, because they are genuinely new. This in turn
requires something closer to aesthetic judgment than to scientific judgment.
“Imagination
alone,” Arendt wrote, “enables us to see things in their proper perspective.”
The challenge Arendt poses to us is to think of truth and meaning not from the
perspective of the economist, financial analyst, data scientist or sociologist,
but of the historian, the kind who sees human events as a series of breaks,
anomalies and initiations.
This is
what the “closed world” of platform and market surveillance can’t provide: a
kind of understanding that is not reducible to empirical data. Artificial or
market “intelligence” has the capacity to learn at ultra-high speed from
existing data, but its range of possible outcomes, while extremely large, is
nevertheless enumerable and therefore finite. In the gamified space of such
“closed worlds”, history is finished, and all that remains is lots and lots of
behaviours. Every conceivable event, utterance or idea is already out there,
whether in the real-time computer of the market or the archival one of the data
bank, waiting to be discovered.
Trump and
his administration are undoubtedly stupid. They don’t know what they are doing,
don’t understand the precedents or facts involved and lack any curiosity about
consequences, human and non-human. The tariffs fiasco has been the greatest
fillip to the legitimacy of the economics profession in living memory, showing
by a series of brute experimental results that international trade does, on
balance, enhance prosperity and efficiency. It turns out that the foundational
concepts of macroeconomics do have some empirical grip upon the world after
all, and that to ignore them is an act of stupidity. Tragically, a similar
process is under way in public health.
But if
our only alternative to stupidity is to reinstall the “preliminary
understanding” of expert orthodoxy (welcome as that might be in some areas),
then there will be no reflection on the wider historical conditions of
stupidity, nor on the extent of stupid policy and process not only tolerated
but valued by contemporary capitalism. The outsourcing of judgment to financial
markets, digital platforms and fusions of the two is also an invitation for
people to behave stupidly, albeit within systems that are governed by some
esoteric form of mathematical reason. It would be absurd to seek hope in Trump
and Trumpism, but perhaps stupidity on such a world-historical level can at
least offer an opportunity for “true” understanding. Nothing – markets, bots or
machines – can rescue us, except our imagination.
A longer
version of this essay appeared in n+1 magazine
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