Books
An
Anatomy of the MAGA Mind
Under
Trump, post-liberal intellectuals have abandoned tradition for radicalism and
scholarship for vulgarity.
By George
Packer
November
24, 2025
https://www.theatlantic.com/books/2025/11/how-trump-corrupted-intellectual-right/685021/
“In the
United States at this time,” the critic Lionel Trilling wrote in 1950,
“liberalism is not only the dominant but even the sole intellectual tradition.”
Conservatives and reactionaries, Trilling added, had no ideas, only
impulses—“irritable mental gestures which seek to resemble ideas.” Whether the
point was true in mid-century America—the reactionary writer Richard M. Weaver
published Ideas Have Consequences, an attack on the modern West, two years
before Trilling’s The Liberal Imagination—today it is obviously false. For the
past decade or more, the intellectual energy in American politics has been on
the right.
In
Furious Minds: The Making of the MAGA New Right, the political theorist Laura
K. Field organizes the ideas that have coalesced around Donald Trump into
several schools of thought. At the Claremont Institute in California, the
disciples of Leo Strauss, the intellectual guru to several generations of
conservatives, combine Platonic philosophy, biblical teachings, and a reverence
for the American founding into a politics of ethical and religious absolutism.
Post-liberal Catholic thinkers, such as Patrick Deneen of Notre Dame and Adrian
Vermeule of Harvard, believe that the liberalism of the Enlightenment has led
to civilizational collapse, and only the restoration of the beloved community
under Christian governance can save the West. National conservatives, including
a number of Republican politicians, base their policy agenda—anti-immigrant,
protectionist, isolationist, socially traditionalist—on an American identity
defined by ethnic and religious heritage rather than democratic values. In
Silicon Valley, techno-monarchists such as Peter Thiel and Curtis Yarvin
denounce democracy itself and dream of a ruling class of entrepreneurs. And in
dark corners of the internet, media celebrities and influencers with handles
such as “Bronze Age Pervert” and “Raw Egg Nationalist” celebrate manliness and
champion outright misogyny and bigotry.
These
tendencies come with various emphases and obsessions, but the differences
matter less than the common project. The MAGA ideologues who provide America’s
new ruling elite with any claim to having a worldview should be understood as
offspring of a shared parentage, not unlike the Lovestoneites, Trotskyites, and
Shachtmanites of 1930s and ’40s communism. More reactionary than conservative,
their political ancestry is in the underground of the American right—Strom
Thurmond, Joseph McCarthy, Patrick Buchanan—rather than the forward-looking
Reaganite libertarians who dominated the Republican Party for four decades.
Their favorite philosophers are not Locke and Mill but Plato, Aquinas, or even
Carl Schmitt, the Nazi theorist of authoritarianism. They believe that justice
and the good life can be found only in traditional sources of faith and
knowledge. They share a revulsion toward liberalism and pluralism, which, they
believe, have corroded the moral and spiritual fiber of America by
accommodating false ideologies and harmful groups. Their modern hero is Viktor
Orbán.
The
American experiment in egalitarian, multiethnic democracy fills these
intellectuals with anxiety, if not loathing. As Field notes, they often express
undisguised hostility toward women, sexual minorities, the “woke Marxists” of
the left, and the cultural elites of the “soulless managerial class.” Vermeule
writes of “the common good,” and R. R. Reno, editor of the Christian journal
First Things, speaks of “a restoration of love,” but the mood and rhetoric of
the MAGA intellectuals are overwhelmingly negative. Without enemies they would
lose vitality and focus. Their utopia is located so high in the heavens or deep
in the past that the entire project always seems on the verge of collapse for
lack of a solid foundation. “The movement is, in many respects, untethered from
the ordinary decency and common sense that characterize America at its
idealistic best,” Field writes—“and from the pluralistic reality of the country
as it exists today.”
The
author’s background perfectly positions her to deliver this lively, devastating
taxonomy and critique of MAGA’s ideologues. She was originally trained in
Straussian scholarship—a reading of classical political thought that criticizes
the modern turn away from the sources of moral authority toward liberalism and,
in Strauss’s view, nihilism. His approach has had a deep influence on leading
conservative American intellectuals of the past half century, including Allan
Bloom and Harry Jaffa, the godfather of the Claremont Institute. Nearly a
decade in these academic circles makes Field a knowledgeable guide to a subject
she takes seriously. She’s also a Canadian woman, a double identity that puts
her at a skeptical distance from the more and more extreme world of the
American right.
Her
exodus, as she tells it, began in 2010, when she was a fifth-year graduate
student, during a lavish banquet at the University of Virginia where she was
seated next to an important member of the host organization’s staff, who
described meeting First Lady Michelle Obama: “Very tall, very impressive. I’d
really like to fuck her.” Field excused herself to go to the restroom. Gazing
in the mirror, she wondered: “What on earth am I doing here?”
She
didn’t flee entirely. In the ensuing years she lingered as a sort of spy,
attending conferences where speakers took turns denouncing liberalism,
secularism, feminism, and modernity itself—until, in 2024, she became persona
non grata. By then something had happened to the sober, pious minds of the new
right. That something was Trump.
Beginning
with his election in 2016, anti-liberal intellectuals made a Faustian bet that
this coarse real-estate developer and reality-TV star would be the vehicle for
realizing the Good, the Beautiful, and the True. “Trump was the strongman
brought to bring liberalism to heel,” Field writes. But in attaching themselves
to MAGA, they did less to influence the new regime than Trump did to corrupt
them. Field shows, for example, how the Claremont Institute became a nest of
conspiracy theorists and election denialists, with one of their own
Straussians—the constitutional scholar John Eastman—providing Trump with a
bogus legal justification for overturning the 2020 presidential election. Or
take Deneen, a serious philosophical mind whose widely influential 2018 book,
Why Liberalism Failed, was a kind of 95 theses nailed to the front door of the
Enlightenment. “Whereas in 2012, in addition to disdain and skepticism, Deneen
showed some sensitivity to the attractions of elite modern urban life,” Field
writes, “ten years later he was naming the American elite ‘one of the worst of
its kind produced in history,’ calling to ‘replace’ them, and advocating for
‘regime change.’”
Subverting
the establishment is a lot more thrilling than defending it. Many of those who
trade in ideas that overturn the status quo are drawn to power and have a
particular weakness for extremism. Whether the likes of Steve Bannon, Michael
Anton, Stephen Miller, and Tucker Carlson are driven by conviction,
opportunism, personal grievance, or some combination of these motives is never
easy to say. What’s clear is that MAGA ideologues—including the prize recruit
to the anti-liberal right, J. D. Vance—have entered a downward spiral of ever
cruder language and thought, usually with notes of bigotry and xenophobia, and
sometimes blatant ugliness, as if to show their bona fides. They’ve abandoned
tradition for radicalism, careful scholarship for vulgar discourse, reason for
the irrational, universal truths for narrow identities, and philosophy for
partisanship.
A few
obscure figures—I wasn’t familiar with the name Julius Krein—recoiled and
withdrew from the magnetic sphere around Trump. Others, such as Rod Dreher,
have very recently begun to voice concern over the hateful trajectory of the
American right. But reading Field, you can see something like the current wave
of MAGA anti-Semitism coming from a long way off. Moral and intellectual
descent is inherent in a political project that sets out to undermine liberal
democracy, reject the inclusive egalitarianism of modern America, find enemies
to demonize, and heroize a leader who defiles common decency. Such a movement
might begin with Plato, but it will inevitably lead to Nick Fuentes.
The MAGA
right has filled a vacuum created by popular disenchantment with globalization,
neoliberal economics, mass immigration, political corruption, technological
power, and democracy itself. A question that Field touches on but never
analyzes in depth is why liberal minds haven’t produced an equally potent
answer. The French cliché that the left thinks while the right governs has been
nearly reversed in 21st-century America. Making the same mistake as Trilling,
defenders of liberal democracy can hardly fathom any other framework for
organizing modern life. “Liberals (and establishment types, too) have
difficulty conceiving of perspectives and world views that differ so
significantly from their own and seem so outlandish and extreme,” Field writes.
In the
humanities, where the most profound questions about politics and life should be
asked, many academics are so stuck in a calcified ideology of identity, with
its ready-made answers, that they’ve ceased exploring fundamental moral
arguments and stopped teaching the books where they can be found. In religion,
progressives have a hard time admitting matters of faith as legitimate concerns
in civic life. In politics, they debate policy ideas such as “the abundance
agenda” and constitutional reform without confronting the deeper malaise of the
modern West. To most of its adherents, liberalism means free speech, due
process, rule of law, separation of powers, and evidence-based inquiry. It
doesn’t join the quest for meaning and dignity that haunts our civilization.
Liberals
are in the necessary but untenable position of having to defend democracy from
right-wing assault in an age of broad discontent. They need their own theorists
and influencers, their own institutes and manifestos, to undertake the historic
task of not only reversing America’s self-destruction, but showing the next
generation why liberal democracy offers the best chance for a good life.

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