Our class was recorded on the eve of election night and was mentioned multiple times in our class discussion. It was chilling to go back in time - just a few days - to when our world seemed to have a much different future. We alluded to Clinton's win as a guarantee and the idea of an upset by Trump as a joke. Many of us based this joke on his complete inability to understand or react to the intricacies of international (or domestic) issues with a grain of logic, rationality, or ability to support our country. In addition, we discussed key differences between authority and autonomy, how conflict is generated through actors' articulation of situations and the multiple economic patterns or systems in our world.
This week's lesson gave me the ability to conceptualize my greatest fear - not embarrassment as that had been easy to conceptualize, but fear - of Donald Trump as President: he is ambiguous.
As a good student of SISG 760, I'll first define the term that I'm discussing. According to dictionary.com, ambiguous is being:
- open to or having several possible meanings or interpretations; equivocal: an ambiguous answer.
- exhibiting constructional homonym; having two or more structural descriptions.
- of doubtful or uncertain nature; difficult to comprehend, distinguish, or classify.
- lacking clearness or definiteness; obscure; indistinct
Professor Jackson focused his lecture this week on the importance of understanding that real issues are not economic, they are conceptual issues on authority, autonomy, and ultimately who has the right to do things. Donald Trump now has the right to do things, and that is going to cause many more conflicts than his inevitable clashing of ideas and interests with US citizens, world leaders and international actors. Trump is going to hop around the various modes of interaction we've been studying without any regard for the consequences that such rash and ambiguous behavior have upon his own authority and right to pursue his aspirations.
If I was a citizen, world leader or international actor, why would I maintain an ounce of trust or respect for someone who believes he is accountable to nobody, not even his own thoughts?
Katherine,
ReplyDeleteI am reading your blog after reading Lorien's. It is a little eerie we were on this topic given the results of the election.
Your point about ambiguity is a critical one. Trump has been and will continue to be the shock we do not see coming in so many realms from one day to the next. But, as Lorien points out, he is ours now, regardless our thoughts on it. I think - as I suppose we all may - it is on all of us to keep dialogue and action alive and vibrant on the things we feel matter.
As the election pertains to class, I had mentioned in my comment to Lorien, there was a good Newsweek article that came out at the end of September - scary, but telling in regard to how difficult foreign policy will be given how politically messy our president-elect's financial dealings are overseas. The lines are incredibly blurred - ambiguous - in the realm of public authority. And, as you state, in trust. It is not only our citizens, but a spectrum of global actors who will be scratching their heads in trying to navigate agreements with a mercurial and globally ignorant leader of the (presently) free world.
Hi Kirstin,
DeleteThank you for your comment. I'm a little confused though - are you on the right blog? You've never been a part of our group before and Lorien isn't either.
Either way, yes, I assume Lorien is repeating the perspective President Obama shared with the nation the morning after the election. It was sobering and possibly the only remedy for the nation's depression. I hope Trump either proves us all wrong or generations are able to learn from our mistakes.
Your last sentence hits the nail on its head, "cratching their heads in trying to navigate."
Oh, brilliant - I forgot we had the other links.
DeleteHi Katherine,
ReplyDeleteI did not mean to confuse you. I am commenting to my own group as well. The Group Blog instruction to the question about whether we are limited to our own blog group encourages us to "expand the conversation beyond our own blogging group by commenting on posts in other locations..." and I am trying to when I can. Your blog and Lorien's called to me this week as I am have similar thoughts.
Oh, brilliant - I forgot we had the other links.
DeleteHi Katherine,
ReplyDeleteYou ask a good question, why would we maintain an ounce of trust in somebody like Trump? I think it is an understatement when I say that not only I was shocked about the results but the whole world was (and still is). But, unfortunately, it is what it is now and President Obama asked the people to give Trump a chance. We do not have a choice but hope that he will choose good advisors who will make him learn how politics actually works.
I am not sure how people and world leaders will be able to maintain an ounce of trust in him. German chancellor Angela Merkel, for example, is very reluctant to comment on questions like that. I really think the best course of action is to show willingness to work with him and then see what he does.
Christine, you bring up a good point in how much relies on his choice of advisors. I bet it will be difficult for him to find advisors and senior leadership that maintains a style as ambiguous as himself. Actually, I think that if he does find such a person he is likely to fire him because his actions would be so unpredictable to Trump himself - very ironic.
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