Extract from The Guardian
By posting an image of
his gun, the Republican candidate is hoping to appeal to the
irrationality that has enabled Trump’s rise. In fact, it reveals he
is giving up
‘Having your name on your gun and revealing this in a photograph makes
you look like a bullied schoolboy desperately trying to resemble a
bully.’
Photograph: Nicholas Kamm/AFP/Getty
Thursday 18 February 2016 02.23 AEDT
When
a man hoping to be president of the United States can sum up his own
country with a photograph
of a monogrammed gun and the single-word caption “America”,
it may be time for the rest of the world to worry.
Instead
they are laughing. Since the Republican nomination hopeful (although
not very hopeful) Jeb
Bush tweeted a picture of his handgun he
has been mocked around the world with images that comically
replace that violent symbol with the gentler images that sum up less
trigger-happy places – a cup of tea for the UK, a bike for the
Netherlands, a curry for Bradford.
The
joke’s a bit thin, because what is currently happening in US
politics is only funny if you are an alien watching from a spaceship
and the fate of the entire planet is just one big laugh to you. For
what is Bush trying to achieve with this picture? He’s trying to
appeal to the rage and irrationality that have made Donald
Trump’s bombastical assault on the White House look
increasingly plausible while Bush languishes, a conventional
politician swamped by unconventional times.
The
centre cannot hold, WB
Yeats wrote nearly a century ago, and this photograph shows
exactly how off centre things are getting. When Jeb Bush – brother
of one warmongering president, son of another, and a governor who
sanctioned 21
executions during his tenure in Florida – embodies the
centre ground, you know things have got strange. Compared with the
strongman politics, explicit bigotry and perversion that a Trump
presidency threatens, mere conservatism would be sweet sanity.
But
this photograph reveals that that is not on offer. America, says
Bush’s Twitter account, is a gun with your name on it. The
candidate has his name inscribed on his weapon – Gov Jeb
Bush, it says on the barrel. This man is a gun. He’s primed and
loaded. You think Trump talks tough? Well, talk is cheap. “Speak
softly, and carry a big stick,” said Theodore Roosevelt. Bush has
got this gun, see, and he knows how to use it.
Violence
has directly entered the bloodstream of US politics, this picture
tells us. The comments immediately appended to it confirmed this,
with sick jokers speculating it was some kind of suicide note. Sarah
Palin and Donald Trump don’t need to wave guns about to
show they mean business. Everyone can see that they are scary.
When
the scary ones – the really, really scary ones – start getting
their claws into democracy, what do you do? Bush, clearly one of
the “losers”
Trump is always telling us about, has responded with this
pathetic attempt to play the macho man too. Of course, it looks puny.
Having your name on your gun and revealing this in a photograph makes
you look like a bullied schoolboy desperately trying to resemble a
bully.
It
is also a horrible image of America for a politician to put out.
America is the
land of the gun, Bush proudly tells us. This may be the message
read by the pro-gun voters he is presumably trying to impress, but to
everyone else in the world it’s a portrait of the American
nightmare. How did the world’s most confident nation come to see
the globe – and itself – as so terrifying? America is so
frightening to itself that people need guns to protect themselves
from their neighbours. As for outsiders, you’d better keep your
weapon to hand at all times. America, a fortress full of
trigger-happy civil warriors.
And
how it has haunted modern times. The guns, the deaths, the wars.
Growing up, seeing it from the other side of the Atlantic, the US was
a spectacle of extremes. Assassinated presidents and napalmed foreign
villages. Ronald Reagan sabre-rattling. It seemed a bit sick, then I
finally went there and loved the place. The US has given the world so
much, from Jimi
Hendrix to Jackson
Pollock, not to mention those moon
landings. Now it seems the sickness was always serious, the gun
in the mind was being loaded and primed.
Can
the world’s first truly democratic nation, and in so many ways the
greatest, become something truly as ugly as its enemies accuse it of
being? This picture reveals that mainstream American politicians are
giving up. They have no weapons to fight a politics so irrational it
is a threat to civilisation. So let’s all laugh at this photograph.
While we can.
No comments:
Post a Comment