Chapter 16

Alex’s explanation didn’t satisfy Paul.
“Good to know – still, Trance has to have some fans among the county’s residents, else he couldn’t get away with all that. Who are his supporters? Maybe a better way to put it is, who should we watch out for?”
Alex filled in several of the missing pieces.
“Oh, sure, Trance and DeRump have their diehard stooges and co-conspirators. But they’re nowhere near fifty percent of the legitimate voters it should take to run the place.
“Trance gets most of his support from four groups. The minimally skilled make up the largest of them. They struggle to make it where the cost of living is higher, so they come or stay here – their last, maybe only, refuge.
“The fearful make up another group. They include otherwise-decent people who fear for themselves or their loved ones if they don’t toe Trance’s line. The members include those who might lack the education, confidence, or life experience to resist peer pressure. That group includes those who are enablers, apologists, or co-dependents by nature.
“The third group consists of individuals I’d label ‘professional victims.’ These are wound collectors and grievance amplifiers seeking ways to claim they’ve suffered horrible injustices. They leverage their perceived, often self-inflicted or imaginary, injuries to demand remedial action, usually involving compensation from their fellow taxpayers. They see Trance as a bullhorn for advertising their inflated afflictions.
“And finally, there are the profiteers, con artists, and Trance clones taking advantage of their fellow residents solely to improve their own lot.”
Alex paused for a moment before warning us what was coming.
“Look, I won’t put any window-dressing on this. I find political correctness dishonest. And if you’re trying to solve serious problems, it’s not helpful playing games pretending things aren’t what they are.”
Paul and I had a pretty good idea by now what to expect from Alex. We glanced at one another before I nodded at our host to continue.
“The groups I’ve laid out matter because they are directly responsible for all that ails places like this.
“Yes, our founders predicated the Constitution upon the idea that everyone is born equal. I won’t dispute that; however, I would say that what each of us makes of ourselves after birth – our individual merit – is anything but equal.
“We are where we are today as a county because a master grifter and his corrupt cronies could amass voices in such numbers as to drown out those of us who’ve contributed more to society. When I say ‘more,’ I don’t mean just financially. I also include the arts, sciences, charity, education, and achievements that may not have high monetary rewards.
“Our situation is such that anyone able to apply AI and other technologies, foreign help, and criminality can get the least educated, aware, motivated, or honest of us to outnumber voters of merit. That empowers the undeserving to do things that will ultimately destroy us. They’ve pulled it off in two of the last three elections.
“This has to stop if we are to remain a decent place to live.”
It seemed we were going off on a tangent that wouldn’t be helpful.
“It sounds like you’re saying we need to screen voters somehow to stop people like Trance. Nice idea in theory, but I can’t see it happening, certainly not in time to bring the Judge to heel….”
Alex persisted.
“We already recognize and enforce the idea, albeit only in the most rudimentary way, that merit should play a role in voting. The vast majority of our states bar convicted felons from voting for various periods, and the Supreme Court has permitted those restrictions. Had we applied even that primitive implementation to candidates as well, we’d have solved the immediate problem: no one with thirty-four felony convictions could hold office.
“But so long as we allow criminals to stuff ballot boxes using voter stupidity and gullibility, the concept of merit-based voting will never gain traction. Those abusers have already learned how to control and game the current system and will use it to prevent any changes. And unfortunately, the right to speak freely trumps consideration of the speaker’s merit.
“That means, for now, we’re stuck with the system as it is. For it to produce positive results, we need to understand exactly what we’re working with, which, in my mind, are the groups I’ve described as holding us back.”
I wasn’t sure I wanted to go down this path, but I relented.
“You’ve labeled the largest of these groups the ‘minimally skilled’….”
“That group includes the untalented, the unmotivated, the poorly educated, the incompetent, the misfits, and the unfit. Consider that, in a properly distributed bell curve for a class in school composed of all the adults in the county, one-half the class would be low-C, D, and F students. Roughly the same number who voted a 34-time felon, finger rapist, and known grifter in as Judge – not an insignificant group, nor a trivial problem.
“Because of a phenomenon known as the Dunning-Kruger effect – basically, that someone lacks the awareness to know how unaware they truly are – more than half the members of this group won’t acknowledge belonging to it, even to themselves.”
I pushed back.
“Their numbers shouldn’t be as large as you’re implying. Residents in Narcissus County would be no less capable by percentage than any other population.”
“There’s an old joke, been around for years, that relies on at least one difference. Here we have a special label we apply to underage girls who are slow of foot and have at least one brother or male cousin – ‘pregnant.’
“Inbreeding is a serious issue in small towns with tiny gene pools and few mating choices, though no one wants to talk about it. However, the minimally skilled also include those who are indeed capable of more but are just starting out their adult lives, have medical problems, are dealing with various addictions, or have criminal histories. Or, more problematically, believe they can’t reach higher, often because of their own insecurities. This group supports Trance because they are angry at being shut out of the good things in life, and they see Trance as a sympathizer and conduit for their anger – a fellow D student, just like them.
“They’re frustrated because society used to have roles for them, though they weren’t always things the rest of us would aspire to.
“American oligarchs – the greedy, the powerful, the enfranchised, and the corrupt – used the minimally skilled laborers, the human beings they privately call ‘losers’, to serve as cannon fodder for their military; entertain them as athletes until retired by injury or age; build their roads; vacuum their septic tanks; police their streets, clean their homes; cut their grass and weed their gardens; cook and serve their meals; manufacture their goods; pour their concrete; dig their ditches; advertise and distribute their wares; drive their trucks, busses, and taxis; pilot their planes, boats and ships; raise their crops; mine their coal; drill their oil; erect their buildings; and extract, refine, or create their raw materials, among thousands of other tasks too beneath the rich to do themselves.
“The minimally skilled have had no choice but to take on the nastiest, most unfulfilling, and least rewarding jobs our society offered. Now, many of those roles are no longer permanent or long-lasting. Some are going away; others are largely gone. For example, we no longer have a military draft; our factories are fewer and further between.
“Yes, immigrants took some of those jobs, though primarily because our citizens wouldn’t work them. But far bigger threats have emerged to the working poor, and these we can’t deport. AI, robotics, 3D printing, and dedicated-purpose computers housed in appliances are rapidly taking over the fighting of our wars, the piloting of our land, sea, and air vehicles, the making of our products, and the construction of our buildings and streets. It’s sneaking into skilled occupations, too, even advertising and video generation – and yes, professional writing of all kinds.
“As a result, those being pushed out of a job, unable to earn a living and feed their families, wind up living on the streets and filling our prisons, jails, and mental health and addiction facilities. We have nothing else for these people to be.
“We put them on welfare or social security disability, take their few possessions in homelessness raids, pretend they don’t exist, and look the other way when they deal drugs or steal things of lesser value.
“When we perceive that we’re out of other options, incarcerating and warehousing them only goes so far. With nothing meaningful to do, they sit around seeking opportunities for revenge and nursing their resentment at not having a voice. It should be no surprise to anyone that the minimally skilled would be angry and disappointed, or that some would strike out in any way they could.”
“Okay, I’ll buy that,” I conceded. “I assume they see themselves in Trance. He’d be one of them were it not for Daddy Dearest running interference, several bankruptcies, and blowing off paying any penalties for his crimes. Who do you see in the second group?”
“In some ways, those who coddle Trance out of fear are worse than those too incompetent to stand up to him. For one thing, cowards and enablers are easy for Trance to attract by manipulating threats he manufactures in, or repurposes from, the world at large. For that matter, he can exploit the fearful and compliant with pure imagination – conspiracy theories – that he can spin up at will. If nothing else, insulting timid followers or overwhelming them with false information seems to work.
“Sadly, the fear here isn’t limited just to Trance or what he might do to them. It’s everywhere and encompasses everything.
“My God, these people aren’t afraid just of what others think; they’re scared to death of what the neighbors might think!
“You go to Sunday sermon, and what do you hear? Fear God, fear Jesus, fear the devil, fear the devil’s trying to trick you into believing he’s God, fear false prophets, fear not having faith, fear not praying enough, fear praying for the wrong things, fear getting what you pray for. And above all, fear missing a fear-reinforcing Sunday at church.”
“Like the minimally skilled, there will always be cowards. I personally can’t stand them, but they’re unavoidable. Still, I find one subgroup of Trance’s chickenshit supporters especially frustrating simply because they shouldn’t exist.
“There is no reason in hell that an intelligent, moral, productive female, especially a mother, should ever support Trance. He’s a pussy-grabbing, finger-raping, abortion-obstructing misogynist and woman-hater, who publicly demeans all women by condemning menstruation.
“Housewives in traditional roles, like so many in this part of the country, have never experienced an opportunity to discover that they can do their own thing, independently of what their husbands, families, or peers might say or believe.
“Not only can they be independent, but they can thrive in their individualism. That’s a threat to Neanderthals like Trance, who do everything they can to keep females around them from learning what they can be and do. They keep those women ignorant, barefoot, and pregnant, assigning them value only when they are horizontal.
“For all of that, women are among Trance’s most ardent supporters. The reasons are a damning indictment of this county’s hypocrisy; they raise serious questions about the mythos of motherhood, for one thing. How does a child benefit from completely ignoring the evil in Trance?”
I wasn’t comfortable with where this line of conversation was going and wanted to move it along.
“If I understand you correctly, those two groups run on the individual members’ emotions, and they cluster together for support and reinforcement. It’s hard to see how logical arguments against Trance would go anywhere; critical thinking has no place in their worldview.”
“That problem differentiates the first two groups. Something else is notable about them: the focus of the fear, anger, and hate you see from the less competent and cowards is outward. They direct it against those they see as responsible for their gripes: Trance’s opponents.
“But professional victims and con artists won’t hesitate to eat their own; that is, they’ll prey on other Trance supporters just as willingly as they do anyone who opposes him. They can and will act independently of other members of their groups.”
Something Alex mentioned earlier needed clarification.
“I’ve got a basic idea, but could you explain your understanding of what a ‘professional victim’ is? To me, ‘wound collector’ refers to a behavioral type who never forgets a slight, storing them up and building them into a rage. When that rage boils over, bad things happen. I’ll assume by ‘grievance amplifier’ you mean someone who does the same thing but overstates either the wrongs or how much they’re offended by them.”
“Correct on both counts,” Alex acknowledged with a slight smile. “One problem here is that victimhood has its own attractions and benefits, something no one talks about out loud. For one thing, there are no work, performance, or productivity requirements for being a victim. You can assign the role to yourself; you don’t need approval from anyone else.
“And taking offense is a choice controlled by the listener, not the speaker. Choosing to take offense is a common means for passive-aggressives to manipulate a speaker and usurp their message.
“Think it’s not a choice? Their other options include walking away, switching off the computer, turning down the volume, or putting aside that paper.”
While I understood the concepts and didn’t need the tutorial, Alex’s dissertation showed me he knew his stuff – and that he liked to hear himself talk.
“There are tangible rewards to victimhood, of course,” Alex continued. “Insurance and welfare benefits, Social Security disability, support services, and charity in several forms. But being a victim also comes with attention, sympathy, empathy – even an identity. They see themselves as members of a select class, sometimes the only constituent, to whom this terrible thing, whatever it may be, has happened; they may even see themselves as celebrities because of it.
“All too often, what they are a victim of happened largely because of their own bad choices and poor judgment. That doesn’t hinder their belief that their victimhood renders them important and special, so much so that they expect the entire world to stop spinning on its axis in order to save them from themselves.
“All those things are part of Trance’s narcissistic persona, too, making for a natural bond with the members of the professional victims’ group.”
“That leaves us with the con artists’ bunch,” I said to sum things up. “You’d think their support would be pretty straightforward; honor among thieves, more or less.”
“Certainly, being like-minded can play a role, though I think it’s a little more complicated than that. That’s the group of mostly mercenary sociopaths for whom supporting Trance is a multi-part calculus. ‘Does he do things that are specifically good for me, and does the harm he causes fall mostly on others? If so, can I ride his coattails or use his behavior as cover to run my game?’
“Some are out in the open, but for most, admitting they are on Trance’s side in front of decent people would ruin their con. Those who support Trance in secret, or at least less obviously, are the most dangerous, partly because there are so many of them. Their numbers are why Trance’s pre-election polling estimates are always so far off.
“The bigger problem is that there’s always a sizeable contingent of Trance acolytes working in the shadows, enabling Trance’s agenda for reasons that aren’t obvious and in ways that aren’t apparent.
“But you have to be careful with all these groups; to them, Trance-ism is porn.”
Okay, fine, I’ll bite.
“That one you’re going to have to explain, Alex.”
“One: Unless you have absolutely no intelligence or class, you know at some level that what you are doing is wrong, that nobody benefits in the long run, and that it causes serious damage.
“Two: You do it anyway because you can’t resist fulfilling your immediate need.
“Three: If it becomes known you’re doing it, you approach the situation aggressively in one of two ways. You either adamantly deny what you’ve done or wholeheartedly defend it, while attacking anyone questioning you.”
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