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Timothy Snyder |
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•8th January, 2021
Hello, and welcome to ways to change the
world.
I'm Krishnan Guru-Murthy and this is the
podcast in which we talk to extraordinary people about the big ideas in their
lives and the events that have helped shape them. Now, this week's episode was
recorded a couple of weeks ago, before the storming of the capitol building by
those pro-Trump protesters. But my guest had foretold what would happen in all
sorts of really interesting ways. Timothy Snyder is a professor of history at Yale
University but he's also a permanent fellow at the Institute for Human Sciences
in Vienna, which is where we usually speak to him from. And after the events in
Washington DC, I actually invited Tim onto the news. And so, I want to begin
this podcast by playing his immediate analysis of what happened during what
some people have called a protest, others have called domestic terrorism:
The people who stormed the Capitol building were fascists. When we use
the word fascist, people immediately are talking about comparisons and
analogies and whatnot. You don't need comparisons or analogies. The far-right
white supremacists who organize this storm into the Capitol building are
themselves fascists without qualification. Point number one. Point number two;
this is being organized on behalf of a big lie which is very characteristic of
fascism. Point number three: it's being organized in order to do away with
democratic elections - also fascist, right. And point number four, and this is
a little more subtle but very important: this has everything to do with the
race from top to bottom. The lie that Trump won the election is based upon the
claim or the equivalence of black voting with fraud. When they say fraud, what
they mean is people of colour voting, right. When Ted Cruz invokes – I know
this is obscure to the British – but when Ted Cruz invokes the 1877 Compromise as a positive model and as a model for what
congress should be doing now: The 1877 Compromise was the creation of apartheid
in the American South, that's what 1877 Compromise is. And of course, the
people who are doing the actual storming are in large measure white racists.
So that's what Tim Snyder said about what had happened immediately afterwards.
Let's go back now to the full podcast interview.
I've spoken to you a couple of times over the last year or two about
the threat from Trump. And now Trump has gone. Has the threat gone?
I don't think Trump has really gone. I mean he will leave office, but
he's done things to people, to use one of his phrases, and the very last thing
that he's done to Americans is persuade tens of millions of them that in fact
he won an election which he lost. And this is important, because in actual fact
the 2020 election was probably the best that Americans have run in decades. But
he's introduced this fiction of how he's a victim. And that fiction of victimhood
is really important, because it helps people to believe that even though maybe
their life is going all right, even though maybe they're white male Americans, nevertheless
somehow everything has turned out against them. And the next move is to think
okay, who made things turn out against us, there must be some kind of a
conspiracy. So, Trump is still with us and he's still going to be with us. He's
going to be a problem for the country and a problem for the Republican Party, I
think, for as long as he's not in Russia or in prison.
How much do you think Trump has changed the world?
I mean, to use a technical term, that's a counterfactual question. You
have to imagine what it would have been like if Hillary Clinton had been
president. And I think if Hillary Clinton had been president, things would have
been very different. I think the welfare state in the United States would be
doing much, much better, Americans would have much less reason to be angry. America
wouldn't have been the best country responding to Covid, but we also wouldn't have been the worst. So, there would have been a lot less anger
and suffering and emotions swilling around the American system than there is
now, and that has consequences for the world.
But the direct consequences to the world… I mean Hillary Clinton would
have been a traditional institutional politician who would have tried to support
the European Union. That would have had consequences. Hillary Clinton would have supported American
alliances, Hillary Clinton would have made American aid depend on all kinds of
things. Hillary Clinton wouldn't have pulled out of the Iran deal. So, if we
follow the counterfactual, I mean very quickly we're in a different world. I
mean, one more thing is that I think Trump has accelerated things which were going
to happen anyway. From an international point of view probably the main one is
the decline of American power. I think he basically took 40 years of American
decline and packed it into four.
And to what extent did he influence all the other authoritarians as you
see them and empower them?
That's a great question. I mean what Trump did was change normality. In
2016 one could still think of this thing we call populism or nationalism or authoritarianism…
one can still see it as on the margin working its way in. But once the
president of the United States is someone who talks about his favourite dictators
and openly says that he prefers this dictator or that dictator to his own legislature
or to his own intelligence services, once you have an American president who makes
these practices mainstream, once you have an American president who clearly
prefers the company of dictators to the company of elected officials, then what
you've done is that you've taken that movement, whatever you want to call it,
populism, nationalism, and you've made it normal. That's had a tremendous
effect. Because I mean as hypocritical as American policy can be, as
hypocritical as Americans can be, there was nevertheless this norm around
democracy and the rule of law. And what Mr Trump has done is he said well, we
were just kidding the whole time, it was all just a lie, it was all just hypocrisy.
There was never anything to it. And that's had major consequences. And I fear
also that his way of leaving office, namely saying votes don't count so don't count
them, that will probably also have consequences.
Well, I mean let's just talk about those for a second. I mean in the
short term those consequences are a huge amount of money being raised by his
political supporters. You know those 70 million people who voted for him,
perhaps donating to a future movement. Where do you think it goes?
Well, I think that I mean the money is really important. I mean you've
hit on something which is essential to American politics. There's just too much
money in the system. It takes too much money to become president. So, I mean let's imagine that
you're in the very particular situation that your whole shtick is that you pretend
to be a billionaire. That’s your shtick, that's it. You know you don't actually
have a billion dollars, but you have you're an entertainer and you can convince
people you've got a billion dollars. You're very good at converting a certain
kind of charisma to money, right. That's what Trump can do. And November and
December of 2020 is that. He raised more money losing the election than he did in
trying to win it. I mean, the story that this is all the sham, it's all the
fraud, I need your help - that gave him his best fundraising month.
His best
fundraising month was after he already lost. And the money that he's raised he can
do basically anything he wants with. What he can do now is he can have an event
at his golf course and pay himself five million dollars to give a speech. He
can just do that over and over again. And the reason why this is so important is
that Trump is in debt. He's not really a billionaire. He has half a billion
dollars of debt; he has no real way of paying this off. So in the short term
what we have is obviously a grift, but in the medium term what we have is a
story, and the story is about how I got stabbed in the back, and I got stabbed
in the back by the black people, I got stabbed in the back by the democrats,
then by the courts, and then by the supreme court - to where it becomes a kind
of all-embracing conspiracy theory. And that's going to last longer. Our eyes are
going to divert away from the money soon, but that story that this supposedly
impermeable, undefeatable heroic leader was brought down by this terrible stab
in the back, that's going to stay with us. That's going to poison politics for
a while.
Well, I mean, we're talking to you in Vienna, and you're obviously a
scholar of Eastern European history and Central European history, so have you
now sort of worked out why 70 million people still support Trump in America,
and what happens to them now? What kind of movement does it become? Is it a
normal democratic movement that just seeks to overthrow, to defeat the Democrats,
or is it something different?
I think that 70 million people vote for Trump… first of all, he's the
candidate of the Republican Party in a two-party system. And it's a two-party system
with, as you know, extreme polarization. Not just around values and policies,
but around facts themselves. So, most of the things which Democrats think would
be a very strong reason not to vote for Mr Trump are either unknown or
disbelieved on the part of the Republican electorate. So, there's a structural
problem here which I would go so far as to say is not really Republicans’ fault,
which is that we don't actually share a factual basis of communication anymore.
And that's a problem which has to do with social media and can only be solved by
breaking up Facebook and can only be solved by building up local media again so
we have some kind of common ground to actually start larger conversations on.
Because what's happened to our politics is that all the conversations
are about things that people don't know anything about. You know, it's all
about stuff that happens in Washington or globally, or it's just stuff which
isn't true, you know, some kind of conspiracy theory. People are no longer
walking on the ground, they're floating in the air. But what happens next… I mean
I think the Republicans have a real problem. Because they're basically two views
inside the party. One view is that we can game the system, we're doing pretty
well. And 2020 actually supports that. I mean, if you put Mr Trump aside, they
did much better than they were expected to do. You know they were supposed to
lose the senate, they kept it. [nope - though it seemed so for a while] They almost took back the House of Representatives,
which nobody was expecting. So actually, their model, which is flood the system
with money, suppress the vote wherever we need to, run on emotional issues, that
model did really well in 2020. They also got more Latino votes and more Black votes
than were expected.
So that's one school of thought. The other school of
thought is tear it all down, right. So, one school of thought says game the
system, the other school of thought says destroy the system. And now Trump has
put himself at the head of the movement which says destroy the system. I think
that's going to be a problem. I think what this is going to show is that if
you're going to carry out a coup d’état, you better win. Because if you don't
win, you're discrediting coup d’état. So, Trump tried to carry out a coup d’état.
I mean in my view there's no question about it. He couldn't get the military to
go along, they said no. He doesn't have the kind of violent paramilitary
support he would need, but he tried.
When you say the military say no said no, what do you what do you mean
by that?
I'm referring to June 1st 2020, when as prompted by the Black Lives Matter
protests Trump tried to say that this is a national emergency which requires
that the United States army invade its own country. And basically, he was
refused. And that's a very important moment, because it is not that the military
is on the side of the Democrats, that's not true either. But it became clear
they were not going to get themselves involved in that sort of thing, let alone
directly in electoral politics. I mean not that there aren't people who want
them to, right, like
Michael Flynn, who was a one-star general and who was for a few days national
security adviser, said we should declare martial law, we should bring in the
troops, we should have a new election with the military in charge. So that
current is out there. But the army itself wasn't going to take part. But my
larger point is here: the Republicans now have a coup faction and they have a
game the system faction, and those two factions are now openly in conflict. And,
so long as Trump is in the picture, they're going to have a problem. Because
he's always going to be leading a coup faction, and the coup faction is going
to have trouble with elections because their message is elections don't work.
And so, if you have to win a coup, are you saying Trump will at the
moment feel that he's lost, that he hasn’t completed his coup, and therefore
would want to come back?
I would say he's probably still at the stage where he's not entirely
sure he has to leave.
So, he's still fighting it?
Yeah, he's still… I mean he's… I believe he's still fighting, believing
he has a chance for victory. But even if he doesn't have a chance for victory,
he's never going to admit that. He's going to walk out the White House, saying
that he won. And he's going to keep saying that he won. That's his story. And I
mean the guy has strengths, right. They're not conventional policy strengths
and he didn't really pass any policy. You know all of his policies are about
making rich people richer, which is not policy, that's just gravity.
He is not a
politician in that sense, but he does have gifts. And one of his gifts is that
he's really stubborn. He knows how to say the same thing over and over and over
again, despite what people tell him to say, despite what the way the world
actually is. So, I would guess he's going to stick with this story all the way
through. What he believes is going to be hard to ascertain. He's going to stick
to that story, and sticking to that story is the problem. It means that if he
comes back to office it's going to be on a story about how the system is
completely broken, right. But along the way, so long as he tells that story,
he's telling Americans that one of the few things that actually does work in
our country very well, which is elections, that that thing doesn't actually
work. But yeah, he's not going to want to leave the White House and he's going
to want to come back, there's no question about that. I mean and the reason he
has to be… I mean he's got basic old-fashioned reasons for being in power. He
owes a lot of money and he's facing criminal investigations. I mean those are
really good reasons to want to be president of the United States, and he's got
them.
So how does he compare to Putin? Because Putin doesn't owe huge amounts
of money, you know, have those same sorts of problems. But there's a lot of
similarities there too.
Yeah. I mean Trump is like a precocious tyrant, like he's out ahead of
the curve, right. He's much more of an authoritarian than the American system is. That's what
Denzer is saying. I mean the American system is flawed; the American system
made him possible, obviously. But he's ahead of the curve, right. He's somebody
who really sees the possibilities of social media and pushed them to the limit. He's somebody who wants America to
be more like an oligarchy than it actually is, which is saying something. Because
we're already pushing the boundaries of oligarchy. Trump is not really an
oligarch, right. Putin really is an oligarch. I mean we don't know how much
money Putin has, but it's in the tens of billions of dollars. I mean Putin has so much money that if you are a random friend of Putin, not
even a first-rate friend but like a third-grade school friend, he might just
give you two billion dollars. That's you know, that's actual money. Trump does
not have that kind of money. Trump can't even dream about that kind of money. So,
I mean the first thing to say is that Trump's relationship to Putin is one of a
client to a patron, right. You don't see Putin falling over Trump, but you do
see Trump falling over Putin. And we've been watching that now for more than
four years.
But the second difference is of course structural. The Russian system is
what Trump was aiming for, semi-consciously. The Russian system is a kind of
normal 21st century authoritarianism where you legitimate yourself by elections, even
though everybody knows you didn't really win, right. Because in the 21st
century nobody really has ideology anymore. You don't have some grand reason to
legitimate yourself, you just have elections. So, you have elections, you just
fake them, or you lie about the results. And so, the interesting thing about Trump
in November - December of 2020 is that that's what he's doing. He's trying to
legitimate himself with an election. He's just claiming that he won it, but he
doesn't have the power to fake it. If he did have the power to fake it, obviously
he would. He's trying very hard. So, it's just that slight inability to do the
thing that Putin can actually do which is what separates the United States from
Russia politically at this point. |
Krishnan Guru-Murthy |
So do you think in the West we have really misunderstood who the real
example is, where the real power is, that we've kind of assumed that Trump
being in the White House has being the catalyst all around the world for the
rise of authoritarians and the rise of populism, whereas that the real power
lies in Moscow?
I would say… I mean I'm going to partially agree with that. I would say
that there are underlying trends. The first of them is rising inequality of
wealth and income, which makes it harder for people to see a future, which
makes it harder for people to believe in normal democratic politics, which requires
that you think two years ahead, four years ahead, whatever it is. Another
underlying trend is global warming, which also closes down the future. It makes it harder for people to see how things are going to be
better. And another underlying trend is social media. Russia was ahead of the curve
on using social media, but social media makes polarization much easier, it
makes appeals to emotions over facts much easier. So, that said, I think Russia
mattered so much because it was ahead of the curve on these things. Russia gets
to extreme economic inequality faster than other people, and so Russian politicians have to decide how you govern with
that. And then they can export some of what they learned.
Russia learns how to use social
media to divide not just its own population, but above all other people, and it
uses that in 2016. So, Russia matters, and it probably contingently matters, because
without the Russian intervention in US politics in 2016, Trump probably would
not have won. And that's a pretty big…. I mean they're nudging something which
was going to be a close race anyway, but that's a pretty big effect, right. Russia
also intervened. I mean it is still surprising me how little in Britain this is
reported on. But Russia also intervened in Brexit digitally in a very, very significant
way. And so, you know if you count those as Russian victories, then of course
Russia looks like this mega power. But what I would say is that Russia is
exploiting some trends that we've been slow to see, and the best way to deal
with Russia is to try to deal with those trends.
I mean part of the problem is that we are told as citizens very little
about precisely what Russia did, because the governments in the US and in
Britain are very vague about precisely what influence Russia tried to wield.
Either in the 2016 election or in the Brexit referendum or in the Scottish
referendum. There are hints, but there's nothing very conclusive that's ever
announced. And so, it becomes a bit of a conspiracy theory. How much evidence
is there around these things in truth?
Well the simplest example in the US in 2016 would be the email dumps. So
just to recall; the Russians were able to get into important email accounts of
important Democratic party institutions and operatives, and then at crucial moments during the
election they would then dump things along with a narrative that they'd worked
out. So, for example there was a moment late in the campaign where it seemed
that Donald Trump was bound to lose because it had just emerged that he had been
caught on tape saying that it was fine to sexually assault women. Which would
seem like a big deal, and even he thought it was a big deal. Mike Pence thought
it was a big deal. However, about half an hour after that there was a big email
dump from the Russians with a cover story which involved Democratic paedophilia
and selling children as pros… prostituting children, which of course seemed
ridiculous to all the people who cared about Trump and sexual assault. But he
was out there within half an hour, and what happened very quickly was that it
quickly became on the one hand on the other hand. Well maybe Trump said this, but
on the other hand did you realize that Hillary Clinton is selling sex with children
in the basement of a pizza parlour? - which again… that might seem absurd but if you just follow
the numbers, 30 plus percent of the American population believed that story at
a certain point. So, if you don't have these email dumps coming in and changing
the dynamics, Trump has a hard time.
And then the other thing they did in the
US was the social media, which is harder to measure the effect of that, but you
know, it was pretty massive. In the UK there are some things which can be quantified,
having to do with Brexit. I haven't investigated this, but other people have. If
you look at a great deal of the social media debate, especially over Twitter in
2016, a lot of it was coming from abroad. So, you have a lot of British people responding
to a lot of Twitter material which they think is coming from a person, but
which is actually coming from a Russian bot. And this happens over and over and
over again. And when more than half of your Twitter conversation on a given
subject is being driven from abroad - you know I can't prove that that affects people's minds, but
if you were asked would you like to have your Twitter conversation driven by Russian
robots, your answer would probably be no.
But how do you know that so much of Twitter was being driven from
abroad?
Because there are scholars who work on that and who have the algorithm
that they're able to test it. And they publish their results in 2016, 2017. I mean
there's a whole… I can't now cite this chapter and verse, but I do in my book ‘The
Road to Unfreedom’. There were British scholars and other scholars who were
following this, and you have the computer programs which allow them to measure
this. And this is all on the record. That part's not mysterious.
So, I mean if to pick up that sort of theme of The Road to Unfreedom… I
mean has the defeat of Donald Trump put us back on the road, as you would have
seen it, to democracy? Or is this a sort of a blip, you think?
I think it's somewhere in between. I mean I'm going to take the easy
out here. Things would have been much worse if Trump had won. However, Biden
and Harris winning basically just buys you time to do other things. Because the reasons why Trump won are
all still there. America still has a terrible welfare state which makes people much
more angry and much more frightened than they should be. 2020 and coronavirus
was one more bit of evidence for that. We still have growing inequalities. People
still have trouble seeing the future, all those underlying problems are still there.
So, what you have are now four years of a chance to try to get at some of those
underlying problems, or else you know you bounce back. I think not Trump in
2424, but a slicked down younger, and in better physical shape, version of Trump
in 2024 can still come. So, I think it matters. But basically, what matters
more is what you do with the time that you've got.
Because… I mean, what you're saying suggests that democracy is just
doomed. Because if you have in developed societies growing inequality or a vast
number of poor people, even if you calculate inequality in a way that suggests
it's not growing, you've got enough people who are feeling disenfranchised, not
part of growth, and all the powers of social media and foreign interference - how
can democracy possibly weather that?
I love that you've outflanked me on the pessimism front. That's good…
good job. Now you've got me, I've got to be optimistic. So okay, first thing I'm
going to say is that 80 million people came out to vote for Biden and that was
an act of…. you know that was a human act. A lot of people worked very hard to
get to that outcome. And so, all this terrible stuff that we're talking about; Trump's
claims of fraud, social media and so on, we have to remember that 80 million people
still took the trouble to vote. In the United States it IS taking the trouble.
For too many people it's not easy. The second thing is that some of the stuff
is reparable.
So, you know, 48 states are now appealing to use antitrust legislation
against Facebook, which is a big deal. Facebook is not a feature of nature. We don't have
to have it the same way that we have to have hurricanes. It can be changed. You know, 100
years ago America was using anti-trust legislation to break things up. There's
no reason why we can't do it now. I think some of this stuff is reparable, and
I definitely don't think democracy is doomed.
Can we sort of pause and talk a little bit about you, and how you got
to this point? You've become this voice of warning around contemporary politics,
when… you know, you're a historian? So, I'm guessing, did you ever imagine that
this is where you would get to, where your work, your academic work would mean you writing books trying to sort of say to people wake up and
look at what's going on around you? Was that the sort of the road you were sort
of heading down when you were starting out as an undergraduate?
Well, any good historian will tell you that it's very hard to explain
the actions of an individual person. Look, I'll give you a couple answers. One answer
is we have made a mistake in doing down history and the humanities these last 30
years or so. You know since the end of communism in 1989 too many people in Britain,
in the US, and the West generally have said; well look, capitalism is going to
bring about democracy, it's all inevitable. So, all we have are technical problems.
And if all we have are technical problems, then all we need is engineering and
science and economists and so on. We've defunded history, we've defunded the
humanities. And when you defund history and the humanities, it actually becomes
much harder to talk about the kinds of problems we're talking about now.
Because these are not really technical problems, they're moral problems,
they're aesthetic problems, they're questions of judgment. And to have the concepts and the tools and the
references for all these things you need the humanities. And I'm laying that
out because it's part of an answer to your question; I think history always has
something to say about the present. It's not that history repeats or even that
it rhymes. But it's that history gives you that flow from the past into the
present which maybe helps you to see possible futures. History gives you a
sense of what structures there are that are limiting us, but also gives you a
sense of how you might be able to get around those structures and find ways
into new structures. Also, history… I mean unlike other ways of looking at the world
emphasizes that there's a certain amount of irreducible human agency, of human
choice and things.
And so therefore no matter what's going on,
there probably is something you can do that might make a difference, even if you
feel overwhelmed at that particular point. So, no I didn't see myself being in
this kind of a role, but I just want to say that I think it's normal that
history can teach us about life, and that… I mean I don't think I'm that
important, but I think that if there's a general lesson to be learned here, it
would be something like we need more of the humanities and we need more of
history if we're going to not be surprised all the time by things. Because what
happens is like anytime anything slightly new happens, like you know 911 is a
good example, we all say well how could we have known, right, nothing like this
has ever happened before. Whereas any historian will say well, nothing exactly
like this has happened before, but it's a little bit like a b c and d. And if
we look at a b c and d we might get some patterns and start to be able to think
about it instead of just being surprised. Because when you're surprised you
then get deceived by whoever has the best spectacle and who comes up with the
lie the quickest. History helps with all of that.
Have we also
just been blinded by the scale of killing in the middle of the 20th century to
the extent that we don't think that anything in our modern world can compare?
That's a
wonderful question. I mean one move that people make very often is to say… as
soon as you talk about the past at all, they say well you're making a
comparison. And that's bad news. Or you're making an analogy, and that's bad
news. It's not exactly like that, so therefore, we
don't do think about it. So, six million Jews that haven’t been
murdered [this time], so there's no reason to think about what's going on right now. It's
wrong to say. But before those six million Jews were murdered – I'm just taking
the example that's familiar to me – you had these changes in rhetoric, and then
you had these changes in institutions, and
then you had this new kind of institution. You know, if the comparisons the analogies that
are made are put out of balance by the scale of the middle of the 20th century,
then the sort of ironic consequence is that you can't use history at all. You
know you can't draw attention to those horrors and say; well look, those
horrors they weren't a matter of super villains having superpowers. Those
horrors arose step by step by step, and we know what some of those steps are. And
so, we should pay attention when we see things that look a little bit like those
steps.
But then there's another thing to say about this really important
question: In the 1930s and 1940s, the way that states controlled people was
actually much more direct than it has to be now. And so, you can get at tyranny
now in a way which is visually much less shocking, let's put it that way, than
in the 1930s and 1940s. Things did end in
the 1930s and 1940s with millions of deaths. But one can imagine a country like
China for example, that is a very effective modern tyranny, which doesn't have
to kill millions of people. I mean it sure would, but it doesn't have to, because
the methods of control are much more subtle. And so, we need the comparisons,
not because things are exactly the same, but we need the comparisons because
without the comparisons we're just going to be surprised by everything and not
have any points of reference.
I mean that
also makes it quite difficult to explain to people what it is they have to
fear. If you don't have to fear a holocaust or millions of people being purged,
you have to explain what it is people have to fear, which is much more
sophisticated.
I think that's
an excellent point. I think if we are at the point where people are only afraid of
millions of people dying, then we probably lost the argument. Because the case
for democracy and for the rule of law has to be something better than this is
the way you prevent millions of people from dying. The case for democracy and
for the rule of law has to be more positive. It has to be something like: these
are the forms of life which allow you to live freely, these are the forms of
life which means you're not at your neighbour's throat the entire time. These
are the forms of life which means that you're not fighting pointless wars. These
are the forms of life where you don't have to humiliate yourself in front of
other people. These are the forms of life where you're not born into a caste or
a class which is going to keep you down the entire time. There has to be some kind
of a positive case. If we're only making the negative case, then I think we're
probably going to lose.
I mean, that
takes us to your latest book, which is about healthcare and your own experience
of having been ill and negotiating healthcare systems. You see… you know that's a classic case of
something particularly in Britain where the National Health Service is totemic,
where you ask people what are the most important things about Britain, what
makes Britain special – and they'll say healthcare. But healthcare has never
been the issue of an election or the thing that will make people vote a
particular way.
Democracy, you
know like I said before, it's not a state of nature. It's also not just a set
of procedures. It's also a kind of institutional and social backdrop which
makes it possible for those
procedures to make sense. So, my experience, to which you kindly refer, reminded
me of how elemental politics can be. That if you're really afraid, if you're
really terrified, if you're facing
certain kinds of risks all the time, unnecessarily maybe, you're not a great candidate for
being a democratic voter. Let's just put it that way. So, the relationship
between a health service and a democracy might seem obscure, you might say well people could
vote for, people who vote against it. I would say it's more like this: if you want
people to be able to contemplate a future involving their interests, the
interests of their children, the next generation, you have to as part of the
social contract get them into a place where they're not immediately terrified.
Because we're not… you know we're rational beings at the best of times. And so,
part of the job of government is to create those best of times. Or to put it conversely:
you can torpedo a democracy by creating unnecessary fear and pain and
impatience and suffering. That's Mr Trump's model. You can try to do it that way.
So, if you want democracy to keep going you need to have the institutions.
And I think healthcare is probably the single most important, which means that
people aren't immediately facing existential fears. If you are less concerned about pensions, if you're less concerned about education for your children, if you're
less concerned about illness, then you're pulling back the level of existential fear. And
you're making it more likely that people are going to be able to vote on water
quality or on issues that they can actually talk to one another about. So, I think
that there's a very close relationship actually between these institutions that we need to get people into that better place where
the procedures can then carry us into the future.
Can I finally ask you about Boris Johnson, which we haven't really
talked about, and how you see him. Because, obviously, I think in the current context
he'd like to see himself as a sort of a Churchillian figure taking on the modern-day
war of the pandemic. Where do you think he fits in?
Yeah, I mean I haven't lived in Britain these last these last few years,
so I've been observing this from afar. I think the main problem of democracy
after empire, going back to that really high level, is how you find a way to
build an us which is ever bigger rather than ever smaller. And the US and Britain face the same issue; can the US become
a country where yes, the immigrants are real Americans, and yes, the Blacks are
real Americans, and can you keep that story going where spiritually and also electorally you're
including more and more people. Can you do that after empire, or do you pull
back and say we the people who had the privilege, we're going to keep the vote
to ourselves and the money to ourselves and so on.
I mean Britain faces a
similar challenge, right, what do you do after empire. And there was once an
answer. If you look at the debates of the 1960s, the British were well aware
that Europe was what you do after empire. That's what the whole debate was
about. It was we were aware of losing our empire – look, here's a substitute. It
may not be perfect, but if we get in there we can probably throw our weight around a little
bit and make deals that are good for us. And that turned out to be absolutely correct.
I mean de Gaulle kept the British out for a while, but once the British were in, they
had a disproportionate role in the European Union, they punched far above their
weight for a couple of decades there. But, more importantly, it was being more
rather than less. It's a bigger Britain rather than a smaller England. And I think
that's the whole trick: where after empire do you find a way to be bigger
rather than smaller, to have a future rather than just a past.
So, when I look at the whole sweep of Boris Johnson’s career, the thing
that I see is that as a journalist and then as a politician – for whatever reason, I
don't know what he actually believes in – but for whatever reason he's turned
the argument towards something smaller. Not Europe but Britain. I think in the end
not Britain but England is where it's going to all end up.
So, we are on a trajectory of shrinkage. Less influence and less power?
It's interesting, because you can't stay put. That’s the kind of the
magic… part of the magic of a Trump or the magic of Boris Johnson is that you first
conjure up this moment when you were great, and then you imagine that stasis is
somehow powerful – impossible! But stasis is never possible, right, you're
always either rising or falling. And if you're going to rise, you have to rise in
the conditions you're in and not in the conditions of the 1930s or whatever
your moment of greatness is in your own mind. If you decide against going big,
you are deciding in favour of going small, and that's what Trumpism looks like.
So, the US lost a huge amount of influence around the world in every respect very
rapidly, and the democratic project within the US also suffered. You either go bigger
or you go smaller. And with Britain it's not just that. Britain had so much influence inside the European
Union, it had so much influence, and that's now all gone. And as a member of
the European Union it had disproportionate influence around the world in trade
negotiations. That is also now all going to be gone. And then the next question
is what does Britain look like. Because remember; Britain has always been in
modern history either an empire or it's been part of the European project. There's
never been a moment in British history where Britain has been this thing called
the nation state. And I think once it is this thing called the nation state,
it's probably not going to last for very long. I think something else is
probably going to emerge out of it like in England for example.
Well, I mean it's been fascinating Tim. We spent this conversation
talking about how other people have been changing the world and other movements.
What if you could change the world, what would you do?
That's a funny question. My son had a question in school; decide that
you have a superpower, what is it. And his superpower was I can do anything. But
then of course he applied his superpower to get himself less homework. So, you're
asking me what I can do if I could do anything. Let me just try to narrow that
down a little bit. For me, you know, there is no us and them among people. The
politics of us and them is what's bringing us down. That's you know… it is Britain against Europe, or in America the real Americans
against everybody else.
That us and them, it freezes us in time, and it makes
us angry, and it makes it very hard to do policy. There isn't really an us and
them, and you can't be morally coherent and think that there's really us and
them among people. I do think there's a real us and them in the world, though. And
the us and them is people and machines. So, if I could change anything it would
be to create larger awareness of that. That the humanities, the study of humans,
like thinking normatively, aesthetically, politically about humans, is really
important. Because something is closing in on us, and that is the world of the
machines. And I don't mean this in a kind of dark, obvious, like they're
shooting lasers at us and it's Terminator sort of way. What I mean is that more
and more of how we spend our time, more and more of how we think, what we read,
how we communicate, is being driven by logics that are not human. So, if I could
change one thing, it would be that. I would just create an awareness of that,
so that we would have some purchase on how we spend our days. We would read a
little bit more, have more conversations live, not think of other people as
being the other. Because ultimately that's just not only destructive, but I think intellectually and morally untenable. But realize that there is an other
out there, and that other is the way that the world is being digitalized. And
think of that as something that maybe we could all together think collectively
about and change.
Timothy Snyder thank you very much indeed.