The Angry Kulak
Why shouldn’t white hinterlanders be enraged?
The central paradox of power in modern America is that those who have it are obsessed with pretending that they don’t. Today’s elite is captivated by a kind of Sheryl Sandberg-style radical chic — the revolutionary ethic of the post-1960s order, repurposed via watery corporate Human Resources liberalism. Left-wing experts, academics, and intellectuals have a habit of delivering the most breathtakingly conventional opinions with an air of performative bravery, layered beneath a host of familiar clichés: Have uncomfortable conversations. Speak truth to power. We are the resistance. Nasty women vote!
This particular genre of feigned bravado was evident in the publication of White Rural Rage: The Threat to American Democracy. The new book from political scientist Tom Schaller and journalist Paul Waldman, which hit the shelves in February, opts to deliver yet another beating to one of the deadest horses in modern American politics: The caricature of the racist, resentful, ignorant rural white Trump voter. “An Honest Assessment of Rural White Resentment is Long Overdue,” declared a New Republic headline from the two authors. “Tom Schaller and Paul Waldman have the guts to ask a crucial question: Why do so many rural white Americans fall for the authoritarian demagoguery now being peddled by the GOP?” Mother Jones’s David Corn enthused. The guts! The soldiers rushing into machine gunfire on D-Day had nothing on Schaller and Waldman.
In reality, White Rural Rage is an almost comically unoriginal recitation of self-flattering elite shibboleths: Rural whites are bigoted, xenophobic, and backward — and stupid, too. What’s more, they’re prone to any number of dangerous conspiracy theories, and harbor anti-democratic, illiberal political views that pose a threat to the survival of American democracy. This is a particularly potent danger, argue Schaller and Waldman, because white rural voters exercise a disproportionate power over the U.S. political system, given their geographic concentration within the Senate and Electoral College maps. “No group was ever dealt a better electoral hand than rural White Americans,” they write. Thus, “the inflated power of rural White voters confers upon them an unusual ability to force state and national governments to cater to their preferences and grievances.”
The practical political function of this argument is clear: From the very first pages of the book, the authors set out to prove that rural whites “are not disempowered,” as they put it. “In fact, in critical ways, they have more power than any other large demographic group in America.” That “disproportionate power wielded by rural Whites…is often justified on the right by the insistence that these are the worthiest Americans, the ones most possessed of virtue and ‘values,’ and that, therefore, it is only proper that their votes count for more.” (An argument for our electoral system that no one, other than the authors of White Rural Rage, has ever actually made).
Schaller and Waldman go on to argue that the ostensibly dangerous power of rural whites in American elections came to a head in the 2016 election of Donald Trump — and could manifest once again in Trump’s re-election in 2024. They write:
The fact that their votes do count for more is why Donald Trump became president in the first place, and if he should regain the White House, it will be rural Whites who return him there. Yet even as the threat to American democracy Trump represents has become the subject of enormous concern and debate, few have connected that threat to its essential source: rural White America.
Of course, that isn’t true. Disdain, resentment and contempt for rural white America is so commonplace on the left that it has become something of a cliché. But Schaller and Waldman’s gripe is not just with the looming possibility of their partisan team losing the White House. That is only a symptom of a deeper pathology, a lurking evil, in the heart of the white hinterlands: “Name a force or impulse that threatens the stability of the American political system — distrust in the fairness of elections, conspiracy theorizing, the embrace of authoritarianism — and it is almost always more prevalent among rural Whites than among those living elsewhere.”
Schaller and Waldman make obligatory noises about their concern for the plight of rural whites, and empathy for their degraded condition — but only in the most patronizing manner imaginable. They wax poetic about the tragedy of “rural White conservatives voting against their material interests,” opting for the familiar What’s the Matter With Kansas? redux. (There is a “cottage industry of ‘we-have-to-empathize-with-Trump-voters’ explainers,” as I wrote last year, that “are less an effort to understand Trump voters on their own terms than an attempt to absolve them of moral responsibility for the ongoing populist rebellion that Trump embodies”). The book cycles through all the well-worn examples: Rural whites voting against Obamacare, various government programs and subsidies, tax-the-rich schemes, and so on. The implication is always the same: Things would be better for you if you just let us run the country our way.
Whose Rage?
White Rural Rage is riddled with caricatures and straw men, and premises its core claims on cherry-picked, misapplied, or outright wrong data. Qualified writers — including a number of the scholars whose work was cited in the book — have already made a point of debunking or refuting these errors at length. Two of the political scientists whose research was abused by the book penned an op-ed accusing Schaller and Waldman of “repeatedly commit[ting] academic malpractice.” In The Atlantic, Tyler Austin Harper published an essay based on interviews with “more than 20 scholars in the tight-knit rural-studies community, most of them cited in White Rural Rage or thanked in the acknowledgments,” finding that “not a single person” in that cohort said the authors “sought out their expertise in a serious way, circulated drafts of the book, or simply ran its controversial argument by them in detail.” The scholars, Harper wrote, “left me convinced that the book is poorly researched and intellectually dishonest.”
But even outside of the book’s serial misuse of existing research, its core thesis is, ironically, parochial in the extreme. The implication that “rage” is a political problem that primarily belongs to rural whites requires a willful ignorance of the past decade of American politics. Rage has been the ethos of progressive politics since the 1960s. (The famous left-wing punk-rock band “Rage Against the Machine” wasn’t exactly being subtle with their name choice). But it has taken on an almost hysterical tenor on the left in the Trump era.
The past eight years have given birth to a long line of essays and think-pieces touting the power and virtue of “women’s rage”; Rebecca Traister’s 2018 Good and Mad: The Revolutionary Power of Women’s Anger was a New York Times bestseller. One of the Left’s unofficial bumper-sticker slogans during the Trump presidency was: If you’re not outraged, you’re not paying attention. James Baldwin’s remark that “to be a Negro in this country and to be relatively conscious is to be in a state of rage almost, almost all of the time” continues to circulate approvingly through mainstream progressive outlets. “I’m Finally an Angry Black Man,” read the headline of one 2020 New York Times op-ed. “I suppressed my rage about racism for decades. No more.” Righteous anger is a kind of political currency in left-wing circles. Just last month, an AP-NORC poll found that Democrats were substantially more likely to report feeling scared or angry about Trump than Republicans were for Biden.
The same is true of the “distrust in the fairness of elections” and “conspiracy theorizing” allegations that Schaller and Waldman lay at the feet of rural whites. “The excess coronavirus deaths in rural counties should be classified as suicides by scientific skepticism,” the authors write, reasoning that “conspiracy-addled rural Americans” had “reject[ed] proven vaccines.” In general, “Rural Whites exhibit the highest support for election denialism, antiscience Covid-19 and vaccine resistance, Obama birtherism conspiracies, and unhinged QAnon claims.”
Most conservative readers will likely be familiar with the recent history of elite progressive “election denialism”: Hillary Clinton’s insistence that Trump was an “illegitimate president” who “stole” the election from her; Jimmy Carter’s remark that Trump was “put into office because the Russians interfered” and “didn’t actually win the election”; Karine Jean-Pierre’s description of 2016 as a “stolen election.” (And that’s not even to mention Stacey Abrams and her sycophants). These views are not confined to party elites. A 2018 Gallup poll found that 78 percent of Democratic voters believed that Russian meddling “changed the outcome of the election” to deliver Trump the victory; as late as 2022, a Rasmussen poll found that 72 percent of Democrats still thought as much.
As for anti-democratic authoritarianism and challenging election outcomes: As Derek T. Muller noted in the New York Times, “starting with George W. Bush’s victory in the 2000 presidential election, Democrats contested election results after every Republican win” — not just with strong words, but with material (albeit quixotic) efforts to overturn the result. In the wake of the 2016 election, Democratic electors “signed onto an attempt to block Donald Trump from winning an Electoral College majority, an effort designed not only to deny Trump the presidency but also to undermine the legitimacy of the institution,” as Politico reported at the time. During the joint session to certify the election on January 6 of 2017, a cadre of House Democrats led an effort to object to the certification of electoral votes from a number of different states.
It would be overly charitable to merely describe all this as a “glaring omission” on the part of Schaller and Waldman. That would imply that their book was a flawed attempt at actual scholarship, rather than simple self-serving partisanship, laundered through the veneer of a legitimate intellectual expedition. Most of us on the right are well-acquainted with the ludicrous hypocrisy of the rote progressive talking points repeated in White Rural Rage — a monomaniacal concern with the conspiracism and anger in rural Pennsylvania, paired with a studied ignorance of the conspiracism and anger in the Harvard faculty lounge. But the book’s most fundamental crime is not hypocrisy. It is that it is substantively wrong to describe “white rural rage” as a problem at all.
A Dream Deferred
Schaller and Waldman are correct on at least one count: The white lumpenproletariat is angry. In fact, the most remarkable thing is that they aren’t more enraged. Our ancestors fought a revolution over taxes. The fees on tea and stamps levied by the colonial-era British Parliament pale in comparison to the indignities that white Middle Americans are regularly made to endure today.
Rural and exurban whites are the alienated Americans. In economic, cultural, geographic and demographic terms, they occupy positions with the least proximity to the centers of power. They are not always poor, per se, but if they are economically well-off, their resources come from the blue-collar trades, or from owning and operating local or regional firms, rather than Wall Street or Silicon Valley or the government dole. Distant from the places where decisions are made, viewed as an afterthought (if not with active contempt), they nonetheless sustain the system that parasitizes them: They raise cows for our beef, farm land for our crops, create cement for our skyscrapers, and send their sons to die in our wars, all while their productivity is metabolized as a tax base for the high-low coalition of managerial elites and their patrons in the welfare-dependent urban underclass.
But rural whites are merely the easiest, and most vulnerable target in a much more all-encompassing, systemic assault on the white American majority. Despite comprising more than half of the population, whites are handicapped in elite university admissions — all the more so if they happen to not be well-connected legacy applicants whose parents grease the wheels with generous donations. They are explicitly discriminated against in government policy, from housing to the disbursement of government funds and loans. They are discriminated against in hiring, particularly (though by no means exclusively) in the most powerful Fortune 500 businesses, and excluded from countless special programs, set-asides and investments in the corporate sector. They are pushed to the back of the line for life-saving medical treatments, displaced by mass immigration, and subjected to explicit and targeted racial hatred in their schools, their workplaces, their media and mass culture, and even their places of worship — up to and including calls for their race’s genocide. If they lodge a complaint, they are the ones who are tarred and feathered as racists. (Jeremy Carl’s new book on this topic, The Unprotected Class, is a must-read).
White Americans aren’t ignorant to all this; a majority believe their race is discriminated against in this country. But unlike every other demographic, they are severely discouraged from organizing and defending themselves along the lines of their shared identity, even as they are under sustained attack on the basis of that identity. There is no NAACP for whites, as there is for blacks; no Human Rights Council, as there is for gays; no UnidosUS, as there is for Latinos. Their political leaders are loath to even describe the problem: Despite the fact that white voters comprise the vast majority of their political base, conservative elites tend to respond to the ongoing attacks against them by resorting to abstraction — hand-waving about “violating the principle of colorblind equality” rather than calling out the specific character and target of the hostility. (And that’s when they’re not eagerly participating in the hostility themselves).
It is impossible to imagine the left responding to, say, the killing of George Floyd in this fashion — going to great lengths to avoid even having to mention “anti-black racism,” opting instead for navel-gazing sermons about judging individuals by the content of their character. (The Pulitzer Prize-winning 1619 Project went so far as to “reframe the country’s history by placing…black Americans at the very center of our national narrative”). But conservatives will construct sophisticated ideological theories and perform Olympic-level mental gymnastics routines to evade the obvious. At times, this verges on absurd: In a recent interview with Steve Bannon, for example, Newsweek editor Batya Ungar-Sargon angrily lambasted White Rural Rage as an attack on the “multi-racial working class” — a notion disabused by the very first word of the book’s title — before launching into a monologue about how Trump’s base was “multi-racial” and “the majority of Hispanics” were “also part of the MAGA movement.” (Spoiler alert: They are not). Her outrage was not that the left was anti-white; her outrage was that the left was accusing her side of being white.
Abandoned by their political leaders, attacked by their institutions, displaced in their own communities, disenfranchised and ghettoized by the country their ancestors built, America’s white kulaks have a more legitimate claim to rage than just about any other demographic in the country. The truth, however, is that they are still less angry than Schaller and Waldman’s fear-mongering suggests. Many of them are too busy dying — from opiates, or suicide, or various other deaths of despair; from obesity and abysmally unhealthy lifestyles; or simply from failing to marry and reproduce. Their small towns and rural communities are disappearing, and with them, their way of life is, too. Their hopes, dreams, resentments and fears, their memories, their family stories and traditions — an entire world, receding into the darkness, dying so many small deaths at the bottom of a pill bottle or a Big Slurp soda cup.
Those who are left are often confined to lives of quiet desperation, awaiting their fate in a country that is no longer their own — strangers in their own homes. However angry rural whites may be, it isn’t angry enough.
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