No Result
View All Result
  • Login
Thursday, July 9, 2026
theadvisertimes.com
  • Home
  • Business
  • Financial Planning
  • Personal Finance
  • Investing
  • Money
  • Economy
  • Markets
  • Stocks
  • Trading
  • Home
  • Business
  • Financial Planning
  • Personal Finance
  • Investing
  • Money
  • Economy
  • Markets
  • Stocks
  • Trading
No Result
View All Result
theadvisertimes.com
No Result
View All Result
Home Economy

How Winning Became the Shared Ethos of the US Oligarchy

by theadvisertimes.com
6 hours ago
in Economy
Reading Time: 5 mins read
A A
0
How Winning Became the Shared Ethos of the US Oligarchy
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on LInkedIn


Two brothers are playing chess. One checks the Queen. The other ponders but does not seem to see the saving move. The father steps in and gives it away. “That’s not fair,” the first brother complains. The other concedes and puts down his King.

What the father had done was not simply give an unfair advantage—he had ruined the game. If they were to continue playing and the player with the checked Queen ended up winning, he could not truly claim victory.

Winning is all that seems to matter to Trump—winning big and claiming victory even when it’s cheated or not even real. He has claimed that the U.S. won a war launched illegally against Iran. He has claimed that the U.S. is winning through tariff revenue and $18 trillion in investment. He has taken credit for “historic” low crime rates, border control, and stopping illegal drug trafficking. All of these are fake victories.

The claim of victory over Iran is a misconstruction of reality. The claims about tariffs and economic investments are smoke and mirrors. The claim of low crime rates cannot be attributed to his policies alone, and illegal immigration and drug trafficking controls are pyrrhic victories at best.

Trump is not an anomaly. He is, perhaps, the most strident representation of an oligarchic ruling class and its ethos, for whom the sole measure of success is to always win. To win no matter the cost, because winning confers legitimacy.

“People inside the process, constituting as they do, a self-created and self-referring class, a new kind of managerial elite, tend to speak of the world not necessarily as it is but as they want people out there to believe it is,” wrote Joan Didion in her seminal essay Insider Baseball for The New York Review of Books in 1988.

By “people out there,” Didion meant the average American. The political discourse is built for them to hear, not to reflect reality. Its purpose is to manage them and convince them that “the process” is working. The only difference between Trump and other U.S. politicians is that he has changed the tune, but not the genre.

Didion spoke about how the elite do not care about the reality of the citizens they govern. Instead, they are obsessed with the “process”—polling data, tactical maneuvers, optics, and the “narrative.” They treat governance like a private game whose rules only they understand.

She describes this ruling class as an exclusive club composed of politicians, campaign strategists, corporate donors, and elite journalists. They argue with each other on television, but they eat at the same restaurants, attend the same weddings, and share the exact same class interests.

Didion notes that this elite class prefers low voter turnout because a disengaged public is easier to manage. By reducing politics to a highly scripted, theatrical performance, they alienate ordinary people, reducing the citizenry to mere “vassals” who have no real say in the trajectory of the empire.

Donald Trump made a cameo in Insider Baseball. He was mentioned as someone who is part of the process—one of the TV personalities who brings it closer to the people. That’s why Trump is obsessed with polling data, the numbers on the stock market, and fighting the media. He is an insider; that’s the world he’s lived in all his life, and the only style of politician he’s ever known.

However, something happened that allowed him—someone whose job in the process was merely being a TV personality—to take on the role of the professional politician. The high offices of the White House, especially the presidency, had traditionally been reserved for those who were part of America’s “political dynasties,” as Stephen Hess called them.

What had happened, in fact, was a two-fold but interconnected event. On the one hand, the “process” had been hollowed out even for those who ran it. Didion showed, in later essays collected in her book Political Fictions, that the process was increasingly geared towards the “affluent, educated, diverse, suburban, ‘wired’, and moderate.”

She quotes The Washington Post as saying about the 1988 election, that “apathy is the single biggest reason why an estimated 100 million Americans will not vote on Tuesday.” Apathy, she explains, is the way the Post—which is part of the process—referred to those who were alienated by it.

From 2000, culminating with the financial crisis of 2008, “the process” was exposed as an empty shell which, increasingly, not even those inside it believed. When Barack Obama was elected on the promise of reining in the financial class and making them pay, the opposite happened. He bailed them out.

“The process”—that is to say, the state—had been taken over by the financial and corporate class. The second thing that happened was that after 2009, 9 out of 10 dollars invested in Silicon Valley came from central bank money through Quantitative Easing (QE). That is the premise upon which Yanis Varoufakis has written his book Technofeudalism.

Central banks gave this money to commercial banks at near-zero percent interest. The financial system couldn’t make enough money on normal loans so that money was channeled into high-risk, high-reward Silicon Valley investments. Essentially, 90% of the valuation of tech start-ups and the cash flows that kept them afloat were indirect lines of credit tracing back to Quantitative Easing.

In the 20 years that passed from 1988, when Didion’s essay was first published, to 2008, when the financial crisis hit, the financial and corporate takeover of the state culminated. From 2008 to 2026, the financial oligarchy, through state-sponsored QE, staged one of the largest transfers of wealth ever witnessed from society to the oligarchy.

This gave rise to Silicon Valley as a new speculative field and created a new technological elite. As the wealth of this elite increased and their technology became more sophisticated—and as they were able to show that it could be used to maintain the oligarchic status quo—they began to stake their claim in politics, bringing their own agenda. This is the tune that Trump plays.

Donald Trump and J.D. Vance perfectly exemplify this. Trump is a member of the “process” elite but not of the great dynastic political families. He is there because he represents the interest of the financial class. Vance is a product of Silicon Valley, a protégé of Peter Thiel; he is there to act on their behalf. Because “the process” had been delegitimized and because the new elite did not believe in it, they needed someone to break it. That is Trump.

So what is left to lend legitimacy to oligarchic rule? Winning. Because that is the shared ethos of the financial class and the technological one. Winning no matter what. But there’s no honor in winning when you are cheating



Source link

Tags: ethosOligarchysharedWinning
ShareTweetShare
Previous Post

10 Stocks to Navigate a New Wave of Geopolitical Uncertainty

Next Post

Diagnosed with Cyclosporiasis, Mom of 3 Shares Symptoms That Have ‘Lingered and Lingered’

Related Posts

Ukraine & Zelensky’s Ultimate Corruption

Ukraine & Zelensky’s Ultimate Corruption

by theadvisertimes.com
July 9, 2026
0

  The Ukrainian currency has been a perpetual short since 1998, and nothing has changed since. The central bank tried...

The War System | Mises Institute

The War System | Mises Institute

by theadvisertimes.com
July 9, 2026
0

What is the Mises Institute? The Mises Institute is a non-profit organization that exists to promote teaching and research in...

The Cost of the American Revolution

The Cost of the American Revolution

by theadvisertimes.com
July 9, 2026
0

The core of this argument is that the American Founding set the United States on a unique path that made...

Greenspan Ran the Fed for 18 Years and Left an Economic Time Bomb

Greenspan Ran the Fed for 18 Years and Left an Economic Time Bomb

by theadvisertimes.com
July 9, 2026
0

Yves here. In the spirit of showcasing the great harm that Alan Greenspan did as Fed chairman, Michael Hudson and...

The Reason Socialism Appeals To The Youth

The Reason Socialism Appeals To The Youth

by theadvisertimes.com
July 9, 2026
0

The establishment continues to dismiss the growing support for socialism among young people as nothing more than college indoctrination. That...

China consumer price growth weakens in June, producer inflation quickens

China consumer price growth weakens in June, producer inflation quickens

by theadvisertimes.com
July 8, 2026
0

A container ship is berthed at the container terminal in Qingdao, China's eastern Shandong province on June 25, 2026.- |...

Next Post
Diagnosed with Cyclosporiasis, Mom of 3 Shares Symptoms That Have ‘Lingered and Lingered’

Diagnosed with Cyclosporiasis, Mom of 3 Shares Symptoms That Have ‘Lingered and Lingered’

10 of the Most Overhyped Credit Card Features

10 of the Most Overhyped Credit Card Features

  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
Should You Offer a Concession to Get Your Apartment Leased Faster?

Should You Offer a Concession to Get Your Apartment Leased Faster?

June 15, 2026
Fourth of July 2026 Freebies and Deals

Fourth of July 2026 Freebies and Deals

July 3, 2026
5 things financial therapists want every advisor to know

5 things financial therapists want every advisor to know

June 26, 2026
Vanilla’s approach to better software for family offices: Listen first, build second

Vanilla’s approach to better software for family offices: Listen first, build second

July 2, 2026
Oregon Senior Housing Push: 4 Programs Worth Watching

Oregon Senior Housing Push: 4 Programs Worth Watching

July 2, 2026
Prime Day, June 2026: How Retailers Competed With Amazon

Prime Day, June 2026: How Retailers Competed With Amazon

June 29, 2026
AT&T leaves rivals flat-footed as bankrupt carrier folds

AT&T leaves rivals flat-footed as bankrupt carrier folds

0
US stocks today: Nasdaq rallies to sharply higher close; chip surge offsets Iran worries

US stocks today: Nasdaq rallies to sharply higher close; chip surge offsets Iran worries

0
New Hampshire rejects 0M Bitcoin-backed bond after public finance hearing

New Hampshire rejects $100M Bitcoin-backed bond after public finance hearing

0
How to Freeze Your Credit for Free After 60—and Why Every Retiree Should Do It

How to Freeze Your Credit for Free After 60—and Why Every Retiree Should Do It

0
How Winning Became the Shared Ethos of the US Oligarchy

How Winning Became the Shared Ethos of the US Oligarchy

0
Educational Development Releases Q1 2027 Financial Results

Educational Development Releases Q1 2027 Financial Results

0
How to Freeze Your Credit for Free After 60—and Why Every Retiree Should Do It

How to Freeze Your Credit for Free After 60—and Why Every Retiree Should Do It

July 9, 2026
Asia’s founders are decamping to the U.S. as the region suffers a protracted venture funding slump

Asia’s founders are decamping to the U.S. as the region suffers a protracted venture funding slump

July 9, 2026
Educational Development Releases Q1 2027 Financial Results

Educational Development Releases Q1 2027 Financial Results

July 9, 2026
US stocks today: Nasdaq rallies to sharply higher close; chip surge offsets Iran worries

US stocks today: Nasdaq rallies to sharply higher close; chip surge offsets Iran worries

July 9, 2026
New Hampshire rejects 0M Bitcoin-backed bond after public finance hearing

New Hampshire rejects $100M Bitcoin-backed bond after public finance hearing

July 9, 2026
Kalshi traders see roughly 50% odds of a rate hike in 2026 as Fed is split on policy

Kalshi traders see roughly 50% odds of a rate hike in 2026 as Fed is split on policy

July 9, 2026
theadvisertimes.com

Get the latest news and follow the coverage of Business & Financial News, Stock Market Updates, Analysis, and more from the trusted sources.

CATEGORIES

  • Business
  • Cryptocurrency
  • Economy
  • Financial Planning
  • Investing
  • Market Analysis
  • Markets
  • Money
  • Personal Finance
  • Startups
  • Stock Market
  • Trading

LATEST UPDATES

  • How to Freeze Your Credit for Free After 60—and Why Every Retiree Should Do It
  • Asia’s founders are decamping to the U.S. as the region suffers a protracted venture funding slump
  • Educational Development Releases Q1 2027 Financial Results
  • Our Great Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use, Legal Notices & Disclosures
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

© Copyright 2024 All Rights Reserved
See articles for original source and related links to external sites.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Business
  • Financial Planning
  • Personal Finance
  • Investing
  • Money
  • Economy
  • Markets
  • Stocks
  • Trading

© Copyright 2024 All Rights Reserved
See articles for original source and related links to external sites.