The Political Nightmare
There was a time when politics at least pretended to justify itself. Facts were bent, interests disguised, motives cleaned for public use. But there was still a shared horizon. A common world that had to be addressed, even dishonestly. Persuasion mattered because something like reality was assumed to exist between opposing sides.
That horizon is gone.
Politics no longer argues with the world. It installs one. Whoever acts first defines the field. Whoever moves fastest creates the conditions to which everyone else must respond. Reality is no longer debated. It is promulgated. Political success is no longer tied to truth or coherence, but to speed, repetition, and institutional capture.
This is not a post-truth problem. It is an ontological shift. We have moved from a politics of justification to a politics of enactment.
Donald Trump did not invent this shift, but he understood it instinctively. His method was simple and effective: assert, repeat, move on.