You are on page 1of 11

17/01/2023 12:36 A malicious child acts out: Donald Trump, Jim Comey and the toxic triumph of "kidult"

"kidult" culture | Salon.com

subscribe

A malicious child acts out:


Donald Trump, Jim Comey and
the toxic triumph of "kidult"
culture
Trump is like an overgrown, evil Dennis the Menace — who embodies our infantile
consumer culture at its worst

By ANDREW O'HEHIR

PUBLISHED MAY 13, 2017 4:00PM (EDT)

(Hallden/Shutterstock/Salon)

view in app save

E
xplanations abound for President Donald Trump’s shocking, or pseudo-shocking,
decision to fire FBI Director James Comey this week. Indeed, there are too
many of them. It was because Comey had bungled the so-called investigation
×
https://www.salon.com/2017/05/13/a-malicious-child-acts-out-donald-trump-jim-comey-and-the-toxic-triumph-of-kidult-culture/ 1/11
17/01/2023 12:36 A malicious child acts out: Donald Trump, Jim Comey and the toxic triumph of "kidult" culture | Salon.com

into Hillary Clinton’s so-called email scandal. It was because Comey and his FBI team
were closing in on evidence of the Trump campaign’s collusion with Russian intelligence
last year.

This was a decision based on the recommendations of Deputy Attorney General Rod
Rosenstein (a sudden celebrity!) and his boss, the appalling Jeff Sessions — who isn’t
supposed to be involved with the Trump-Russia inquiry in any way. Or it was a decision the
president made on his own and had contemplated for weeks, because Comey was disloyal
or was too much of a showboat or “was not doing a good job.”

I used the term “pseudo-shocking” above because there’s really no more room to be
surprised by any asinine, impulsive, media-trolling stunt this president pulls. If a troubled,
sadistic child pulls the wings off butterflies or torments a kitten, one should certainly
express disapproval and attempt to mete out discipline. But it kind of rings hollow to act
astonished and announce that you’ve never heard of such a thing before.

Advertisement:

% -33%

-5%

Itens com frete grátis


AliExpress.com

In a column posted earlier this weekend, Salon’s Danielle Ryan makes an interesting case
that all the overlapping and contradictory explanations for Trump’s recent conduct are
needlessly complicated, and that l’affaire Comey may be much simpler than it appears.
Whatever you make of Ryan’s larger argument — she remains skeptical that the Russian
connection is any big deal, for example — I think she’s onto something when it comes to
Trump’s behavior and what he represents. He tossed aside Jim Comey on impulse, the
way an angry child throws away an unsatisfying toy or turns on a friend; he didn’t really ×
https://www.salon.com/2017/05/13/a-malicious-child-acts-out-donald-trump-jim-comey-and-the-toxic-triumph-of-kidult-culture/ 2/11
17/01/2023 12:36 A malicious child acts out: Donald Trump, Jim Comey and the toxic triumph of "kidult" culture | Salon.com

think about what would happen afterwards, and every subsequent explanation is just made
up and tacked on.

It has frequently been observed that Donald Trump acts like a child: He has exceptionally
poor impulse control, cannot reliably distinguish fantasy from reality and appears not to
grasp that human actions are not isolated events but exist in a chain of causes and
consequences. But the emergence of such a figure is itself viewed with childlike wonder,
as if he were mysterious or miraculous and had no history. How in the world did we wind
up with a 70-year-old child as president of the United States?

Advertisement:

I would argue that Trump’s childish nature not only helps explain aspects of his behavior
that otherwise seem incomprehensible, but that it lies at the heart of his appeal — and
indeed his meaning. Donald Trump is the accidental and profoundly ironic embodiment of a
culture that has infantilized itself, a culture that fetishizes childhood as an ideal state of
wonder, joy and innocence to which all adults long to return. The fact that many of the
people who most enthusiastically embrace the ascendant culture of kidulthood — the
affluent, educated “elites” of the coastal cities and college towns — are also the people
most likely to abhor Donald Trump is but one of the many conundrums of this moment.

[jwplayer
file="http://media.salon.com/2017/05/7f16898798120ce3a4aadec78a694906.mp4" ×
https://www.salon.com/2017/05/13/a-malicious-child-acts-out-donald-trump-jim-comey-and-the-toxic-triumph-of-kidult-culture/ 3/11
17/01/2023 12:36 A malicious child acts out: Donald Trump, Jim Comey and the toxic triumph of "kidult" culture | Salon.com

image="http://media.salon.com/2017/05/02d92e916a2e57013b7fc090dd3eea72-
1280x720.png][/jwplayer]

Proposing to end illegal immigration by building a giant wall along the southern border is a
self-evidently childish solution to an imaginary problem — exactly the kind that gets
abandoned when it proves too difficult. When my son was about five years old, he spent
several afternoons trying to dig a tunnel the whole way across our backyard; he got three
or four feet down before coming to grips with geological reality. Believing you can resolve a
military conflict that has stymied several rounds of grownups through the overwhelming
use of force — by “bombing the shit out of 'em,” for instance — is similarly childish, except
that real people’s lives will be thrown away in large numbers even in a brief effort.

Advertisement:

Refusing to accept photographs or statistics as actual evidence and searching for


“alternative facts” to explain away unpleasant occurrences are pretty much defining
characteristics of childhood. Every child grows up terrified and/or fascinated by the “fake
news” and conspiracy theories that run rampant on the playground: In my own youth it was
widely reported, via the social media outlets of the day, that one popular brand of bubble
gum was made from spider eggs. An old friend, somewhat younger than me, once told me
that after he had worked out how implausible that was — why would they bother? It sounds
expensive! — he used the spider-egg fallacy to rebut some clown who was going around
telling everybody that Darth Vader was actually Luke Skywalker’s dad.

×
https://www.salon.com/2017/05/13/a-malicious-child-acts-out-donald-trump-jim-comey-and-the-toxic-triumph-of-kidult-culture/ 4/11
17/01/2023 12:36 A malicious child acts out: Donald Trump, Jim Comey and the toxic triumph of "kidult" culture | Salon.com

Some wild childhood theories turn out to be true, and if Donald Trump is no relation to the
Skywalker clan he might be Harry Potter’s unacknowledged mutant stepbrother, who spent
much too long in that cupboard under the stairs. What I mean by that is Trump could not
possibly have emerged in any other era — in one when the condition of adulthood was
seen as necessary or desirable in a political leader, for instance.

Advertisement:

There were many obvious differences between Trump and Hillary Clinton, and I don’t mean
to downplay the significance of the most glaring one, which clearly played a role in her
defeat. But she behaved like an adult throughout the campaign, since she had no choice:
For better or worse, she is one. Trump has never acted like a grownup throughout his
many decades in the public eye, and surely wasn’t going to start now. So the whole thing
played out like a malicious family sitcom with a stinger ending, and we’ve all seen those: In
a contest between Dennis the Menace and his mom — to cite a pop-culture reference so
ancient Trump himself will recognize it — which of them will be humiliated, and which will
emerge smirking and victorious?

Until very recently in historical time, childhood was viewed with bemused tolerance, at
best, throughout the Western world, while actual children were often shunted aside.
Children of the wealthy and even the middle class were outsourced to be raised by others
as much as possible; children of the poor were mostly left to fend for themselves between
the day they learned to walk and the day they were sent to work. Even as schooling
became more general during the Industrial Age, the cultural products designed for children
were anodyne, moralistic and legendarily boring, which is why pioneers like Lewis Carroll ×
https://www.salon.com/2017/05/13/a-malicious-child-acts-out-donald-trump-jim-comey-and-the-toxic-triumph-of-kidult-culture/ 5/11
17/01/2023 12:36 A malicious child acts out: Donald Trump, Jim Comey and the toxic triumph of "kidult" culture | Salon.com

or E. Nesbit stood out so much. J.R.R. Tolkien’s “The Hobbit,” published in 1937, changed
the course of children’s literature forever because it refused to condescend to juvenile
readers and assumed an appetite for myth, tragedy and grand adventure.

Advertisement:

Since about that time, and especially since the “youth culture” revolt of the 1960s, for
which Tolkien’s “Lord of the Rings” became a text of almost biblical importance (much to
his chagrin), we have seen an extraordinary liberation of the childhood imagination. More
accurately, we have rediscovered it or recognized that it was always there and plays an
enormous role in the shaping of human personality. I’m not remotely arguing that any of
that is a bad thing — certainly not when it comes to actual children, nor when it comes to
adults celebrating and enjoying the aspects of childhood we all carry with us throughout
our lives.

But this enormous cultural shift in the understanding of children and childhood came with
an unintended long-term consequence in late-capitalist consumer culture, and the squishy,
turdlike end point of that process, at least right now, is President Donald Trump. Indeed,
one could quarrel with my use of the word “unintended,” since marketing and advertising,
over the last few decades, have prospered by shamelessly appealing to the most infantile,
narcissistic and acquisitive urges — those that typify early childhood and remain just under
the surface after that. If those enterprises did not deliberately set out to turn us all into
overgrown electronic-cocoon children who search for immediate gratification around the
clock and wail whenever we don’t get it, they accomplished it with great efficiency.
×
https://www.salon.com/2017/05/13/a-malicious-child-acts-out-donald-trump-jim-comey-and-the-toxic-triumph-of-kidult-culture/ 6/11
17/01/2023 12:36 A malicious child acts out: Donald Trump, Jim Comey and the toxic triumph of "kidult" culture | Salon.com

Advertisement:

A number of cultural streams had to come together to devalue the dominant conception of
adulthood — not completely or uniformly, but to a significant degree — and replace it with
kidulthood, an awkward second childhood or imitation childhood. As the old tropes of
grownup-ness — the businessman, the housewife, the factory worker, the bridge club and
so on — came to seem outmoded or ridiculous, and as the American workplace became
increasingly dominated by stultifying service jobs and the perma-collegiate atmosphere of
the technology sector, one’s identity as a consumer became the central aspect of adult
existence.

That development was already coming into view by the late ’60s, when Guy Debord
captured it with uncanny prescience in the Situationist manifesto “Society of the
Spectacle.” To some extent it was predicted by Karl Marx more than a century earlier, who
perceived that eventually the major Western economies would transform themselves from
being a zone of production to a zone of consumption. But the suddenness and totality of
the change were not foreseen by anyone, and we are only beginning to reckon with it.

Advertisement:

×
https://www.salon.com/2017/05/13/a-malicious-child-acts-out-donald-trump-jim-comey-and-the-toxic-triumph-of-kidult-culture/ 7/11
17/01/2023 12:36 A malicious child acts out: Donald Trump, Jim Comey and the toxic triumph of "kidult" culture | Salon.com

I recognize that it’s going way too deep into get-off-my-lawn territory to complain that
everybody is on their damn devices all the time, and nobody even has to go outside to get
a pizza anymore. The network of infotainment and acquisition that holds us all in its grip is
not purely or entirely a passive experience, any more than childhood is. That’s too simple:
It contains other possibilities, some of which are real. Indeed, one of the secrets to Bernie
Sanders’ unexpected success, in my view, is that he appealed to the millennial generation
— the first one to be born and raised inside the information economy — precisely because
he seemed to disrupt its dominant economic and cultural narrative so dramatically. To use
the relevant cliché, the fact that Bernie was from another generation and another world
was a feature, not a bug.

What I’m suggesting is more like a powerful analogy: Children are like consumers, in some
ways, and adults who are primarily consumers have turned themselves into imitation
children. Gamergate zealots and fake-news entrepreneurs and alt-right trolls and Redditors
who “solve crimes” from the sofa are not the problem in themselves; there have always
been people who lie or manipulate others or waste everybody’s time with crackpot ideas.
The deeper problem is that as we have collectively slid backward into a fake childhood
where we can fill any supposed want with a few clicks and an optimistic credit-card issuer -
- where we believe that is our most important right -- we don’t know how to control those
people, or control for them, or control ourselves.

×
https://www.salon.com/2017/05/13/a-malicious-child-acts-out-donald-trump-jim-comey-and-the-toxic-triumph-of-kidult-culture/ 8/11
17/01/2023 12:36 A malicious child acts out: Donald Trump, Jim Comey and the toxic triumph of "kidult" culture | Salon.com

Advertisement:

It’s tempting to say that since Trump is only president today thanks to a statistical fluke,
that proves most Americans are still OK with adult leadership and it was only the
malignant, malicious kidults in flyover country who fell prey to his idiotic magical thinking.
Tempting but too easy. Trump was so horrifying, and so alluring, because he is an
unrepentant rebel child dressed as a man who appeals to the most childish impulses in the
American soul. Build the wall! Drain the swamp! Until it's hard; then don't.

Even those of us who would never have considered voting for him could feel it, and
couldn’t look away. I don’t believe in fate in the classical sense, but the hand of fate was
heavy in last year’s election. Our national second childhood conjured up Donald Trump,
and we couldn’t wish him away. Facing that reality, and learning how to grow up again,
requires dealing with him first.

By ANDREW O'HEHIR

Andrew O'Hehir is executive editor of Salon.

MORE FROM ANDREW O'HEHIR

×
https://www.salon.com/2017/05/13/a-malicious-child-acts-out-donald-trump-jim-comey-and-the-toxic-triumph-of-kidult-culture/ 9/11
17/01/2023 12:36 A malicious child acts out: Donald Trump, Jim Comey and the toxic triumph of "kidult" culture | Salon.com

Related Topics ------------------------------------------

Alt Right Children Consumer Culture Consumerism Donald Trump

Fantasy Gamergate Harry Potter Information Age James Comey

Kidults Lord Of The Rings Partner Video Reddit Video Video Games

×
https://www.salon.com/2017/05/13/a-malicious-child-acts-out-donald-trump-jim-comey-and-the-toxic-triumph-of-kidult-culture/ 10/11
17/01/2023 12:36 A malicious child acts out: Donald Trump, Jim Comey and the toxic triumph of "kidult" culture | Salon.com

Related Articles

Home About Staff Contact Privacy Terms of Service Archive Go Ad Free

Copyright © 2023 Salon.com, LLC. Reproduction of material from any Salon pages without written permission is strictly
prohibited. SALON ® is registered in the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office as a trademark of Salon.com, LLC. Associated
Press articles: Copyright © 2016 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast,
rewritten or redistributed.

DMCA Policy

×
https://www.salon.com/2017/05/13/a-malicious-child-acts-out-donald-trump-jim-comey-and-the-toxic-triumph-of-kidult-culture/ 11/11

You might also like