Erik Heter

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When the ruling class ignores or derides the unsettled populace (“deplorables,” “takers,” “racists,” “Islamophobes,” “fascists,” and so forth), the restlessness jells into an adversarial mood. A populist gains political power on the strength of this adversarial stance. He opposes the governing consensus, attacking its political embodiment, the establishment.
Return of the Strong Gods: Nationalism, Populism, and the Future of the West
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