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Constantin von Hoffmeister
Constantin von Hoffmeister
Constantin von Hoffmeister is a political and cultural commenter from Germany, author of the book ‘Esoteric Trumpism’, and editor-in-chief of Arktos Publishing.

Trump’s ‘new conservatism’ can bring a revival of the true American spirit

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The president-elect is guided by principles that once defined the country’s way of life.

Donald Trump has accomplished the improbable once more – mastering every obstacle and surviving two assassination attempts – to reclaim the throne as president of the United States. In a nation whose corrupt establishment sought to sideline him, he returns not as a defeated man but as one propelled by a profound connection with the American spirit, a connection that no attack could diminish in the slightest. Trump’s return embodies resilience and an enduring rapport with the people, marking the most remarkable comeback in American history. He has taken political center stage again to revive America’s core values and lead his supporters towards a renewal of genuine American principles.

Trump’s return has reignited the aura of the time up through the 1980s when America’s moral and cultural values were clear, stable, and honored by the everyday citizen. The nuclear family, veneration of one’s heritage, gun rights, and unfiltered patriotism – the values cherished in the past are now considered “reactionary.” However, with Trump’s victory, these values might regain their prominent place, repelling the leftist currents that have tried to undermine them for decades.

This signals a dramatic shift in America’s ideological trajectory. Trump’s election acts as a direct response to decades of leftist domination in media, academia, and politics. The “new conservatism” inaugurated by Trump is guided by precepts that once defined the American way of life, including the acceptance of traditional gender roles, religion’s high status in public life, and a perception of freedom based on constructive individualism, not coercive rhetoric. Trump’s base, often labeled “backward,” sees itself as repossessing the dignity of the average, and thus quintessential, American. It understands that what was once normal is now framed as “right-wing extremist” or “radical” simply because the ground beneath America’s cultural landscape has shifted so far left.

The anti-liberal movement that Trump embodies has roots in George Wallace Jr.’s presidential campaign in 1968 and Pat Buchanan’s populist challenge to the Republican establishment in the 1990s. Trump continues these legacies, proving that his message is heard by those who feel alienated by the sterile and homogenized culture foisted upon them. His leadership represents a recapture of cultural space that many Americans feel has been taken from them. With Trump’s win, America is going to regain its sanity – its center.

In the aftermath of Trump’s triumph, our expectation is shifting forward, where J. D. Vance is positioned as a fitting successor. In his autobiographical account Hillbilly Elegy, Vance describes with unflinching clarity the plight of the white working class, revealing the same wounds of disintegration and despair that stirred Trump’s ascent. His book lays bare the erosion of blue-collar America – the scourge of addiction, the decay of family bonds, and the economic desolation haunting rural communities. These communities, spurned and mocked by the urban mainstream and coastal cosmopolitans, have become Trump’s most loyal supporters. Vance, with his intellectual acuity and profound understanding of this demographic, stands ready to carry the torch of Trump’s populist message, built on a more conceptual foundation.

One of Trump’s most significant pronouncements in his 2016 campaign – “Americanism, not globalism, will be our credo” – was far more than simple rhetoric; it was a fierce call to renounce the burdens of global stewardship. With “America First,” Trump tapped into the psyche of a people weary of perpetual wars and foreign obligations that sapped the nation’s strength and spirit. The 2017 National Security Strategy echoed this reorientation, asserting that “the American way of life cannot be imposed upon others, nor is it the inevitable culmination of progress.” Here, Trump’s message resonated with unmistakable clarity: the duty of the American government lies foremost with its own citizens, firmly tied to the preservation of its own destiny.

In the globalized 2020s, this message is more powerful than ever. Trump’s winning of the popular vote not only affirms his mandate but highlights his position as a truly popular leader, beloved by the masses, rather than an elite figure propped up by the deep state intelligentsia. The left’s accusations of “fascism” miss the point. Trump’s America rejects an internationalist agenda in favor of protecting its own borders, culture, and economy. Critics may scream “fascism,” but Trump’s response is as dismissive as it is confident. As his followers might say, “Looks like we’re living under ‘Hitler’ now – might as well kick back and binge-watch Netflix.” For all their fury, the left cannot mask their desperation as they witness the unraveling of their own idiotic narratives.

The essence of America has always been Faustian, marked by a relentless drive towards self-overcoming, expansion, and discovery of uncharted territory. This is the mark of the true West, as the German historical philosopher Oswald Spengler described: a culture obsessed with the seemingly unreachable, gripped by a yearning that is never satisfied, forever reaching beyond itself. America embodies this will to boundlessness, its people animated by the strong desire to investigate new realms – material, intellectual, cosmic. Here lies the pulse of a civilization that refuses confinement, whose gaze is cast towards the stars, restless, defiant, and inexorably driven to pierce the limits of mere existence. Trump’s presidency reflects this innate drive, drawing on a uniquely American desire to go further and aim higher. With figures like Elon Musk aiming for the stars, Trump’s vision encompasses a broader sense of boundless opportunity, blending the practical with the transcendent.

America’s Faustian fire is anchored in its pragmatism and its love for the infinite – a duality that drives its people to both conquer the land and explore the universe. By backing Musk and his plans for space colonization, Trump taps into this primal urge to break through boundaries. Space, in Trump’s view, is not a sterile scientific endeavor but a mission to secure America’s future among the stars, embodying the very essence of the Faustian motto: always striving, always advancing.

Trump’s America also pays homage to the likes of Jack Kerouac, the iconic American writer who celebrated independence, wandering the roads with a desire for unrestrained roaming. Although often claimed by the leftist counterculture, Kerouac was a Catholic and a conservative at heart. His America was one of freedom, positive anarchy, and boundless possibility. Trump’s new administration is in tune with this America, offering a healthy alternative to the bureaucratic encumbrances of modern government. The new president sees America not as a land of regulations and bizarre social engineering but as a frontier of individual potential.

Trump’s victory goes beyond politics; it marks the resurgence of America’s Faustian character, an awakening of the original engine that drives a civilization to assert itself against decline. In casting their votes, the people have summoned a leader who embodies their deepest values, their aspirations, and their grievances. The left may wail and beat its oversensitive chest, but its howls are empty, fading echoes in a hollow hall.

Trump is a voice crying out from the wilderness, the embodiment of the people’s will, come to wrest the land from powers of darkness that feign themselves as “progress.” This is proven by Trump’s triumph in the popular vote, for the people have chosen him as their champion. The left’s false “progress” is but the worship of Satan, clothed in the garments of liberalism, and seeks to lay waste the soul of the nation. Yet fear not, for Trump shall rise up and smite this menace, and the people shall be delivered from its snares, and the land shall be restored unto righteousness.

The statements, views and opinions expressed in this column are solely those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of DTNZ.

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5 COMMENTS

  1. The most sick and evil nation in world history.
    Tear it down. Stinking like sewage. Satanic nation of evil. Disgusting and proud.

  2. Well written column. 10/10.

    Trump is a big fat orange middle finger from the American people to the big Bureaucratic machine that for 80 years has taxed them into poverty, plunged them into wars, ruined their children, destroyed their health, spied on them, lied to them and stolen from them.

  3. Saying “No more, we’ve had enough” is a worldwide phenomenon.
    Don’t sit around hoping America going to save the world, it’s a team effort.
    We all need each other 🥇

  4. Interesting summation. The author sees outcomes others may not – but he addresses why the majority voted the way they did. Two things stand out in my view of the Trump phenomenon. Even in the darkest moments post the 2020 stolen election, insurrection claims, the Afghanistan disaster and the legal attempts to throw him in prison, yet amazingly, crowds lined streets when they heard Donald Trump was visiting their towns. What nation does that? Who lines the streets to cheer and wave flags for Jacinta Arder? Trump was the man that embodied the hopes, aspirations and dreams of millions across the country. Secondly the one salient message that was cited by Trump many times in months leading to his assignation attempt, “They are not after me they after you – I just happen to be standing in their way.” Most religious leaders across the country knew exactly what they were doing when allowed themselves to be photographed on social media praying for a GOP and MAGA victory. Trump was the man who could turn the democrat catastrophe into a victory for common sense.

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