Biden Will Live To Regret The Day He Made Trump An Outlaw

âIâm voting for the outlaw,â my boss, Dan Bongino, wrote on X shortly after former President Donald Trump was found guilty on all 34 counts in a kangaroo New York court. Within a few days, Bongino began selling various "outlaw" shirts, including one with an upside-down flag to signify the downfall of our constitutional republic. As of Tuesday, he sold over $350,000 in tees.
Democrats had hoped their lawfare against the former president would deter the American people. Instead, they awakened one of the most persistent and powerful American mythos: the Western outlaw.
In a $50 million ad released Monday, President Joe Biden leaned into labeling Trump a criminal, depicting the frowning former president in ominous black-and-white imagery. Meanwhile, Biden portrayed himself as the honorable, good olâ boy candidate in bright colors surrounded by smiling faces.
The problem, thanks in part to reinforcement from Bongino, is that people now associate Trump with the rugged bandit heroes of Americaâs beloved Western genre. Thousands of novels, songs, movies, and TV shows take place on the untamed outskirts of civilization. Even American media that doesnât take place in the Wild West often uses the âoutlawâ trope (think Jack Sparrow in Pirates of the Caribbean or Han Solo in Star Wars).
The heroes of this genre arenât the stereotypical good guys. Theyâre rogue protagonists who defend the good but often operate in a moral grey area. As The Federalistâs John Daniel Davidson explains, âthe Western is at heart about the tension between civilization and barbarismâ and âits heroes are often savage anti-heroes.â
In this way, Trump thoroughly embodies the outlaw. No one would consider Trump a âmoralâ character. He isnât Gandalf the Grey or Superman; heâs a playboy billionaire from New York.
The Trump appeal was arguably best exemplified by comedian Dave Chappelle, who described Trump as an âhonest liarâ when recounting the 2016 debate between Trump and Hillary Clinton. âIâve never seen a white male billionaire screaming at the top of his lungs, âThis whole system is rigged,ââ recalled Chappelle. âHe [Trump] said, âI know the system is rigged because I use it⌠And then he pulled out an Illuminati membership card and chopped a line of cocaine,â the comedian joked.
In other words, Trump knows from first-hand experience that our broken system is hurting regular, working people, andâimperfect as he isâheâs decided to fight on their behalf. Indeed, to the ire of the uniparty, Trump has battled for fair trade, American energy independence, secure borders, and an end to irrelevant foreign conflicts.
It is his willingness to get down in the mud and call Hillary Clinton âcrooked Hillaryâ and Elizebeth Warren âPocahontasâ that endears him to the people. While in office, he bucked convention by cutting foreign aid to globalist entities like the United Nations, the World Health Organization, and various climate initiatives. And he wholesale rejects the performative decorum of the political elites because he correctly views the system itself as a farce unjustly rigged against regular Americans. Bidenâs lawfare against Trump only fuels Trumpâs âLone Rangerâ characterization.
If Trump is the outlaw, then Biden is the corrupt sheriff. In his $50 million ad, Biden portrays himself as the bright, trustworthy, and civilized alternative to the outlaw. The only issue is that Biden isnât trustworthy; heâs slimy. Heâs the âbig guyâ embroiled in an influence-peddling scheme with Americaâs foreign adversaries, and heâs rigging the 2024 election by politically persecuting his opponent.
In many Westerns, the sheriff appears upstanding but is actually crooked, willing to accept bribes and create alliances with criminals. The corrupt sheriff archetype is a symbol of power, greed, and failed institutionsâthe very thing quintessential American heroes fight.
Lest I remind you, Americans are adventurers. Our ancestors were risk-takers who were willing to sacrifice their old-world comforts for the chance at something either wonderful or disastrous in the new world. Weâre cowboys, conquistadors, pilgrims, and pioneers. The very inception of Americaâour foundingâwas a rebellion against the status quo in pursuit of freedom.
The spirits of our forebears were restless. They were always ready to bravely challenge the existing order in the name of liberty and justice. Our culture has reflected this ethos for over two hundred years.
Indeed, Trump the outlaw and Biden the corrupt sheriff are not fun little analogies Iâm imagining alone. They are real archetypes rooted in a uniquely American mythos that informs how the American people as a whole view themselves and the world around them.
Stories are powerful. As University of Chicago Professor of Medieval History Rachel Fulton Brown writes, âGood stories challenge us,â âgive us direction and heroes to imitate,â âreveal truths about ourselves that we otherwise cannot see,â and literally âtransform the soul.â
Biden may think that by criminalizing his opponent heâs delegitimized him in the eyes of the people. But in reality, Bidenâs stepped onto a cultural landmine thatâs conjuring up one of the most persistent and evocative American mythologies, and it may cost him the election.
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