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PRINCIPLED IN NOTHING
On the mental servitude of MAGA
There is a kind of slavery that leaves no marks on the body.
No chains. No auction block. No overseer with a whip. The enslaved party moves freely, speaks freely, votes freely. They hold jobs and own property and even wave flags that say the word “freedom” in bold letters.
And yet they are owned. Not by a deed or a contract, but by something more durable than either: the complete surrender of independent judgment to the will of another man.
The MAGA movement, in its current form, does not hold positions. It reveres a person. Whatever that person believes on a given Tuesday is what the movement believes on a given Tuesday. Whatever he abandons, they abandon. Whatever he reverses, they reverse. The mind that cannot maintain a conviction independent of its master’s shifting convenience is not a free mind. It is a captured one.
The indictment is specific. It is documented. And it does not forgive.
They denounced Marjorie Taylor Greene, Thomas Massie, and Lauren Boebert as heroes of the resistance. They were on the merchandise, the podcasts, the rallies. Then those same figures stepped out of line. Greene pushed for the Epstein files. Massie refused to fall in formation. And Trump called them traitors. Within weeks, the same base that had elevated them turned feral. Not because any fact had changed. Because the signal had changed. They are owned.
They called Biden “Sleepy Joe” for four years. They made it an industry. Memes, rallies, chants, a thousand hours of outrage radio. Now Trump falls asleep at Cabinet meetings. He nodded off during the Board of Peace meeting as Tony Blair spoke. The Washington Post counted roughly twenty minutes of eye-closing at a single Oval Office press conference. Trump’s own explanation, delivered to the Wall Street Journal, was that the meeting had gotten “pretty boring.” The same base that ran four years of footage on Biden’s blinking is now explaining that the president takes notes on his lap. They are owned.
They put “I Did That” stickers on gas pumps under Biden. Righteous populist rage. Now gas prices are higher. They are quiet. They are owned.
They bragged that Trump was the “no-wars president”. It was a central promise of the second term campaign. Now he is sending money to Ukraine and Israel simultaneously, after spending years leading the charge against Biden for doing the same. He is depleting our military stockpile with massive assaults on Iran. The isolationist wing of the movement is angry. Some complain privately. None have left. They are owned.
They demanded the Epstein files. They chanted it. They built entire media ecosystems around the promise. Then Pam Bondi assembled influencers for a grand reveal and handed them documents already available to the public. The crowd that showed up to witness accountability was handed theater. Trump’s response was to attack the people still asking questions. And the base largely fell in line and attacked them too. They are owned.
They spent years howling about cancel culture as the singular threat to free expression in America. Then someone shot Charlie Kirk, and within weeks, the movement discovered cancellation as a useful tool. Principle was never the point. Power was always the point. They are owned.
They built a movement around the idea that the establishment was corrupt, self-dealing, and contemptuous of ordinary Americans. Trump has now called his own most loyal followers “red-hat yokels.” His team privately views them as “easily duped morons.” He is not wrong to think so. A movement that surrenders its judgment this completely has earned the contempt it receives from the man it protects. That is the brutal arithmetic of submission.
Candace Owens said she was “embarrassed” for backing Trump after the first Iran bombing. Tucker Carlson said he was “tormented.” Marjorie Taylor Greene said, “Humbly, I’m sorry.” Alex Jones suggested invoking the 25th Amendment. These are not profiles in courage. These are rats becoming aware, very late, that they are on a ship. But they illuminate something important: even the most visible true believers eventually hit a wall they cannot scale. The ordinary follower simply never reaches the wall. They adjust the map instead.
This is what a personality cult does to a mind over time. It does not ask you to agree. It asks you to stop tracking consistency. It asks you to forget what you believed last year, because last year’s position is now inconvenient, and the master’s convenience is the only principle left. The mind learns, slowly, not to ask questions that might produce dangerous answers. It learns to explain rather than evaluate. It learns that loyalty is demonstrated not by honest judgment but by the willingness to publicly defend whatever needs defending today.
That is not politics. That is not even partisanship. That is the condition Frederick Douglass described when he wrote about the most thoroughly broken kind of slave: not the one who fights and loses, but the one who has forgotten there was ever anything worth fighting for.
The people who stand for nothing will tell you they stand for America. They will tell you with the most misplaced confidence you have ever seen. And they will be unable to tell you, specifically, what position they held last year that they still hold today, or what Trump would have to do before they reconsidered anything at all.
There is no answer to that last question. The question itself is the proof.
No crowns. No masters. And no patience left for those who have chosen both.