Opinion | How Trump’s use of kayfabe could unlock new era for US-China ties
A fan of pro wrestling, Trump’s approach to diplomacy may be unorthodox, but it resembles a common-sense tradition rooted in American philosophy
At the same time, the premature notion about the decline of US power and its international status under the Trump administration should give us pause.
For sure, philosophy appears to have nothing in common with Trump, the super-transactional tradesman who doesn’t like to reason with Ivory Tower concepts. But he is highly innovative if understood through the notion of “common sense”.
After all, he considers kayfabe, a notion invented by professional wrestling, to be a great philosophical notion. Kayfabe, which refers to the convention in pro wrestling of presenting staged performances as authentic, is an old term that emerged from the carnival world. It is based on the big lie of professional wrestling, that it’s a real, legitimate sporting competition.
Amid all the outrageous acts at his rallies, he arguably understood the popular sentiment and concerns of many Americans better than intellectuals and liberal political elites. Trump seems able to grasp the philosophical and political uses of the term “common sense” in a way that has had an impact on American political thought for centuries.