My bad. I agree with everything you say, but what doesn't sound familiar is the cult and the degree of hate and anger.
Perhaps we construe the meaning of the term "cult" differently. The Vanity Fair article was transparent about the fact that they were using the term as referring to authoritarian control.
The interactions I've had with die hard Trump fans suggests that they simply defend Trump and attack others, regardless of the issue or facts. An example is Trump's comparison of COVID to the flu. No matter how many people die from COVID, Trump supporters dig in and say things like "people aren't really dying from COVID, the hospitals are just saying this so they can get more money." Another example is the "stolen election" narrative. The facts do not support this, but it doesn't matter to the Trump supporters; they choose to believe fairy tales. If Trump says it was "stolen," that is what they believe.
The stout beliefs in fairy tales told by a single source strike me as being very cult-like.
Do you agree with the following statement by Frank Luntz?
“He’s become the voice of God for tens of millions of people, and they will follow him to the ends of the earth and off the cliff.”
Trump still has supporters, especially among the many rank-and-file Republican voters and conservative activists beyond Washington.
www.nbcnews.com
It's ironic on several levels is that Clinton wanted Trump to win the nomination because he was viewed as being a Pied Piper candidate that would lead the party to ruin. Given that Trump is the first president in almost 100 years to lose the House, the Senate, and the presidency all in one term, he did ultimately prove to be a Pied Piper, albeit too late for Clinton.
>>>So to take Bush down, Clinton’s team drew up a plan to pump Trump up. . . . “The variety of candidates is a positive here, and many of the lesser known can serve as a cudgel to move the more established candidates further to the right. In this scenario, we don’t want to marginalize the more extreme candidates, but make them more ‘Pied Piper’ candidates who actually represent the mainstream of the Republican Party,” read the memo.
“Pied Piper candidates include, but aren’t limited to:
• Ted Cruz
• Donald Trump
• Ben Carson
We need to be elevating the Pied Piper candidates so that they are leaders of the pack and tell the press to [take] them seriously."
While the campaign also kept a close eye on Rubio,
monitoring his announcement speech and
tightly designing the tweeted responses to his moves, Clinton’s team in Brooklyn was delightedly puzzled by Trump’s shift into the pole position that July after
attacking John McCain by declaring, “I like people who weren’t captured.” . . . Clinton strategists' initial reaction to Trump’s blaze through the primaries at the time was giddy disbelief, but back in New York the anti-Trump plan and machinery was still barely begun. . . . “With [Trump’s] potential appeal as an instrument of revenge among white voters, it was clear early on that he would scramble the map." <<<
Inside Team Clinton’s year-long struggle to find a strategy against the opponent they were most eager to face.
www.politico.com