Or, When Conservatism Abandons the Constitution, It Stops Being Conservatism.
We keep talking about “polarization” like it’s a weather pattern. But what has happened to the United States over the last decade is closer to information warfare meeting domestic political opportunism — a force-deployed campaign of cyber-enabled narrative manipulation that found a ready host inside America’s own culture.
Russia did not need to “control” Americans. It only needed to poison the channels, amplify the most divisive instincts already present, and then let Americans do what humans do in an algorithmic environment: reward outrage, repeat tribal stories, and normalize contempt for institutions.
That is the essence of cyber pollution: you don’t have to invent the fire if you can saturate the air with accelerant.
Phase One: The Poisoning (Before MaGA Was a Machine)
U.S. intelligence assessments and congressional investigations have described Russia’s social media influence operations as designed to sow discord and undermine faith in democratic processes, not merely to “advertise” a candidate.
The Mueller Report documented that Russia’s Internet Research Agency (IRA) ran a social media campaign that favored Trump and disparaged Clinton, while also working to inflame social conflict. It also describes how the IRA’s efforts pivoted in early 2016 into more explicit election-oriented activity.
This was not “persuasion.” It was destabilization.
Phase Two: The “Handoff” America Didn’t Notice
Here is the part that many people miss: a foreign influence campaign becomes truly successful when it becomes unnecessary.
Once a large domestic audience is trained to:
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treat politics as existential warfare,
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reject corrective institutions (courts, elections, journalism),
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and spread emotionally satisfying narratives at speed,
…then foreign operators can step back. The target population sustains the dynamics on its own.
That isn’t a theory. Researchers found that conservative users were far more likely to share content from Russian troll accounts in the 2016 period, indicating that troll messaging found an especially receptive retransmission network on the right.
At that point, MaGA didn’t “replace” Russian influence. MaGA became the amplifier that made foreign influence less visible, because it became domestically authentic and self-propelled.
Phase Three: From Grievance Politics to Constitutional Contempt
A political movement does not have to announce “we reject the Constitution” to function that way. It only has to normalize a few propositions:
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elections are legitimate only when we win
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courts are legitimate only when they agree
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oversight is sabotage
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law enforcement is political unless it targets “the other side”
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the executive is entitled to ignore constraints because the nation is “in crisis”
That is where “conservatism” stops being conservatism.
Over the past several decades, American conservatives and Republicans have deliberately redrawn the meaning of “liberal” and “liberal democracy” to equate them with modern partisan liberalism, rather than their actual roots in classical liberal democracy — a system conservatives historically claimed to defend.
In doing so, they have worked to distance themselves from the very ideas they once said they stood for: constitutional limits, pluralism, individual rights, and restraint of power. This was not accidental. This was not confusion or drift. It was a calculated redefinition that made rejecting liberal democracy feel virtuous rather than dangerous.
Conservatism, at least in any serious American sense, is supposed to be about limits: separation of powers, restrained executive authority, and respect for constitutional order. What we have now is something else: toxic conservatism, where “winning” is treated as proof of moral entitlement to power.
And once that happens, the movement doesn’t need bots. It has an identity engine.
The Good News: We Are Seeing Pushback
Despite the noise, institutional pushback is real, and it matters.
Even the Supreme Court has recently shown signs of enforcing statutory limits on executive action — for example, keeping in place a block on a federal effort to deploy troops in Chicago under a disputed statutory theory (as analyzed in recent coverage of the Court’s emergency actions).
And the Court is currently positioned to scrutinize the limits of presidential power in disputes tied to economic governance and the Federal Reserve’s independence — a signal that, at minimum, the judiciary recognizes that some lines still exist.
Courts are not saviors. But when they draw lines, they remind the country of a vital fact: the Constitution is not a suggestion.
The Bad News: Pushback Alone Doesn’t Cure the Disease
Judicial decisions are not enough if Congress continues to behave like a spectator.
The American system is built on a simple design:
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The executive acts.
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Congress constrains.
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Courts arbitrate.
When Congress refuses to constrain, the executive expands.
When the public rewards the expansion as “strength,” the expansion accelerates.
When a movement demands loyalty over legality, constitutional government becomes optional.
This is how republics die without a coup. Not with tanks, but with procedural surrender.
We have also seen a deliberate narrative of “left-right imbalance” used to justify stacking institutions with increasingly extreme actors. In reality, this process has hollowed out moderation and left the courts and Congress weighted toward the most aggressive and norm-breaking elements of the Republican Party, rather than toward institutional competence or constitutional balance.
This conversation also cannot ignore the structural problem of longevity in power. Age itself is not the issue — ageism is wrong — but functional capacity, adaptability, and openness to new realities are. Governing a modern society requires active, critical thinking and an understanding of a rapidly evolving technological world.
Many in Congress and the courts have remained in place long after their perspectives hardened, often lacking the fluency needed to regulate technologies that now shape economies, security, and daily life. This is not an argument for youth for youth’s sake, but for renewal, term limits, and cognitive accountability in institutions where entrenched orientations too often substitute for informed judgment.
What This Actually Requires: Adult Constitutionalism
The corrective path is not exotic. It is boring — and that is why it works.
It requires:
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Congress reasserting Article I authority through oversight, budgeting, and statutory limits
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lawmakers — especially Republicans — deciding that institutional survival outranks factional fear
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the public refusing to treat every constitutional constraint as partisan warfare
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media ecosystems and citizens breaking the addiction to viral outrage that makes manipulation easy
Because here is the uncomfortable truth: Russia did not create America’s vulnerabilities. It exploited them. And exploitation succeeds when the target refuses to fix the open doors.
The Bottom Line
Russian cyber pollution didn’t “make” MaGA. But it helped feed the conditions under which MaGA could harden into an anti-constitutional force — and once hardened, MaGA carried the dynamics forward on its own.
That is the tragedy: the foreign actor’s objective was never just to elect someone. It was to damage the idea of constitutional rule itself. And the more Americans treat constraint as betrayal, the more that objective succeeds.
Pushback is happening. The courts are not asleep. But the country is still in the stress test.
And the test isn’t whether we can win an argument online.
It’s whether we still believe the Constitution is real.
Cheers! Sláinte! Na zdravie!


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