Drudge Retort: The Other Side of the News
Saturday, January 24, 2026

Rational self-interest motivates autocratic regimes to employ idiots.

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Some may be ruthless careerists and others full-blown crackpots, but all are working all too effectively as the gravediggers of American democracy. Weird Trump appointments include FBI director Kash Patel, a conspiracy theorist and Covid-19 vaccine sceptic who promoted a dietary supplement called "Warrior Essentials" which was designed to achieve Covid "vaccine reversal". Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F Kennedy Jr has been busily restricting and defunding routine vaccinations.

I used to hope that the manifest incapacity of Trump's senior lieutenants might diminish the damage they do. But then I remembered my father, Claud Cockburn, who fled Berlin a day before Hitler took power in 1933, saying that one of the many frightening features of the Nazis, in addition to their monstrous violence, was that they were "a regime of basically damn fools, who could blow up half the world out of sheer stupidity". Even when it hurt their own interests, they could not help acting erratically and idiotically, which might baffle or lead smarter people to underestimate them.

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"The need for authoritarian regimes to promote the least able is easy to understand in theory, but has seldom been studied scientifically since existing or aspirant autocracies do not disclose their recruitment and promotion policies," writes Cockburn. "But some years back Adam Scharpf and Christian Glassel wrote a fascinating article entitled Why Underachievers Dominate Secret Police Organisations: Evidence from Autocratic Argentina', published in the American Journal of Political Science."

They looked at the careers of 4,000 officers in the core institution of state repression in Argentina during the 1975-83 military dictatorship, asking: "Why would anyone do dirty work for the regime? Are these people sadistic psychopaths, sectarian fanatics, or forced by the regime to terrorise the population?"

They concluded that, while all these factors may play a role, the typical profile of secret police agents is shaped rather by the mundane need to keep a job and win promotion.

"In competition with better qualified peers, officials with weak early performances have little chances of climbing up to the most lucrative positions at the top," they wrote. "For such underachievers the arduous nature of secret police work offers the opportunity to signal their value to the regime and get ahead of competitors for higher positions."

It is shocking to realise that what was true of Argentinian security services half a century ago is likely to apply to ICE today.

#1 | Posted by Doc_Sarvis at 2026-01-24 07:09 AM | Reply | Newsworthy 1

I always wondered why the Old Nazis employed spoiled goods into their ranks, people they otherwise would persecute.

#2 | Posted by Zed at 2026-01-24 08:57 AM | Reply

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