Imagining What’s in
Trump’s Brain
Nov. 7, 2025
By David Brooks
Opinion
Columnist
I feel as if I’ve spent
large parts of my life reading dreary studies on authoritarian personalities.
These are written by people like me, who despise authoritarianism, and they are
filled with the familiar psychological diagnoses. The authoritarian comes from
a loveless home; he is a bully driven by secret insecurity; he is a psychopath
who does not feel others’ pain. But these studies never actually tell you how
the authoritarians see themselves.
One 2022 novel, Giuliano
da Empoli’s “The Wizard of the Kremlin,” narrated in the voice of one of
Vladimir Putin’s advisers, helped me understand the psychology of authoritarian
power as much as any of those studies — and not just inside Putin’s mind but
also inside the minds of Donald Trump, Xi Jinping, Narendra Modi, Nayib Bukele,
Elon Musk, Mohammed bin Salman, Benjamin Netanyahu, Viktor Orban and all the
rest of the global authoritarian wolf pack.
Last month da Empoli,
who is an Italian Swiss essayist, followed it up with a nonfiction book, “The
Hour of the Predator,” which describes both the wolves who run governments and
those who run tech companies.
Here are a few things
I’ve learned about how authoritarians exercise power.
Performance artists. People like Trump and Putin are not politicians; they
are artists who create alternate realities. They tell stories, invent
alternative facts, enact daily dramas, construct show trials and reinvent
religions — they build a world. In their world, the people who felt humiliated
are now dominant and doing the humiliating. Russia felt humiliated by the West
in the 1990s. Many working-class American voters have felt humiliated by
coastal elites for decades. In this alternative world, the snobs suffer. People
support an authoritarian not because they like this or that policy but because
they embrace the authoritarian’s artistic vision. Performance artists like
Trump and Putin can be dishonest, offensive and outrageous, but there is one
rule: They must never be boring.
Warriors and bureaucrats. In the minds of the authoritarian wolves, history is
a Manichaean struggle. It’s not between left and right or rich and poor; it’s
between the warriors and the weenies. The warriors see themselves as the strong
ones, the men and women of steel, the masters of aggression. They are the kinds
of men you saw at the Republican National Convention — Dana White, Hulk Hogan —
the kinds of men Pete Hegseth and JD Vance are playacting at. The warriors
recognize one another — the AfD in Germany; Jair Bolsonaro in Brazil. There’s a
hint of the wild animal to them: no rules, no limits, just the law of the
jungle.
The bureaucrats, in
their eyes, are the PowerPoint people, who went to law school (like every
Democratic presidential nominee after 1980) — the weaklings who have segregated
themselves at fancy conferences where they nibble canapés and don’t have to
encounter brutal reality. They are seen as emasculated types who take paid
paternity leave, admire the E.U. and get intimidated into telling you their
pronouns.
One of Trump’s political
strengths, da Empoli notes in his new book, is that he is never seen reading a
book. The experts understand nothing, and he scorns them. In “The Wizard of the
Kremlin,” one character says of Putin: “He never mentions numbers. His language
speaks of life, of death, of honor, of country.” In this way, he positions
himself against “accountants looking for glory, little men who think that
politics boils down to running a business council. That’s not what it is at
all. Politics has just one goal: to address men’s terrors.”
Verticality. Educated-class types like everything to be
horizontal. We like egalitarian manners and casual clothing and dislike
grandiose, gilt-edged ballrooms. The wolf, on the other hand, re-establishes
verticality. He is above you, in a grand palace, in a big office, commanding
others and dominating those beneath him.
What do people want when terrorist
attacks occur, when inflation seeps into the economy, when the world is in
flux? The authoritarian understands that they will rush to anyone who will
re-establish order, authority, hierarchy and control. As da Empoli writes,
“Vertical power offers the only satisfactory answer, the only one that can
appease man’s anxiety when exposed to the world’s ferocity.”
Unpredictability. The wolf centralizes power and generates fear among
those around him. He plays endless dominance games. His acolytes rise and fall
on his whim. He never admits error. He is unpredictable because nothing reduces
people to submission as quickly as the threat of random punishment. Any
technocrat can do the expected thing, but the wolf is the master of reckless
action: Putin invades Ukraine. Trump declares a trade war on the world. The
wolf has inherited systems with procedures and norms, but the wolf operates on
manual overdrive. The human brain is programmed to focus on the unexpected, so
you can never turn away.
Clarifying acts of
violence. The wolf needs to show he is the great
protector. That means he needs to show himself savagely destroying the forces
of evil, and if the forces aren’t big enough or threatening enough, he has to
exaggerate them. Putin built his power by attacking Islamic terrorists from
Chechnya. Trump goes after immigrants and alleged drug smugglers from
Venezuela.
Stoking and managing
anger. There is always a high level of
anger and resentment in any society. The wolf needs to find the right
scapegoats in order to manage and direct that anger. Putin turned on the
oligarch Mikhail Khodorkovsky because the people resented the oligarchs. Trump
turned on Musk because who really likes a guy who just got a $1 trillion dollar
pay package? Scapegoats can range from elite universities to Democratic
prosecutors to the corrupt generals in the Chinese or Saudi regimes, but they
will be found. Large portions of the public want the high to be brought low.
Digital Somalia. The real world may still have some rules that
preserve order. But online, it’s anarchy. It’s the conditions the U.S. Army
Rangers and Delta Force operators found in the movie “Black Hawk Down.” The
wolves support anything or anyone who will bring chaos: cyberattacks,
extremists, crypto crashes, misinformation and deep fakes. Antifa, antisemites
or groypers — they’re all equally useful. Anybody who maximizes chaos increases
public demand for wolfish protection.
Greatness. In the minds of the wolves, information-age elites
have shriveled souls. They have been trained to be pragmatic,
utility-maximizing drones. They offer voters materialistic snack food — a tax
credit here, a student loan program there. The wolves see themselves as those
who have not forgotten how to be a human being. They talk about greatness. They
believe that the people want to experience camaraderie and strength. They offer
those people a release from triviality, dreams of glory and honor. Mother
Russia. Make America Great Again. A Chinese century. God’s glory.
Throughout this column I’ve been
calling the authoritarians wolves. I mean it as an insult — predators who are
ravaging the world. But the authoritarians take it as a compliment. They know
they are wolves! But they believe the world needs wolves to protect the good,
decent people from the ruthless fancy people who are their actual enemies. And
here’s how authoritarianism feeds on itself: The more wolves there are in the
world, the more each nation needs to find its own.