By Richard Martin, Chief Strategist, Alcera Consulting Inc.
The chaos is the point.
Introduction
Political chaos is often interpreted as failure—of leadership, of institutions, of consensus. But chaos can also be a strategic weapon. This article argues that what appears as disorder on the surface may function as a calculated strategy deployed by counter-elites to seize control of their society’s dynamic trajectory. Drawing on Graeme Snooks’s theory of dynamic strategy, Peter Turchin’s model of elite overproduction, and the political rise of Donald Trump, we propose a synthesis that reframes political volatility as a tool of systemic transformation. This framework helps explain how insurgent elites exploit breakdowns in institutional legitimacy and channel popular discontent to reorient national strategy around new principles, priorities, and power structures.
Theoretical Foundations
Snooks: Dynamic Strategy and Counter-Elite Seizure
Graeme Snooks, in The Dynamic Society, identifies history as the interplay between dominant strategies and the social forces that sustain or disrupt them. A society’s dynamic strategy refers to its core mechanism of adaptation—a coherent blend of economic, political, and cultural patterns that propel long-term development.
When the dominant elite becomes rigid, self-serving, or disconnected from emergent challenges, it loses adaptive capacity. At this point, counter-elites—those with resources and ambition but excluded from central power—may exploit rising disorder to challenge the existing strategy. Chaos becomes their lever: not a lapse in order but a tactic to paralyze incumbent elites, delegitimize their rule, and pave the way for a strategic reset.
Turchin: Elite Overproduction and Intra-Elite Conflict
Peter Turchin’s structural-demographic theory outlines a cyclical model of societal stress, in which elite overproduction plays a central role. When societies produce more elite aspirants than there are elite positions, competition intensifies. Their resulting relative impoverishment and exclusion from power and influence breeds resentment and fractures the elite class.
Dispossessed elites then seek to mobilize popular grievances—against economic inequality, cultural alienation, or institutional decay—to advance their own claim to power. This convergence of mass discontent and elite rivalry produces an unstable political landscape where radical change becomes not only possible but structurally probable.
Trump as a Case Study in Strategic Disorder
Counter-Elite Origins
Donald Trump did not emerge from the traditional political class. Though wealthy and well-known, he remained outside the institutional networks that traditionally govern U.S. policy. His trajectory from business and entertainment into populist politics mirrors the profile of a counter-elite: someone with resources, visibility, and ambition, but lacking control over the prevailing strategic direction.
Tactical Chaos as Operating Method
Trump’s political rise and governance have been marked by unpredictability, provocation, and norm breaking. From Twitter diplomacy to tariff whiplash, his actions routinely bypassed conventional institutions, weaponized media cycles, and framed volatility as strength. His April 9th, 2025, tariff reversal is emblematic: after initiating a global trade war with sweeping tariffs, Trump abruptly paused most tariffs and reduced rates, triggering historic market rallies. This manoeuvre, chaotic on the surface, shifted the narrative from instability to command, reframing volatility as a demonstration of power.
Aligning Mass and Elite Discontent
Trump’s coalition blends working-class grievances with elite alienation. His rhetoric targets both globalist institutions and domestic bureaucracies, while symbolically elevating those who feel disenfranchised by the post-Cold War consensus. In doing so, he channels economic, cultural, and symbolic dissatisfaction into a force capable of disrupting the existing order—not only from below, but from above.
Structural Analysis: Strategic Disorder as Systemic Reset
Delegitimizing the Old Order
Strategic disorder functions by dissolving the perceived legitimacy of incumbent institutions. When chaos is persistent, it produces cognitive overload and narrows public trust. The arbiters of stability—mainstream media, technocratic agencies, international alliances—begin to appear ineffectual or complicit. The counter-elite capitalizes on this erosion to offer a new organizing principle: nationalism, reciprocity, charismatic authority, or populist realism.
Reconstructing the Dynamic Strategy
The purpose of strategic disorder is not destruction but replacement. The emerging elite must offer a vision of coherence to supplant the shattered consensus. Trump’s vision, however fragmented, replaces multilateralism with transactionalism, proceduralism with outcome-based legitimacy, and institutional mediation with direct leader-follower relationships. The old dynamic strategy of global liberalism gives way to a new one grounded in economic nationalism and symbolic sovereignty.
Implications and Future Trajectories
Stabilization or Escalation?
Strategic disorder may enable elite realignment, but it does not guarantee stability. If counter-elites fail to institutionalize their new strategy, the system remains vulnerable to further fragmentation. Conversely, if they succeed in establishing new norms and structures, a period of re-consolidation may follow—though it may bear little resemblance to the old order.
Comparative Reflections
The Trump case is not isolated. Similar dynamics are visible in Brazil (Bolsonaro), Hungary (Orbán), Argentina (Milei), and other nations where counter-elites exploit systemic strain to alter national trajectories. These movements suggest a global pattern: the use of chaos not as an aberration, but as a mechanism of strategic adaptation.
Conclusion
“Trump chaos” is not merely a style of governance or a symptom of dysfunction. It is the operational expression of a deeper structural realignment. By synthesizing Snooks’s concept of dynamic strategy with Turchin’s model of elite overproduction, we understand chaos as signal, not noise. It marks a shift in the logic of strategic control: from institutional consensus to performative disruption, from stability to volatility-as-strategy.
Understanding this transformation is critical. We are not just witnessing a series of political events. We are watching the reset of who governs, how they govern, and by what story they justify their rule.
About the Author
Richard Martin is the founder and president of Alcera Consulting Inc., a strategic advisory firm specializing in exploiting change (www.exploitingchange.com). Richard’s mission is to empower top-level leaders to exercise strategic foresight, navigate uncertainty, drive transformative change, and build individual and organizational resilience, ensuring market dominance and excellence in public governance. He is the author of Brilliant Manoeuvres: How to Use Military Wisdom to Win Business Battles. He is also the developer of Worldview Warfare and Strategic Epistemology, a groundbreaking methodology that focuses on understanding beliefs, values, and strategy in a world of conflict, competition, and cooperation.
© 2025 Richard Martin
Discover more from Exploiting Change
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.