It's easy to say that the rise of Trump shows how vital it is to have a sense of sacredness. Something about him and those like him makes the planet feel dirty.
The problem comes when your idea of sacred threatens mine. My reaction to Trump is similar to yours but for an awful lot of people in the US Trump actually stands for something - for want of a better word - sacred. Plenty on the religious right certainly identify with his values. After all, what is sacredness if not that which aligns with ones deepest values and sense of identity? In which case, might one not define the sacred as that which represents an extension of
me? Doesn't sound quite right like that though, does it!
Trump wants to remove protection from public monuments and national parks so that the land can be exploited for short term gains. Although this directly threatens what some feel is sacred, including many native Americans whose spirituality is bound up with the land, for others it is jobs now that matters - indeed, there remains a strong sense among many that the land is given to humans by God precisely so that it can be domesticated and exploited, as in the commandment in Genesis to subdue the earth.
Over here we have Brexit, which for some would seem to have reached an almost sacred importance - enough to warrant violence in the streets apparently. An issue that not so long ago was, so polls suggest, of only minor significance for most folk, is now the line that divides the nation in half. How did this happen? Facts seem to matter relatively little in the debate and changing circumstances are not significantly reflected in changing opinions, presumably because people have responded to the issue by making it a proxy for some kind of identity war which obviously predates the referendum but has found a new and vigorous expression in its outcome.
Looked at like this, perhaps sacredness is something of a double-edged sword. I certainly have some sympathy with the author of the old Zen poem who wrote, 'hold no opinions for or against anything. To set up what you like against what you dislike is the disease of the mind.' Trouble is I have strong opinions about Trump, and Brexit, and so much more. These opinions won't go away and, to be honest, they do feel very much like a dis-ease. Never mind - death will cure it all in due course!