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asides

Don’t Fool Yourself, Trump is Not an Aberration

From Don’t Fool Yourself, Trump is Not an Aberration:

For as much as it seems that Donald Trump has changed something about the character of this country, the truth is he hasn’t. What is terrible about Trump is also terrible about the United States. Everything we’ve seen in the last four years — the nativism, the racism, the corruption, the wanton exploitation of the weak and unconcealed contempt for the vulnerable — is as much a part of the American story as our highest ideals and aspirations.

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asides

Trump Proved That Authoritarians Can Get Elected in America

From Trump Proved That Authoritarians Can Get Elected in America:

Make no mistake: The attempt to harness Trumpism—without Trump, but with calculated, refined, and smarter political talent—is coming. And it won’t be easy to make the next Trumpist a one-term president. He will not be so clumsy or vulnerable. He will get into office less by luck than by skill.

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politics

Celebrating With An Anxious Mind

It is 3:19 PM EST on November 7, 2020. I just returned from a therapeutic dispensary (curbside pick-up while masked), where I retrieved a self-prescribed package of medicinal-grade cannabis. It has been over a week since I last took my prescription. I take it for anxiety. 

As the man said, “Looks like I picked the wrong week to quit sniffing glue.”

But now it is Saturday, and I have returned from the therapeutic dispensary, and the people of planet Earth have been introduced to President-Elect Joseph Biden and Vice-President-Elect Kamala Harris.

My very first thought upon hearing the news was, “C’mon, Georgia.” See, when you have an anxiety disorder, you don’t get to experience the same level of relief and enjoyment as everyone else; instead, your anxiety leaps to the next closest obstacle.

You might think I’d be anxious about the Supreme Court. After all, President Trump and the Republicans out-shamed themselves to rush Associate Justice Barrett onto the bench for just this purpose: to side with the Republican Party if and when the validity of the Presidential Election come before the Court. While the Republicans already had a majority on the Court, Chief Justice Roberts’ decisions have raised some valid concerns about his willingness to rule from a place of naked partisanship, so they appointed and confirmed Justice Barrett to the Court to ensure the Republicans a favorable outcome. 

Justice Barrett’s decision to recuse herself from the pre-election case in Pennsylvania gave me hope that the Republican leadership misread the strength of her character, although I am not delusional enough to imagine her loyalty to the Constitution will override her loyalty to the Party if a particular case provides her with the moral wiggle room to avoid her Catholic guilt.

While the Republicans on the Supreme Court could still reveal the partisan horrorshow beneath their dignified black robes, even my anxiety has too much faith in democratic institutions to fall into that abyss.

Our democratic institutions,  unfortunately, also include the United States Senate, which has been controlled since 2015 by Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell. Senator McConnell famously led The Party of No during the Obama Administration, which was a “daring (though cynical and political) no-honeymoon strategy of all-out resistance” to the Democratic majority’s agenda. He is also the first Senate Majority Leader since the Civil War era to deny a president the right to fill an open seat on the Supreme Court. 

As it stands, experts predict the Republican Party to retain control of the Senate for the 117th United States Congress, but their prediction rests on the likelihood of the two special elections in Georgia resulting in two more Republican members being added to the Senate in January. With Alaska and North Carolina almost guaranteed to send two Republican members as well, the outcome of the Georgian special elections will determine which political party controls the Senate. 

I find hope against that happening in the surprising results of the presidential election in Georgia, where the Democratic candidate defeated the Republican candidate by (as of the afternoon of November 7th) roughly 12,000 votes.

I also find hope in Stacey Abrams, a Georgian who parleyed her gubernatorial defeat in 2018 into a powerful force for fair elections and who deserves the lion’s share of the credit for the surprising results in Georgia. 

Political strategists expect the two parties to spend upwards of $200 million on the two special elections. I don’t know anything about the four candidates who will be facing off, but each race has a Republican running against a Democrat, and I don’t want Senator McConnell and the Republican party to continue their stranglehold on progress.

So yes, it is a Saturday night, President Trump has been defeated at the ballot box, my self-prescribed anxiety-soothing herb is back in the house, and I’m about to leave to celebrate the nation’s victory around a campfire with my family, friends, and neighbors, but still, the anxious voice in my head won’t stop repeating the phrase, “C’mon, Georgia.”

Categories
politics

No More Years

It is morning on the eastern coast of the United States of America on Election Day in the year 2020. Over 100 million Americans have already submitted their ballot to their local officials, and the media estimates over 150 million Americans will cast their votes before the day is complete. With roughly 255 million eligible voters spread throughout the country, the participation of 150 million voters would give this election a participation rate of roughly 58%, making it the highest turnout since the election between former Vice-President Richard Nixon (R) and incumbent Vice-President Hubert Humphrey (D) in the tumultuous year of 1968.

I am one of the 100 million Americans who voted early this election, having mailed my Vermont ballot to my town clerk early last week. My wife plans on voting in person later this afternoon. I decided to vote early because, as a teacher of dozens of students whose families are doing who knows what in terms of protecting themselves from the coronavirus, I run the risk of having been exposed, and I want to limit any potential exposure that our polling-station volunteers (virtually all of whom are elderly) have to face today. My wife, on the other hand, feels it is symbolically important for her to cast her vote in person, and I respect her decision.

As a resident of solid-blue Vermont, the outcome of our votes in the Electoral College is as close to a foregone conclusion as one can have in our messy democracy. I fully expect (as does everyone else) that former Vice-President Joe Biden will receive our state’s three electoral votes. If you read this blog on the regular, you won’t be surprised to learn I cast my vote to help make the pundits’ prediction a reality.

While I put my mark next to their names, I was not voting for former Vice-President Biden and Senator Harris. I suspect former V.P. Biden will make a passable president and Senator Harris will make a serviceable vice president (in that she will continue to have a pulse and she will break in the direction I favor if there are tie votes in the Senate), but if I had my druthers, I would have voted for Senators Elizabeth Warren or Bernie Sanders, the two Democratic candidates I most favored in the primaries. 

Instead of voting for the Democratic nominees, however, I voted against giving President Trump and Vice-President Pence another four years of power. Some of my Republican-leaning friends have argued against this particular stance, asking for me (and others who feel like me) to defend our votes without referencing the Republican incumbents, but I don’t accept their premise.

It’s just as important to keep the wrong people out of power as it is to put the right people into power.

Our country has shown that, for the most part, its democracy can survive corrupt politicians, white supremacists, serial sexual assaultersparanoid and insecure old men, connections to organized crime, and even secession, and I have complete faith that former Vice-President Biden’s administration of the executive branch will be just as palatable as virtually any other of the non-great men who have held the title of President over the office’s 231 years of history.

But I have serious doubts that it will survive the reëlection of President Trump. The most pressing concern is the Trump Administration’s response to the coronavirus. In September, the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists wrote that “through his actions and inactions, this callous, self-absorbed president and his administration are responsible—by standard statistical measures—for well over half of all US coronavirus deaths.” In other words, over 111,000 Americans are dead today because Donald J. Trump is the overseer of the executive branch of the United States government.

The second most pressing concern is this administration’s denial of the existential threat that is human-caused climate change. Policies enacted by President Trump and his partners in the Republican party  have, as one scientist put it, locked in “permanent, irreversible damage to our environment[, and] once we go beyond key tipping points…there is no going back.”

This administration’s weakening of fuel-efficiency standards, removal of national coal-power regulations, opening of gas and oil drilling on federal lands and offshore, support of oil pipelines in protected areas, withdrawal from the Paris Climate Accords, loosening of restrictions on methane emissions, refusal to send the Kigali Agreement to the Senate for ratification, and so much more, threatens to destroy the lives and livelihoods of millions of Americans over the next several decades, not to mention the national security of the United States (see Sec. 335 of the National Defense Authorization Act of 2018).  

To President Trump’s coronavirus response and tragic stance on environmental regulations, we must also add his rhetorical and legal challenges to the country’s democratic institutions, including his incitement of violence against members of the free press, his repeated calls for the extrajudicial incarceration of his political opponents, his flirtation with ignoring the 22nd Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, his refusal to address the racism inherent in so many of the nation’s systems, his tacit and not-so-tacit support of violent white supremacists, his recruitment website to organize illegal militias (a Trump Army) to secure the integrity of the voting process (rather than trusting state and local governments to do it), his repeated calls for his subordinates to make a loyalty oath to him and to uphold that oath rather than the one they made to the Constitution, and so much more.

I fully believe — and all evidence supports the belief — that President Trump is dangerous

While I might not be a full-throated supporter of the Biden/Harris ticket, I am a full-throated opponent of four more years of President Trump. 

If you are one of the 50+ million Americans who have not yet cast your ballot today, I beg of you: please vote for anyone other than President Trump.

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asides

The Coming Conflict

From What If Trump Refuses to Concede:

We talk about it, some worry about it, and we imagine what it would be. But few people have actual answers to what happens if the machinery of democracy is used to prevent a legitimate resolution to the election.

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asides

Trump isn’t thinking. He’s selling.

From The Trump Era Sucks and Needs to be Over:

The question, “What is Trump thinking?” is the wrong one. He’s not thinking, he’s selling. What’s he selling? Whatever pops into his head. The beauty of politics from his point of view, compared to every other damn thing he’s sold in his life — steaks, ties, pillows, college degrees, chandeliers, hotels, condominiums, wine, eyeglasses, deodorant, perfume (SUCCESS by Trump!), mattresses, etc. — is that there’s no product. The pitch is the product, and you can give different pitches to different people and they all buy.

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asides

Biden is Not Obama

From ‘The President Was Not Encouraging’: What Obama Really Thought About Biden:

“Biden doesn’t come from the wonky angle of leadership,” said a senior Obama administration official. “It’s different than the last two Democratic presidents. Biden is from a different style. It’s an older style, of Franklin Roosevelt and Lyndon Johnson of ‘Let’s meet, let’s negotiate, let’s talk, let’s have a deal.’”