While I thrill at the Democratic victory and savor the
moment of the Biden/Harris win, the presidential election was close.
Why is this nation divided still split right down the middle as
significantly as it was in 1860, the dawn of the Civil War.
Donald
Trump did not get the majority of votes but he surely did get enough to
leave some of us scratching our heads as to why. Trump to me was the
most corrupt, most mendacious, the most sadistic, the meanest, most self
inflated narcissist to ever hold the nation's highest office -- the
presidency. What was Trump's appeal to so many -- mostly white men but
not all -- in this our representative democracy?
The
half that supported him were satisfied with the obvious democratic
carnage as he rode roughshod over our founders' greatest bestowal -- the
balance of power. He and his democracy destroying minions were
satisfied with his rude insulting tweets, his labeling of the most
respected news organizations as fake news crushing truth, his embrace of
anyone or anything that supported him including the right wing hate
extremist terrorist groups like the neo Nazis and others who raised
their arms in a Nazi-like salute shouting "Hail Trump." He told us some
of the marchers in Charlottesville shouting "Jews will not replace us"
were "very fine people" and that the Proud Boys,
a right wing extremist terrorist group, should stand back and stand by
ready to help him if he needed their help. No, none of them were very
fine people. His supporters did not flinch an inch when he described
the military dead as "losers and suckers" or that John McCain was not a
hero because he was "captured." Trump said "I like people who were not
captured" -- this coming from the draft dodger Sergeant Bone Spurs Trump
who got away with everything because no one held him to account for
anything nefarious he did, even paying someone to take the college
boards for him. The rules simply did not apply.
His
enablers, the entirety of the Republican Party feared him so much so
even in the face of impeachable offenses such as the abuse of power,
contempt of Congress, and subverting the rule of law they refused to
find him guilty and remove him from office even though clear impeachable
offenses were committed. In the face of numerous corruptions,
illegalities and unconstitutional actions, Trump got away seemingly with
it all as America became weary of it all. Why would one half of
America choose to ignore 250 years of a democratic experiment, often the
envy of the world, and support a leader who was a human wrecking ball
to a democratic system with designs on power far greater than even two
terms as president. Why? I can only guess.
I feared Trump
because of the lessons other fascist states can teach. Fascism can
happen anywhere and nearly happened here. How many times have I asked
myself how could a bastion of intellect and a nation of learning that
was Germany raise its arms in the Nazi salute for a totalitarian
demagogue and mass murderer that was Adolph Hitler. If it could happen
there as I looked at Trump and thought it surely can happen here.
"You
have a republic," said Ben Franklin, if you can keep it." Democracy
stands by a fragile Constitutional thread. It can be lost more easily
than it was created. All it takes is the will to erase it and a leader
that takes advantage of that will.
The
two ingredients of Fascism that create the poison of its elixir are
nationalism in extremis and hate. Most all of us are nationalistic that
is most of us love our country but most of us do not hate so much that
we would use our love of country to promote and adhere to a doctrine of
hatred and the personification of it through violence.
Both
Trump and the haters that supported him seem strong but they are not
strong they are weak. Hundreds of years from the first slave ship,
through the viciousness of Jim Crow up until our present time the
vestiges of that hate in our present era resided in the presidency of
Donald Trump. Trump gave one half of the nation the green light to hate
-- to hate Black Lives Matter,
to hate the black/brown immigrant and fear a loss of American
whiteness, to hate the loss of the Civil War, to hate the advancement of
black rights and to hate the other whatever or whomever the other may
be. From the loss of the Civil War, to the growth of American foreign
policy criticism which saw America
as not as the exceptional nation it said it was, conservatives have
devoted years assembling power to overrule liberal thought and changes
no matter how just and fair those changes were.
In
the end, this nation showed its exceptionalism because the greatest
threat to its democracy, a second election of Donald Trump, was
thwarted. This election shows that this nation is a democracy in the
fabric and the sinews of its being but that we must be ever vigilant to
keep it strong because tyranny can happen anywhere even here!