Tom Friedman writes that the terrible experiment is over:
We just survived something really crazy awful: four years of a president without shame, backed by a party without spine, amplified by a network without integrity, each pumping out conspiracy theories without truth, brought directly to our brains by social networks without ethics — all heated up by a pandemic without mercy.
It’s not that Trump never did anything good. It’s that it was nowhere near worth the price of leaving our nation more divided, more sick — and with more people marinated in conspiracy theories — than at any time in modern history. We need to be simultaneously reunited, deprogrammed, refocused and reassured. The whole country needs to go on a weekend retreat to rediscover who we are and the bonds that unite us — or at least once did.
During his four years in office, Trump never ceased to surprise. But his surprises were of a particular kind. He knew no bottom. And, each day, he surprised the world by continuing to sink to the worst of all possibilities. Friedman believes that Americans need to continue to be surprised. But they need to experience the good they can do:
I honestly think we can again be our best selves, but it’s on all of us to make it happen. How so?
Upside surprises are a hugely underrated force in politics and diplomacy. They are what break bonds of pessimism and push out the boundaries of what we think possible. They remind us that the future is not our fate, but a choice — to let the past bury the future or the future bury the past.
I have been watching Mitt Romney repeatedly put his oath to defend the Constitution ahead of his party and personal political interests. Along the way, we’ve gotten to know each other. We don’t agree on everything, but there’s mutual respect. Romney recently introduced me for a speech I gave virtually to a bipartisan climate action coalition in Utah. That surprised some people, and maybe made them look at the whole issue differently. It’s surprising what can happen when we surprise for the better.
Liz Cheney just totally surprised me on the upside last week by putting country and Constitution before party and personal ambition and voting to impeach Trump. I knew her when she worked on Middle East democracy issues. Makes me want to reconnect.
Last May, after the death of George Floyd at the hands of the police, the rapper Killer Mike was enlisted by Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms to help quell the violence in Black neighborhoods. He surprised me when he scolded violent Atlanta protesters:
“It is your duty not to burn your own house down for anger with an enemy. It is your duty to fortify your own house so that you may be a house of refuge in times of organization. And now is the time to plot, plan, strategize, organize and mobilize. It is time to beat up prosecutors you don’t like at the voting booth. It is time to hold mayoral offices accountable, chiefs and deputy chiefs. …
It's certain that the future will be full of surprises. What matters is the kind of surprises that await us.
Image: LTC News
4 comments:
A culture that gives a racist imbecile like Thomas Friedman a career is a culture that produces a Trump presidency.
I don't agree with everything Friedman writes, thwap. But he's neither a racist nor an imbecile. Are you sure you're not confusing him with Milton Friedman?
I don't read Friedman but as an amusing aside there is a non-ISO unit of time called a “Friedman unit.” “Friedman Unit"
At least he doesn't claim infallibility, jrk. In year-end columns, he has admitted his mistakes. He does not claim infallibility.
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