Michael Gerson writes that American politics is now being conducted under the threat of violence:
Rep. Liz Cheney (R-Wyo.), who has a talent for constructive bluntness, describes a political atmosphere within the GOP heavy with fear. “If you look at the vote to impeach,” she said recently, “there were members who told me that they were afraid for their own security — afraid, in some instances, for their lives.” The events of Jan. 6 have only intensified the alarm. When Donald Trump insists he is “still the rightful president,” Cheney wrote in an op-ed for The Post, he “repeats these words now with full knowledge that exactly this type of language provoked violence on Jan. 6.”
Violence is at Donald Trump's core:
Trump has made a point of encouraging violence against protesters at his rallies (“knock the crap out of them”), excusing violence by his supporters (people "with tremendous passion and love for their country”) and generally acting like a two-bit mob boss. He publicly supported Kyle Rittenhouse, the teenager charged with homicide in the killing of two people in Kenosha, Wis. (Rittenhouse has pleaded not guilty.) He embraced Mark and Patricia McCloskey for brandishing guns at peaceful marchers in St. Louis. He deployed federal security forces to break heads in Lafayette Square.
That violence exploded on January 6th. Now, Republicans who were targets of that violence are trying to bury an investigation into it. And they are desperately seeking to change the rules around elections to ensure their rule -- even though that rule is supported by a clear minority. The signs are not good:
Compared with the utter chaos of previous efforts, this time there seems to be a strategy at work. First, undermine Republican confidence in the electoral system and stoke the party’s sense of grievance. Second, modify state election laws to try to discourage Democratic (and particularly minority) turnout. Third, replace or intimidate state election officials who show any hints of independence or integrity.
The first goal has been achieved: In a recent poll, more than two-thirds of Republicans denied the legitimacy of Joe Biden’s election as president. Results on the second goal (so far) have been mixed. Republican “reforms” have made the system marginally less fair than the status quo, but not quite as bad as some feared.
The third goal is where the threat of violence has mattered most. Officials who held the line against electoral corruption in 2020 have been worn down by threats. Some have retired or been forced out of office. State legislators who didn’t act as reliable partisans have been targeted and intimidated. All who resist Trump’s will know they will be singled out by name. They will be exposed to political jeopardy and physical peril, particularly from activists who view the right to bear arms as the right to make armed threats.
The signs don't look good. There's a bad moon rising.
Image: The Arts Fuse
4 comments:
Isn't this America's descent into tribalism? Who needs truth and reason when you can incite, inflame emotion? Emotion - fear, anger, distrust - needs neither fact nor reason. All it requires is a gathering of people willing to believe and a core of individuals, mongers of fear and hate.
Today's America is a fearful and hateful place. Not everyone. Not everywhere. All that's required is a critical mass of individuals to keep the fires burning, exploiting every opportunity to drive wedges even deeper. It becomes an "us versus them" reality in which people are almost compelled to choose a side.
None of this should come as a surprise. It's happened before.
It's Lord Of The Flies on a much bigger island, Mound. One side is determined to exterminate its enemies by burning down the island.
America has been at war with itself since it's existence; whats changed?
America is too big to succeed much like the defunct USSR.
The EU offered a subtle difference to the model but failed upon the throne of British racism.
TB
And it's racism -- then and now -- that has always been the reason the republic has stumbled, TB.
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