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Democracy challenged, Capitol, January 6th 2021
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Jon Ossoff |
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Martin Luther King Jr. and Raphael Warnock |
I have
long winced at hearing Americans claim to have the greatest democracy
on earth; usually I have tolerantly, benignly, attributed this
fondly to the usual American penchant for having to feel the best,
the biggest, the greatest. But that fond tolerance bit the dust years
ago; four to be precise. Since Trump appeared legitimately on the
American political scene, I have grown more and more hostile to the
very idea of American-ness, unable to believe that so many millions
could vote for a person so manifestly unfit in every way, to be
President. At each appalling act or pronouncement, I have felt
angrier and angrier and more and more dislocated in every way, from
anything American. And this is a country where I have family and very
dear friends and where I have spent such happy times in the past. I
could not have visited the U.S. had Trump clung to power. And,
frankly, had the destructive power of Covid19 not intervened
powerfully, almost certainly he would have been re-elected. Imagine
the mayhem and carnage of that scenario. Painful to imagine based on
the history of the last four years. Every single day, we all awoke to
the latest crass tweet or series of tweets; to impulsive, implicitly
nonsensical or explicitly malign announcements of proposed policy changes or intentions;
another irrelevant or supremacist idea from the latest screwball who had
sucked up to Trump; almost unhinged rants from various of the Trump
tribe; assertions that black was white this week, and that apparently
intended policies were suddenly being overturned in yet another
upheaval which further turned friend against friend, and family
member against others in the family. Small wonder that the New York
Times had one front page headline:
A
nation united in its fatigue post Jan 20.
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Former Lord of Misrule. |
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Stacey Abrams, organising Supremo in Georgia. |
Early
on Jan 6th the first of the day’s shocking events occurred; Raphael Warnock,
the black senior pastor of the Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta
where Martin Luther King had reigned in earlier times, was elected to
one of the two Senate seats for Georgia. Later that day, he was
followed by Democrat Jon Ossoff winning the second Georgia seat. All
this after Joe Biden had won the State in the
Presidential
election; all three
by
tiny majorities it is true but
nonetheless, all in the heart of the former Confederacy.
These victories were the results of both
population change and especially, grass-roots
organisation over
the last decade, to
register
black voters and educate them into the importance of actually voting
to
get out the Democratic vote, principally the black vote so long
suppressed under Republicans. But it presented a consistent picture
for Georgian Republicans; however slim each majority, there is an
emerging political and electoral reality here.
Elections cannot be relied upon to produce the desired results in
the face of demographic change and the increasing black franchise.
Presumably this lent an extra charge to the force exhibited that
same
January
6 day at the Capitol. Force
just might obstruct the future the crowd feared and put Trump back in
the White House with his reliable far right nationalism, his racism,
his fake news in which he so fervently believed and his naked white
supremacism. But
it wasn’t until January 6 that I finally realised that all the Trumpery nonsense really
disguised Actual Insurrectional Intent. And that the Hollow Man actually believed in his fantasies. |
Ted Cruz Rioter, examining documents, said, "Ted Cruz would want us to do this." |
The
insurrection was planned for the day and the hour when the electoral
college vote was in process, and Trump had helpfully, and knowingly,
stirred up the anger
and sense of betrayal of the
8.000 people in the crowd listening to him, and
helpful crusaders like Giuliani and Don Junior,
outside the White House, before sending them off to stop, violently,
the authentication of the largely ceremonial vote accepting
the Electoral College result.
[147
Republicans voted against acceptance of that vote following a chiefly
fault-free, fraud-free, frankly
exemplary
process] He
will be impeached but there is doubt as to whether the Democrats will
be able to persuade the necessary 17 Republicans to vote with them.
So this is where my incredulity explodes. Openly, defiantly, these
elected lawmakers will cast blatantly dishonest votes to stop the
lawful |
Josh Hawley |
impeachment of a damaged, violent
man responsible
for the assault on Congress by thousands of insurrectionists,
leaving him free if he so chooses, to stand for public office again
and
incite possibly millions.
How IS it that law-makers
feel free to do that and
ordinary people, ordinary voters, don’t find this reprehensible?
Presumably
because they all
like
what he stands for and what he does. They too want the status quo
ante bellum because white supremacy has been How Things Have
Always
Worked.
So,
how
is it possible to describe the U.S.A. as a democracy?
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Joe Biden Cometh the hour, cometh the man. |
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