99 Problems But A Functioning Government Ain’t One

It’s so tempting to believe that somehow we’re going to emerge stronger from this crisis. It’s so tempting to believe that we’re going to Be Better. That, somehow, we are going to be able to see the error of our ways, learn from our mistakes, and strive to make a more perfect union once the worst is over.

But what if we can’t?

I have a fairly idealistic liberal worldview. I believe that a strong nation is defined by having an educated, wealthy, healthy citizenry that understands and admires individual responsibility and accountability, and yet also grasps in a deep, fundamental way that we are all stronger when we work together. I believe that a government’s main responsibility is to invest in the lives of its citizens. That means I believe in a strongly regulated capitalistic society where basic standards of living such as education, childcare, and healthcare are easily accessible and as inexpensive as possible. I believe in taxing the shit out of the top 10%.

In short, I believe in everything that this country does not.

So as this pandemic sweeps across this nation like a brushfire across the Outback, it’s impossible not to look for silver linings on the black clouds of carnage.

For one, I think the anti-vaxx movement has peaked. I can’t imagine Jenny McCarthy getting booked on The View a year from now talking about how dangerous the coronavirus vaccine is. (Of course, just because I can’t imagine it doesn’t mean it won’t happen. Because if there is one thing our national media love it’s controversy.)

Another silver lining is that maybe this will be the death knell of the cruise ship industry. Journalists have been reporting for years on the pollution and filth that those floating cities are spewing into our planet’s precious oceans. Maybe this virus will force many of them to shutter operations. I’m sure our oceans would thank us for it if they could.

And then there are the political currents in the United States. An idealistic old liberal like me can’t help but look at this incompetent, grossly negligent, proudly corrupt administration and think that surely people will see the importance of good governance now. I was a child when Ronald Reagan said that the worst words anyone could hear were “I’m from the government and I’m here to help,” and everyone in this country since then has endured the painful legacy and devastating effects of that mindset. Surely, with the ineffectiveness of the federal government under Donald Trump on hideous display for every American, every citizen of the world, to see, surely people will now see that good government is a vital necessity. Surely.

But that hope presumes conservatives and libertarians will change their thinking because of this crisis. Expecting things to improve in government presumes that the voting public will rest its impartial gaze upon the leadership of Mitch McConnell and find it lacking.

And there is nothing built into the structure of these United States that leads me to believe that will happen.

The right-wing of this nation has its own self-sustaining universe. It has it’s own television network in Fox News. It has its own television station network in Sinclair Broadcasting. It has its own newspapers in everything owned by Rupert Murdoch and every other conservative rag in existence. It has think tanks. It has magazines. It has websites. It has radio personalities and podcasters, from Michael Savage to Joe Rogan. It has conservative columnists who get to add their voices to more neutral newspapers such as the New York Times and the Washington Post. It has provocateurs such as Roger Stone and whatever Jack Posobiec and Charlie Kirk are. And it has the churches. Oh, Lord, does it have the churches. And they all have one mission: To ignore the glaring problems inherent in laissez-faire capitalism and help the rich get richer. They do this by blaming everything they don’t like on the Democrats.

So I don’t know if the millions of citizens who are umbilically-latched onto that right-wing universe will suddenly realize that they’re affiliated with a sinking ship. I don’t think it’s going to work like that.

I fear that, once the pandemic subsides and we’re reviewing our dead, many things will happen, none of which I will view as “progress.” All of those conservative voices–the ones out there right now, blowing Trump’s horn, they’ll look at the number of dead and immediately start the “it would have been much worse without Trump” argument. Trump saved this nation. If it wasn’t for his firm action, more people would have died…it’s straight from the authoritarian playbook. Refuse to accept that mistakes were made. If you have to admit that mistakes were made, make sure you’re blaming your political opponents. Therefore, imagine all the Sean Hannitys and Laura Ingrahams and Rush Limbaughs of the world ruthlessly criticizing Democratic governors around the country.

The churches won’t be much help. Evangelical churches, for whatever reasons having to do with power and control and influence, they’ve cauterized themselves to Donald Trump’s breast. When he gets hot they sweat, they’re that closely linked. This pandemic–they’ve already established that it’s God’s will. They refuse to believe that any human reaction would have altered its course. If God wants you to live, you will live. So, when the crisis has passed and the churches are still standing, they will raise their hands to heaven and praise Donald Trump for being the human manifestation of God’s Will on Earth. And they’re not going to change their beliefs.

Every faction in this nation is going to see this pandemic as an opportunity to remake the world in its image. So, for every one of me there are, hoping this crisis gets us closer to universal healthcare, there will be a religious zealot convinced that this pandemic is a sign that the United States need to be disbanded altogether.

The belief that people are going to “come to their sense” after this crisis is over is the hope in humanity that I need to keep living in this dystopian society. It’s the silver lining that I need in order to be able to sleep at night. I need to hold onto Anne Frank’s belief that “in spite of everything, I still believe people are really good at heart.” Because we have to believe that. Because to accept the alternative–that this country has slipped into a irrevocable vortex of evil, one lacking of empathy, where compassion is mocked as a weakness, just as it was in Hitler’s Germany, where humanity is distilled down to its tribalistic essence of only having enough energy to care for one’s immediate family, shattering this society into some sort of Mad Max hellscape with warring factions fighting over precious resources–is to accept the death of the principles of the Enlightenment that have guided western civilization for four hundred years. And I just can’t do that.

But what if I can?

America’s Trump Card

Donald TrumpFor those who are not aware, the United States of America is less than nine months away from electing the president that will succeed Barack Obama in office. And while it is too early in the process to say definitively, by all appearances it looks as though the Republicans are going to choose The Donald as their candidate to stand against the Democratic Party’s choice, which in all likelihood will be Hillary Clinton.

I am simply an anonymous liberal American armed with a blog. I dropped out of college over 25 years ago. I have never made more than $40,000 a year. I am not a respected member of my community. Statistically, it is more likely that my body will go undiscovered for weeks when I die than it is that I will ever buy a new car. It goes without saying that I am overweight. I am, in a word, inconsequential. And fat.

Which means of course, using the up-is-down, black-is-white logic that currently grips fervent Republican primary voters, that there is no one more perfectly qualified to proffer up sage, thought-provoking opinions of one Donald J. Trump than I.

Without further ado, let me begin.

<In a scene reminiscent of Robert Durst in The Jinx, I take my blog with me to the bathroom, forgetting that my “mic” is still on. Under my breath, I can be heard saying>

What the fucking fuck, America? Who decided it was a good idea to let you morons vote?

<Emerging from the facilities after delicately washing my hands, I proceed with my stately analysis of the Trump presidential bid, unaware that my interior thoughts have been captured in print>

We’ve been through this before, people. You must remember, of course. Sixteen years ago, long before social media brought us disturbingly close to other people’s political opinions and conspiracy theories, some of us worried about another dipshit Republican candidate. His name was George Bush. People lovingly referred to him as “Dubya,” Perhaps you remember him. Some of us naysayers and, yes I confess I was one, worried that he wasn’t up for the job, that he wasn’t capable of deep intellectual thought, and we fretted about what would happen were he to actually win the election. We feared the worst, although you didn’t know that, as most of us didn’t have blogs at the time. Thankfully though, after his election, Dubya led America through eight years of unprecedented prosperity and peace, and all of us naysayers were proven wrong. Then some Kenyan name Barack Hussein Obama was elected and ruined America by creating Obamacare. (I may have some of details mixed up, but you get the gist. Nothing bad happens when you elect an blowhard. Lesson learned, America. Good job.)

I spend an inordinate amount of time thinking about Donald Trump. You may think I am exaggerating, but I assure you that in my free time, when I am not binge-watching something on Netflix or wondering if the DiGiorno pizza I put in the oven is done, I am thinking about this Donald Trump phenomenon. (I call it a “phenomenon” only because it’s surprising to see a rude, fat, white man with orange cotton candy for hair bully his way into the American consciousness. The hatred and anger that he articulates is not phenomenal.)

The angry white voter is hardly new. Why is America acting like this is a new thing? Seriously. Angry white voters were so common back in the 1850s that when a congressman almost beat a senator to death in the Capitol building using a cane, hundreds of them sent him replacement canes for the one he broke in the assault. I mean, say what you will about people applauding when Donald Trump says he wants to punch somebody in the face, but the applause seems quaint in comparison. I am not going to trace the history of the angry white voter for you tonight, but please realize that it has always been with us.

I think people are disturbed this election cycle because Donald Trump has smashed the veneer of respectability our presidential races typically have. The voters are supposed to be rabid and furious, not the nominees. Politicians have exploited people’s fears for generations…but it’s been done obliquely. Subtly. In code. Ronald Reagan, for example, didn’t come right out and say he hated black people, he simply announced his presidential campaign in the town of Philadelphia, Mississippi. That’s a strange out of the way place to hold such an important event, until you remember that Philadelphia, Mississippi was where three civil rights workers were murdered. That’s the way presidential politics is supposed to be run in America: smooth and on the down low. Donald Trump blows that subtlety to smithereens. Mexicans are rapists and all Muslims will be banned from entering the country. Oh, and he is going to take a serious look at banning same-sex marriage, too. He’s going to kick ass and take names because he’s mad as hell and he isn’t going to take it anymore. And people are lapping this shit up. This billionaire prick who calls getting a million dollars from his daddy a “little” loan has people convinced that he’s Howard Beale speaking truth to power.

American leaders aren’t supposed to been seen deliberately stoking the fires of unrest. America has always been hyper-vigilant about mob violence. Undoubtedly the roots of that fear can be traced back to our slave-holding ancestors. The question is whether or not it is healthy for the country to experience this anger so openly during a political season. I mean sure, four years after Preston Brooks beat the shit out of Charles Sumner in Congress in 1856, America found itself embroiled in a Civil War, but I’m sure that was just a coincidence. I am sure that openly expressing hostility and rage while refusing to calm down or accept rational responses in return is perfectly healthy in a democracy. It’s just a healthy exercise of our first amendment rights.

I’m sure we have nothing to worry about.