Perhaps this will be hard to read. Laments often are.
It may bring you comfort, or it may make you angry. It may make you think more of me, or less. It may offend you. Rest assured, it offends me.
So be it.
This is fine. |
This is fine. |
That’s a short list. It’s a hell of a short list.
But wait, listen: The people went for it.
Tens of millions of people voted to make him the most powerful man in the world. He will soon have the ability to
blast the planet to an irradiated cinder, if he sees fit. He will continue to
run his business, which appears to involve sitting in a golden throne and putting his names on things. He's given every indication, despite some laughably thin feints toward divestment, he will run that business from the Oval Office. Maybe he’ll even put his name on new things, like laws. Laws:
a whole new product line for Trump International, and a potentially lucrative one. He owes
the banks of foreign powers millions
and millions of dollars. One wonders what laws they’ll want passed. Word is, his first foreign trip will be to visit Vladimir Putin. Heigh-ho.
His party is in control, too. They don't seem bothered by any of this. They're a bit more focused on providing checks and balances upon ethics watchdogs who have pointed out their party leader's multifarious and historically unprecedented infractions. They'd rather ignore those, so they can immediately—immediately—get down to the serious business of divesting millions and millions of the most vulnerable people in our society from the only chance they have at affordable health coverage. They plan to replace this program with something...someday. Their speculation so far indicates they will be replacing it with the opportunity to save up hundreds of thousands of dollars to pay for medical bills if you need them someday, or, if you don't have hundreds of thousands of spare dollars, to maybe go screw yourself. So, a lot of people are going to die in coming years, that would otherwise have lived, and they're rushing to make it happen. My, look at them laugh.
Meanwhile, they're ignoring as peccadilloes the caricatured infractions of a man who intends to keep his own private security detail around him, who expounds upon provable lies, and then when exposed simply doubles down on the lie, who is considering throwing the press out of the White House, and other maneuvers straight out of the dictator handbook. It's really something to see.
It's a new order, trumping the old. Isn't it great again?
His party is in control, too. They don't seem bothered by any of this. They're a bit more focused on providing checks and balances upon ethics watchdogs who have pointed out their party leader's multifarious and historically unprecedented infractions. They'd rather ignore those, so they can immediately—immediately—get down to the serious business of divesting millions and millions of the most vulnerable people in our society from the only chance they have at affordable health coverage. They plan to replace this program with something...someday. Their speculation so far indicates they will be replacing it with the opportunity to save up hundreds of thousands of dollars to pay for medical bills if you need them someday, or, if you don't have hundreds of thousands of spare dollars, to maybe go screw yourself. So, a lot of people are going to die in coming years, that would otherwise have lived, and they're rushing to make it happen. My, look at them laugh.
Republican lawmakers sign legislation to repeal ACA and defund women's health care access through Planned Parenthood, January 2016 |
It's a new order, trumping the old. Isn't it great again?
Laura Ingraham, speaker at the Republican National Convention, 2016. |
But I don’t want to think that of my country or my fellow
citizens. I really want it to be something else. Let us consider other
possibilities.
Many seem to think that a great thing about him was his
frankness. They liked that he “tells it the way it is.” Then again, those same
people seemed most likely to think that he didn’t really mean his more shocking
proposals. It’s a bit confusing, then, parsing what is meant by ‘telling it
like it is,' as it appears to rely on selective trust in insincerity. Many voters, excited by promises to “drain the swamp,” but now
disappointed by the recent appointment of a Goldman Sachs foreclosure kingpin
to Treasury, of a Putin-connected oil executive to State, and by other signals the new president has given about his
eagerness to rob us all blind, have
been admonished by a key advisor for taking his words so literally.
The 'alt-right' Neo Nazis and the KKK are very excited, for what it’s worth, about the more shocking proposals, and they remain confident our new leader meant every word.
The 'alt-right' Neo Nazis and the KKK are very excited, for what it’s worth, about the more shocking proposals, and they remain confident our new leader meant every word.
You're really going to want to go to video on this one. |
KKK Newspaper, The Crusader, endorses Trump. |
Many seem to have mainly enjoyed that he wasn’t Hillary
Clinton, and it’s certainly true to say many concerns and criticisms could be
levied against her. But the man they voted for as an alternative already stood
actualized as the cartoon parody of any potential danger she may have
hypothetically posed. Bad judgment? Corruption? Fraud? A proclivity to
violent retaliation? A worry about temperament? Untrustworthiness? Lack of transparency?
It’s hard to believe this all had much to do with Hillary Clinton and her
faults. Hard to believe this list of concerns would yours, but your acceptable alternative would be Donald Trump.
Or maybe they believed the more lurid stories, the debunked,
the ridiculous. Hillary’s murdered 80 people close to her. She invented
cancer and put it in your cell phone battery. She is secretly seven tiny demons
all stacked up in a pantsuit and glued together with the blood of aborted
fetuses. She controls the Yosemite supervolcano, along with a cabal comprised
of George Soros and 17 other Jewish industrialists. I don’t know what all.
I know there are people like this, who have seceded from objective reality into
a dystopian alternate dimension, where they can perhaps supplement the
powerlessness they feel in their lives with the comfort of false control, of
being one of the few with the secret knowledge unavailable to the masses. I
don’t know what to do with them, because they live in an alternate dimension.
And, it must be said, I don’t think there are 63 million of them.
So here we are. In grave moral and physical danger. All of us. And for what?
I’ve heard the same line again and again since the election:
“America isn’t a different country today than it was before the election.” Jon
Stewart trotted it out. I think I heard it from President Obama.
I fear I agree with the statement. I’m puzzled, though,
because I think it is meant to be reassuring, to think we’ve always been the
country capable of such a choice.
The statement doesn’t imply that we’re still great. It
implies that we were never good.
It has to be admitted, people responded to Trump for what he
is. Which means we are left with the statements and proposals by which he
distinguished himself. And millions of us—tens of millions—preferred him
specifically for his points of difference. Excited by his promises to return us
to a time when our system existed only for certain people, and the preferences
and needs of all others were beneath consideration, or at least willing to
overlook that, in favor of some material or policy advantage somewhere.
And ultimately, the reason is immaterial. A man ran for president promising to use the power of the state to bring violence to scapegoated religious and ethnic minorities, to make America torture again, to make it easier for an already-militarized police force to employ violence, who praised dictators, who bragged about sexual assault, who praised vengeance as good, who promoted as fact debunked conspiracy, who stated his determination to ignore as conspiracy what the data overwhelmingly indicates is an oncoming extinction-level event. There was some other reason to vote for him, that allowed you to overlook these facts? Save it, please. It really doesn't matter. It was a bad reason. We have seen this movie before.
Historians have a word for Germans who joined the Nazi party, not because they hated Jews, but out of a hope for restored patriotism, or a sense of economic anxiety, or a hope to preserve their religious values, or dislike of their opponents, or raw political opportunism, or convenience, or ignorance, or greed.
That word is "Nazi." Nobody cares about their motives anymore.
They joined what they joined. They lent their support and their moral approval. And, in so doing, they bound themselves to everything that came after. Who cares any more what particular knot they used in the binding?
What am I saying here? Am I saying we are Nazis? The answer, I suppose, has to be 'no.' Only Nazis are Nazis. We are Americans. But what that will mean in decades to come—'American'—has been thrown into hazard. We used to be the sort of place that doesn't allow Donald Trumps to happen. That's gone now, along with that specific sort of trust the world once had in us. In any case, what we seem to now be trying to redefine 'American' to mean seems like a rough beast, and omnivorous.
Democracy reveals us by our choices and our actions, not our intentions. We are what we are.
And Donald Trump will be president.
And ultimately, the reason is immaterial. A man ran for president promising to use the power of the state to bring violence to scapegoated religious and ethnic minorities, to make America torture again, to make it easier for an already-militarized police force to employ violence, who praised dictators, who bragged about sexual assault, who praised vengeance as good, who promoted as fact debunked conspiracy, who stated his determination to ignore as conspiracy what the data overwhelmingly indicates is an oncoming extinction-level event. There was some other reason to vote for him, that allowed you to overlook these facts? Save it, please. It really doesn't matter. It was a bad reason. We have seen this movie before.
Historians have a word for Germans who joined the Nazi party, not because they hated Jews, but out of a hope for restored patriotism, or a sense of economic anxiety, or a hope to preserve their religious values, or dislike of their opponents, or raw political opportunism, or convenience, or ignorance, or greed.
That word is "Nazi." Nobody cares about their motives anymore.
They joined what they joined. They lent their support and their moral approval. And, in so doing, they bound themselves to everything that came after. Who cares any more what particular knot they used in the binding?
What am I saying here? Am I saying we are Nazis? The answer, I suppose, has to be 'no.' Only Nazis are Nazis. We are Americans. But what that will mean in decades to come—'American'—has been thrown into hazard. We used to be the sort of place that doesn't allow Donald Trumps to happen. That's gone now, along with that specific sort of trust the world once had in us. In any case, what we seem to now be trying to redefine 'American' to mean seems like a rough beast, and omnivorous.
Democracy reveals us by our choices and our actions, not our intentions. We are what we are.
And Donald Trump will be president.
As a result, I’m bereft. Bereft of the country I thought I
was living in. Bereft of the people I thought I lived among. Bereft of what I
believed was a shared direction despite divergent opinions. Bereft of a belief
in the possibility of a common dialogue or even a common reality. Bereft in
confidence in basic decency and intelligence. Bereft of the spiritual heritage
I was born into, because of course Trump’s most enthusiastic supporters
were white Christians. Christians voting for a new Herod with the power of a
Caesar is a pretty good joke for the universe to tell, I suppose. He’s even
promised to go after the (anchor) babies.
My translation of the Bible is full of all this toff about
loving your enemy, about how love of money is the root of evil, about showing
hospitality to the widow and orphan and the immigrant, and admonishments
against drawing the sword lest you die on it. My reading of the Bible doesn't ask "but who's going to pay for that?" My reading of the Bible suggests to me that if you wish to pretend to care about babies unborn, maybe you shouldn’t be so hostile to the idea of
making sure they’re cared for once they are born and inconveniently and expensively needy, and
perhaps you shouldn’t make so many of their mothers into the welfare-queen boogie-men of your
whole realpolitik, and perhaps you shouldn't make weaponry a right more important than health and food. Maybe healing and wholeness and liberty is something that should be available to even the pagan. Maybe the door is open for the tax collector and the prostitute and the Samaritan. Maybe, unencumbered by the overweening need to be perceived as correct in every moral posture, they've even entered that door ahead of us as we do our best to hold it shut against unworthy access.
Maybe I got a trash translation. Maybe the other ones are all about the joys of using political power for your own aggrandizement instead of the call to self-sacrifice for the benefit of others, about the dangers of anchor babies and welfare mothers, about how paying tax money toward a shared life is tyranny, about how with terrorists you have to kill the families, folks, believe me, kill the women and children, you’ve got to go after the families, and we’re gonna torture again, folks, we’re gonna torture, believe me…
You know what?
I believe him.
WWJD Check: White Evangelicals are the group most likely favor use of torture by a military superpower. |
* * *
You wake up and the sky is gone. At times that’s how it
seems. You wonder at it: how could there not be a sky? What will become of us
now, in this world without a sky? Was it ever there, or did we just imagine it
there, as an exercise of collective will?
And then you talk to other people who insist the sky is
there. They say: It’s not gone, it’s just red now. Don’t be a sore loser, just
because you didn’t want it red. Accept that we did want it red. It’ll be fine
if it’s red. And anyway, the banks seem to like it red. Move on with your life.
Suck it up. Hope that the red sky will be as good as the blue one.
But the sky isn’t red. It’s not anything. It’s just … not. It is a not-ness. An un-sky. A nothing.
But the sky isn’t red. It’s not anything. It’s just … not. It is a not-ness. An un-sky. A nothing.
And then you start talking to people who laugh, not without
compassion, that you ever fell for the idea there was a sky. They say: That big
vast emptiness? Oh, yes. That’s always been there for us. Is it there for you
now? How… interesting. We can tell you a thing or two about that emptiness, if
you’d listen. We’ve been watching it an awful long time.
Family of Japanese origin returning to their home after WWII (1945) |
American Nazi Rally, Madison Square Garden, 1939 |
Future Georgia Representative and Civil Rights pioneer John Lewis, beaten by a state trooper on "Bloody Sunday" in 1965. |
Oh. Will he. Will he do that. |
Oh. |
The sky is the future. Or it was the future. That’s how it
seems, at times. How odd, to speak of the future in the past tense.
But the past tense presents us with further troubles. It
seems the past is gone, too.
In 1965, everybody thought King was great, and nobody tried to dismiss him by tying him to violence. |
Somehow we are never culpable. It was always a long time
ago. Mistakes were made, but we’d never make them ourselves. It was always
somebody else holding the gun, the whip. We arrived here after that, you
see, born blameless, without any afterbirth or shock, into the Greatest Country
in the World. Our holocausts we absolved ourselves of, because they served to
illustrate not the evil we’d done, but how far we’d come from it. We stood on
the prow of the ship, looking forward as we cut new water, not aft looking back
at whatever may have been churned up in the wake. Not big on the rear-view
mirror, us, not fans of the over-the-shoulder glance. We’d tell ourselves
stories of what lay behind. We’d imagine ourselves into those stories of darker
times, making ourselves the protagonists. We would have been the ones to build false
walls in our home to hide slaves. We would have marched with King. We would
have spoken out against the Japanese camps. We would have stood at Stonewall.
Our moral arc bends ever toward justice; an inevitable
thing. That was the story.
America was great, because it was good. All the old hits.
People still alive can remember this sort of thing very well. |
This kid is probably still alive. As are most of his classmates. As are the children with whom he refused to attend school. |
This also happened within living memory. |
It's amazing what people consider communism. I mean back then, of course. |
Sometimes you’d hear stories about a random injustice or brutality. A
policeman who had become a little too enthusiastic. A bad apple, and surely
justice was served. If not, it’d have been in the papers You’d hear about it in
the papers if it hadn’t been. A gay teen beaten to death in a cornfield. A car with
the banner of the struggle to preserve human slavery on the bumper sticker. The KKK marching again, how quaint.
Ah, you’d think, if you were like me. We still have some work to do. Cleanup on aisle seven.
Ah, you’d think, if you were like me. We still have some work to do. Cleanup on aisle seven.
Technology has changed that. We see with new eyes now, unless we choose not to. We
see videos, dozens and dozens of them now, new ones each week it seems, of police
shooting unarmed black people. Again and again and again and again. Can you remember all the names? I can't anymore. And I ask myself: why can't I?
We see the speed with which so many seem willing to seek and
find the nearest handy reason the victim deserved his or her fate. We see the
news organizations find a Sunday School photo for the shooter and a mugshot to
represent the victim. We see acquittal and acquittal and acquittal. We see failure to prosecute.
And, perhaps, we begin to wonder.
We see the people protesting, unarmed, asking only that
their lives be thought to matter as much as another’s, and we see the
stormtroopers with their massive guns and their tanks, arrayed against a
civilian population almost reflexively, like defenses in an organism’s
bloodstream mustering against a disease. And we wondered, perhaps: why do they
look so much—so exactly, if we’re honest—like an occupying force?
We saw the white ranchers seize government land, pointing their
guns directly at law enforcement officials, speaking openly of armed
insurrection against the government, of revolution, of war. We saw them, later,
seizing a government building. They weren’t protesting after centuries seeing their children and brothers
and sisters killed without consequence by authority. Rather, they didn’t want to have to pay a grazing fee. Was it with
surprise that we saw it: law enforcement seemed less frightened of these white
men and their guns than they had an unarmed black woman in a sundress, or a 12
year old boy playing in a park? Were we surprised to see they seemed so
level-headed in this situation, so much less likely to respond with immediate
lethal force?
Why, those fellows with their arsenal didn’t even get
convicted. They were less threatening to the system, apparently, than a man,
arms up, lying on the ground next to his autistic ward begging not to be shot.
(He was shot.)
We might contrast to the treatment of the protesters at Standing Rock, and wonder…is the Holocaust against native people relegated only to the past? Would we change it, if we could?
We might contrast to the treatment of the protesters at Standing Rock, and wonder…is the Holocaust against native people relegated only to the past? Would we change it, if we could?
We wonder: Are we seeing the system breaking down, unable to
cope with new challenges? Or are we seeing a system working exactly as it’s
always intended? Do we as a collective of 'white' people secretly want the police to control brown people by force? Are we secretly hoping that force will prove lethal, only occasionally enough to soothe our consciences, but frequently enough to promote
an order less immediately costly, than the pain of culpability, than the justice of restitution?
If not, why are prosecutions so rare, and convictions even
less so?
If not, why aren’t we protesting these killings? Why
aren’t we in the streets?
Do all lives matter? If so, why wouldn’t we act like
it?
White Christian America reveres Dr. King, it should be noted. You remember him—the peaceful guy who gave the speech that ended racism. If Facebook and newspaper op eds are any measure, we white Christians can’t stop bringing him up, almost as a cudgel, an admonishment to those today who would dare ask for their own human dignity, for not doing it as antiseptically as we remember it being done by him. And perhaps people begin to wonder: Why was King enshrined as 'the peaceful one' only once he was peacefully dead? Is King’s being safely dead our favorite thing about him? These days, we white Christians can claim to have brought his dream to reality (the white guy is usually the hero of the story in the movie), and Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. will not protest—and we white Christians don’t like protest. Heavens, no—it’s so divisive. Dr. King, he wouldn’t approve of this protest, nor that one, and certainly not that one. His protests were so polite! Why, nobody had any problem with them at all! Dr. King agrees with all of us in white Christian America so much, these days. Oh my, he never stops agreeing with us. Just ask us; we’ll tell you. Yes, and what ever happened to Dr. King, anyway, after he gave that speech that ended all inequality forever?
But no matter, I told myself. That’s a dying strain, it's not who we are these days. That’s just a few bad apples. We’ve made so much progress. They’ll exhaust themselves in a final futile sputter. We’re just about to turn the corner. Sure there are racists, bigots, white supremacists, lost-causers, and they're loud, but they're dying out, and they know it. They'll eventually run somebody on an overtly racist platform, and they'll lose huge—I disagree with Republicans, but most of them won't stand for stark white supremacy, surely, and obviously Christians won't be able to align themselves with it — and we’ll show them it’s no use, and they’ll retreat, retrench to even positions even more compromised, less fortified, further back, smaller, diminished. We’re a better country than that.
But then Donald Trump, a half-rate and transparently obvious bullshit artist, a greasy reality TV star most skilled at demonstrating his manifest ignorance, promising mostly the goodness of violence
and the strength of vengeance, offering to return America to an earlier time, railing against the inconvenience of practicing sensitivity toward the perspectives of others (he called it 'political correctness'), received 63 million geographically-convenient votes to become the most
powerful person in the world. Perhaps, if you’re like me, you took a moment
then to ponder that statement about bad apples and what they do to the whole
barrel. The meaning of it. And, perhaps, another saying, about recognizing a
tree by its fruit.
And, it must be said, though we refuse to face it: In America, our trees have long borne a strange fruit.
And, it must be said, though we refuse to face it: In America, our trees have long borne a strange fruit.
Here’s what we’ve lost, or at least what I’ve lost: The
assumption of goodness’s inevitability. The assumption of goodness of those around me. The assumption of good intent in their hearts. The assumption that the future is still there. The assumption that most of us will die of old age.
Here's what I've lost, the one favor Donald Trump may ever do for me: The wool from my eyes.
An illusion, particularly a pretty and a convincing one, can be a painful thing to lose.
Here's what I've lost, the one favor Donald Trump may ever do for me: The wool from my eyes.
An illusion, particularly a pretty and a convincing one, can be a painful thing to lose.
I’ve gained a vision of tens of millions of people desperate
to bend history’s arc back toward an injustice that favored them, and willing to fight for that
regression, willing even to risk species-wide extinction rather than suffer the pain of facing the consequences of their own mountainous indifference.
The moral arc of the universe may bend toward justice, but
the gears of history grind the weak. There are people now who are giddy, almost
with the air of a teenager behind the wheel of a sweet-sixteen hot rod, to test
out their perceived new warrant to deliver retributive and violent indifference
to the people they deem unlovely. A headscarf yanked off here. A slur shouted
in public there. A swastika scrawled on a wall here. A Neo Nazi propagandist advising the President of the United States in the corridors of power there. A
crowd of seig heils in a government building, in praise of our new leader here. A few million children stripped of health insurance with no serious attempt at a replacement there.
They think this is allowed now.
Sixty-three million people, complacently or enthusiastically or ignorantly aligned with white supremacy, gave them the idea it is.
Sixty-three million people, complacently or enthusiastically or ignorantly aligned with white supremacy, gave them the idea it is.
It’s going to be our job to show them otherwise.
We must show them otherwise.
And.
Even if you voted for Trump—especially if you voted for Trump—the door is wide open for you to join in that struggle. You show them otherwise, too. All you have to do to join...is join.
Your intentions were good? Excellent. I believe you.
I've badly misunderstood you? Excellent. I believe you.
Now, show it. Show your good intention by your good actions.
You, like all of us, possess tremendous moral authority. Don't lend it any longer to those who have promised to squander it on atrocity. They seem intent on doing as they say. If you wait too long, they will leave you with none left to withdraw.
Use it to protect those different than you. Use it against your own advantage, for the advantage of those who have none.
And.
If you, like me, did not vote for Trump, there is the great danger of complicity. You will be offered, if you, like me are white and straight and employed and well-off and cis-gendered and able-bodied and healthy and property-owning, the opportunity to be indifferent. Resist that current.
We must show them otherwise.
And.
Even if you voted for Trump—especially if you voted for Trump—the door is wide open for you to join in that struggle. You show them otherwise, too. All you have to do to join...is join.
Your intentions were good? Excellent. I believe you.
I've badly misunderstood you? Excellent. I believe you.
Now, show it. Show your good intention by your good actions.
You, like all of us, possess tremendous moral authority. Don't lend it any longer to those who have promised to squander it on atrocity. They seem intent on doing as they say. If you wait too long, they will leave you with none left to withdraw.
Use it to protect those different than you. Use it against your own advantage, for the advantage of those who have none.
And.
If you, like me, did not vote for Trump, there is the great danger of complicity. You will be offered, if you, like me are white and straight and employed and well-off and cis-gendered and able-bodied and healthy and property-owning, the opportunity to be indifferent. Resist that current.
If the universe bends toward justice, the engine it has chosen for this
good work is the hard and sacrificial struggle of good people willing to
acknowledge the basic humanity of all other people. People who don’t think
profitability is the foundational metric of goodness. People who don't think life holds a value that begins at conception but ends the moment it enters poverty. People bold and willing
to become peaceful pebbles in the gears. To give time and money. To link arms with a married gay
couple. To take sides in a cafeteria skirmish with a transgendered teen. To take a truncheon in the head for
a Muslim.
To paraphrase Jesus (another favorite who those of us in white Christian America appear by our words and deeds to consider as safely dead as Dr. King): to live, first you must die.
To paraphrase Jesus (another favorite who those of us in white Christian America appear by our words and deeds to consider as safely dead as Dr. King): to live, first you must die.
Or, as another poet says, love’s the only engine of survival.
So, what’s next?
First, we lament. We acknowledge the un-sky, the void. We listen to
those who’ve been staring at it far longer than us. We name the challenge with
clear eyes. That, I suppose, is what this has been.
Let us hope our leaders will prove other than than they say they will.
Let us not be so naive to think it likely.
Let us oppose in a fierce and broken love.
Let us meet with friends, we eat good meals with them.
Let us consider people before money, and notice where our society fails to do so.
Let us make art, and we try to make it well.
Let us refuse to allow a comfortable silence to enfold a hateful or ignorant statement.
Let us stand up against hate, bodily if necessary.
Let us learn our system, and work within it.
Let us call our leaders, and advocate for those who suffer.
Let us practice generosity without care for the merit of the beneficiary, but only for their need.
Let us investigate before we publish.
Let us loudly proclaim the humanity others try to diminish.
Let loudly proclaim the humanity of those who do not share our values, even as we oppose.
Let us never celebrate the suffering of those who oppose us, for they suffer, too.
Let us seek to divest ourselves of unearned cultural advantage.
Let us enter spaces where our voices are not primary, and listen without thinking to speak.
Let us create space to speak, in places where our voices are primary, for those who have had no voice.
Let us reject optimism and blind belief.
Let us embrace hope.
Let us work.
Let us work.
Let us work.
We are a people who have dreamed of the sky. I’d like to see if we can make it real.