2020
Way back when I was a little kid growing up in the years immediately following World War II, our villains were Indians and cowboys who always wore black hats in the movies or on TV. The next generation of villains were Nazis and Commies. Then came Arab terrorists. Nowadays the villains are Republicans.
Not since the Civil War have Americans been so divided, and the Republicans are swinging the cleaver. The political party that produced the Great Emancipator and the Great Communicator has degenerated to the point where it has saddled us with the Great Prevaricator and is unrecognizable from its origins. Today it’s nearly impossible to imagine that barely 50 years ago the Republican Party was once somewhat progressive, giving us, for example, the Environmental Protection Agency it now attempts to emasculate. Why, even otherwise disgraced President Richard Nixon was urging Congress to adopt a national health insurance program!
The modern Republican Party is all about revenge, restrictions on rights, retaining power, and rewarding the rich. Whenever I see the abbreviation “Rep” attached to some right-wingnut politician’s name these days, I’m never sure if it stands for Republican, Reprehensible, or Reprobate.
Politics is about compromise, and it wasn’t that long ago opposing sides could find a common ground and enable the government to function. Then the Tea Party hijacked the Republican Party, and, shamefully and out of fear for their jobs in Washington, good civic-minded Republicans allowed it to happen and then let it get out of control to the extent where Congress is in perpetual gridlock and Trump runs roughshod over the Constitution because no one in the party has the spine to stand up to him and his chief enabler, Mitch McConnell.
Sometimes it’s hard to tell whether Trump or McConnell is the villain with the blackest hat. From the moment McConnell declared back in 2008 that the Republican Party’s primary goal was not to govern but to make Obama a one-term President, its members should have rebelled. Changes since then have only been for the worse. McConnell refuses to bring hundreds of bills to the Senate floor for a vote. Citing a non-existent precedent he refused to allow the Senate to vote on Obama’s nomination for a Supreme Court justice during his last year in office and then said later he would have no problem allowing a vote if Trump needed to replace a justice during his last year in the White House.
Before the impeached Trump went on trial last week, McConnell and many of the other Trumpkins violated their Constitutional oath to be impartial by declaring the President to be innocent without having heard the evidence and then blocking witnesses from testifying who might have provided even more damning evidence. The hoax, as the Republicans characterized it, were not the articles of impeachment but the sham trial where only one Republican Senator, Utah’s Mitt Romney, voted to find Trump guilty on one of the two charges.
Now I have no problem with members of the House of Representatives and Senate voting their consciences, and I applaud the handful of Democrats in the House who voted against impeachment. But when every Republican in the Senate except Romney whitewashes the trial and declares his or her intentions to do so ahead of time in spite of overwhelming evidence, I’d say they left their consciences behind long ago and that their so-called Deep State conspiracy is in reality a Red State conspiracy to wreck this nation.
And no one in the party is holding these hypocrites accountable as they pander not only to their base but to humanity’s basest instincts. Middle-of-the-road Republican legislators would rather retire than take on McConnell and Trump. Since Trump became President, 40% of the Republicans in Congress have either chosen to retire or been beaten at the ballot box. Michigan’s Dave Trott, who decided against running for re-election, admitted he didn’t even try to convince his constituents of his belief that Trump “is emotionally, intellectually, and psychologically unfit for office.” Trott added: “I’m sure a lot of Republicans feel the same way. But if they say that, the social media barrage will be overwhelming.”
The steep and rapid decline of the mainstream media, newspapers and news magazines that were committed to fair and responsible reporting, and the proliferation of social media outlets that care little or not at all about the facts, have certainly contributed to an increasingly uninformed and misinformed public. But the public is also to blame for its apathy and ignorance. Only 58% of eligible voters cast ballots in the 2016 election. Fewer than half of those voted for Trump, which means less than 29% of American citizens have determined how this country is being governed and 42% don’t even give a damn. Throw in the millions of citizens who don’t bother to register to vote at all, and that appalling tiny percentage of people who dictate our future shrinks even more.
It’s discouraging how little Americans know about their government. I’m willing to bet naturalized citizens know more about it than those who were born here. I loved civics and history when I took those courses back in high school. Many, if not most, of my fellow students hated those subjects. And, as near as I can tell, for a number of decades school systems dropped civics from their curricula, and only recently are schools starting to teach it again.
I like, or used to like, to think I’m pretty astute when it comes to understanding how our government works. And then last year I read Michael Lewis’ “The Fifth Risk” and was astonished about how much I did not know about what the various Federal agencies actually do. It became obvious from reading the book that far too many Americans, especially those living in the rural Red States, are clueless about how much the Federal government really does for them. And Republican villains are not in the mood to tell them. The fact is, despite Trump’s promises, Red States remain far more disadvantaged economically and continue to lose manufacturing jobs at an accelerated rate. Yet voters in those states lap up Republican propaganda and habitually vote against their own best interests.
According to the National Assessment of Educational Progress, in 2014 only 23% of the country’s eighth-graders ranked “proficient” in civics. Recent polls have revealed that about one-third of Americans cannot even name the three branches of the Federal Government. For years now I’ve been convinced that our so-called democracy was a noble experiment in self-government that is doomed to fail. I’m far from alone in my cynicism. Benjamin Franklin, one of the framers of the Constitution, expressed doubts that the average citizen would be interested and involved enough to make the system work.
And then there was Abraham Lincoln, the first Republican President, who said: “America will never be destroyed from the outside. If we falter and lose our freedoms, it will be because we destroyed ourselves.”
If the modern villains continue their wicked ways unchecked, the end may be nearer than we think.
It’s a full blown civil war, one without physical casualties…so far!