Discussion about this post

User's avatar
R Dooley (NY)'s avatar

He might resign.

Mike might pardon him.

Congress might impeach or censure him.

Some Republicans will pretend to disavow him.

Prosecutors will indict him.

Citizens will sue him.

Banks will abandon him.

His followers will erect shrines to him.

He will wither and eventually die an angry, broken, delusional man.

And many will try to forget him.

But I will not.

We may escape his tenure in office bruised, but not mortally wounded.

Our environment may begin to recover from the assault he leveled at it that delayed action to slow the creeping warming that is engulfing our earth and threatening our children’s lives.

Communities that were the targets of his hate may entertain some hope for deep and lasting change.

People who fear illness or death from the Coronavirus may live to see those fears relieved.

The world may breathe a sigh of relief that the tyrant who ruled the United States has passed from the scene.

But I will not.

I will not forget him.

I will not breathe easily when he leaves.

He did not act alone.

Those who enabled his worst behavior remain in positions of trust and power.

They must be held to account.

They must be rooted out.

Some may forgive and forget.

But I will not.

Expand full comment
Herb Klinker (FL and Umbria)'s avatar

When the article in The Atlantic appeared, warning of the dangerous period of the Interregnum, it talked about how he could move from the electoral, to the litigation phase, but that after January 6th, the only option remaining was insurrection.

The visual of a constructed gallows, and vigilante groups, who carried zip cuffs, who new the location of secret congressional offices, tells me this was not simply a flash mob of angry citizens.

No, both from an offensive and defensive standpoint this a planned assault conducted by hate groups. He gave them their marching orders. He removed the leadership of the agencies tasked with guarding the Congress, ensuring that the response would be weak and ineffective. He influenced 147 political leaders to reject their oaths to the Constitution and swear their allegiance to him alone.

Almost seventy years ago, one man stood up to a demagogue saying, “Have you no decency, sir?”

We are at such a moment today, except that what’s at stake is far more than decency. Our country is badly divided, with about one in three citizens in support of the carnage that occurred on January 6, 2021. We face a most formidable adversary.

As Pogo said many years ago, “We have met the enemy... and it is us!”

Seventy five years ago we vanquished Fascism. Using our might, we built the greatest economy the world had seen. We conquered polio. We put a man on another celestial body. And we expanded the rights of the least powerful among us.

In an earlier letter, you described how Lincoln insisted on completing the dome of the Capitol at the same time the Civil War was killing over half a million people. Now we are facing dueling crises, one of our own making.

Conquering Covid does not demand we set aside what happened last week. We can, and should hold our leaders accountable for their false allegiance to a person that cares not one whit for the welfare of anyone but the privileged few.

Let that shining dome remind us of our shared history, our decency, our common purpose; and serve as an inspiration to those who yearn for and love freedom to continue the quest for the “more perfect union”.

Eight days...

Expand full comment
562 more comments...

No posts