Wednesday, September 22, 2021
Wednesday, March 3, 2021
Now they are Deplorable
As a Democrat, I have to say I’m getting a little tired of the constant criticism that Republican leaders are being subjected to, for simply being Republican leaders. This goes for everyone from Trump to Cruz and McConnell, Rubio and Hawley, Ron Johnson, the ever-ridiculous Louie Gohmert, and a whole lot more.
True,
they are all hypocrites, clueless and idealess, which is a whole lot more
problematic than being an idealist. They stand for nothing other than
self-preservation in a dog-eat-dog world of politics, which is why it has
become easier than it’s ever been to make fun of them or box them into a corner
by throwing their own words back at them.
Nevertheless,
ridiculing Republican leaders has become all too easy, because they are simply doing
the only thing they feel they must do to hang on to their jobs—appeal to
Republican voters by being loyal Republicans. They are wrong of course. They
could be leaders, but leadership is not what Republican voters look for in
their leaders. Trump won in 2016 because he said what Republican voters wanted
to hear, not what they needed to hear.
For
this reason, while media fatigue has allowed me to let Republican leaders off the hook, and because
they deserve our pity more than our scorn, I am disgusted with Republican
voters. Not just because more of them seem to be white supremacist,
racists, bigots, religious fanatics, law-and-order enthusiast who don’t respect
the law, Constitutionalist who don’t respect the Constitution, and in many
cases, may not have ever read the Constitution, or just plain folks who simply
don’t care about anyone other than themselves.
I’m
disgusted with them because they just don’t seem to be that smart.
I’ve
listened to QAnon conspiracist rationalize why they supported and continue to
support Trump and it’s mind-boggling—not only for what they think they know,
but what they honestly don’t know, and make no mistake, QAnon conspiracist vote
Republican.
So
do a lot of other crazies—Proud Boys, boogaloo boys, that old standby KKK,
those people who think masks aren’t necessary, or the ones who think guns are
not only necessary but vital to our survival.
Too many of these
not-so-smart Republicans think a debate on healthcare or wages or the economy
or politics can be won by throwing out the words Socialism, traitor, un-American,
fake news, Soros and lately Hunter.
They
are so ill-informed, and willingly so, that Republicans were able to run in the
last election on a platform completely devoid of ideas or policies, other than,
we’ll do whatever Donald Trump wants us to do. This was the Republican platform
and 74 million Republican voters said, “Sounds good to me.”
When
Hillary Clinton declared Trump supporters were deplorable, and was rightfully
called on it, she immediately apologized and admitted that not all of the 60
million people who voted for Trump in 2016 were deplorable, only many of them.
Of course, she was talking about the white supremacists, bigots, racists,
fanatics, conspiracist and extremists, but not every Republican voter fell into
these categories.
Some
were just lifelong Republicans, probably born and raised in Republican
households, just as many Democrats are lifelong Democrats born and raised in
Democratic households.
Close
elections are generally not won or lost by these voters, but rather by those in
the middle who tend to lean one way or the other depending on the year, the
issues, or the candidates.
For
any number of reasons, 60 million voters chose Trump in 2016, and while they
were not a majority, they were strategically well placed to secure an Electoral
College win for who turned out to be, the worst president ever.
Twenty-twenty
was a different ballgame entirely. Democrats picked up 17 million votes, which
wasn’t surprising considering Trump had spent four years bashing Democrats as
Socialists and un-American traitors.
What
was surprising, was Trump picking up 14 million more votes after a presidency that should have only pleased James Buchanan, a presidency that included a public love-fest with a Korean
dictator and murderer, a tax law that benefitted millionaires and billionaires
and very few middle class Republicans, two impeachments and the groundwork for
numerous lawsuits once he left office. There was also a wall that Mexico never
paid for because it was never built, an immigration policy that separated
hundreds of children from their families, and a response to a world-wide
pandemic that was disastrous for the nation and fatal to 500,000 and counting
Americans.
The
events of January 6, 2021, as well as Trump’s behavior in the two months after
the election, only solidified for me that Trump is not qualified to be president,
and yet, he appears to have lost little support among his base. Seventy-four
million Americans voted for Trump in 2020, after a presidency that gave him a
leg up in the race for worst president ever. I shudder to think what those
voters saw in Trump’s presidency that made them want to go down that road
again.
The
devotion of Republican politicians to Trump was evidenced recently by their
behavior at CPAC, where they publicly proclaimed what we all knew they were
doing privately—pledge their allegiance before a cartoonish golden Trump mannequin. I
don’t expect them to behave any differently than they do. I’d like to think
they answer to the Constitution, but I’m not naïve. They only answer to voters,
Trump voters.
Again,
maybe not all of those voters are deplorable. It’s possible that some might
just be foolish, but the fourteen million new Trump voters, if they had been
paying attention—and how could they not have been paying attention—surely they
are deplorable.
No
one in their right mind could have witnessed the last four years, listened to
Trump speak, read about his missteps—no not missteps, but rather crimes since
even Republicans attest to his guilt—and not realize that he is a dictatorial
demigod, and totally unfit to be president.
As
sensible, thinking Republican voters continue to jump ship, making the party less
sustainable than a Trump casino, Republican leaders are not the problem so much
as Trump voters, the deplorable ones are, and they are not just a problem for the
Republican Party, but for the nation.
Thursday, February 11, 2021
...I will support and defend the Constitution...
I am watching the Trump Impeachment hearings with interest. I watched the events unveil on January 6, and concluded that day, because I had been paying attention for the last four years, that President Trump was obviously responsible for inciting the insurrection. He has spent his entire personal life courting conflict, and devoted his one-year campaign and four-year presidency to provoking, condoning and relishing in violence. Trump is not a difficult man to understand.
At
the same time, the big question surrounding his impeachment seems to revolve
around what Republicans will do. Actually, this isn’t the big question. The big
question is why won’t Republicans do the right thing—and again, the answer
appears obvious.
No
attempt has been made to hide this fact that Republicans are expected to vote
for acquittal because they fear political retaliation from Trump supporters, should
they do the right thing and stand up to Trump by condemning the January 6
insurrection. This apparently outweighs the fear the rest of us have of the
damage their dereliction to duty will do to our democracy should they give
Trump a pass.
I
think House managers are doing an excellent job—an effort, we are told, which is
being missed by many Republican senators who are behaving childishly, as Trump has
often been accused himself, by refusing to pay attention.
Overall,
I think most senators are paying attention. As with Trump’s election in 2016,
setting a low bar is oftentimes what we do best in this country.
One
thing does bother me about the hearings, and I don’t know if changes will be made
down the road. I hope so, but fearful they won’t.
Despite
the fact that most Republicans appear to have made up their minds to acquit,
House managers are proceeding as if they are dealing with impartial jurors, who
will ultimately do the right thing.
The
nation can count on fifty Democratic senators voting to convict, not because
they are biased, un-American traitors as the ex-president suggests, but because
they were at the Capitol on January 6, witnessed the violence, and don’t need
to be told what an insurrection looks like, or who provoked it.
This
impeachment is all about convincing 50 Republicans that what they saw really
happened, and that they must do the right thing so that it never happens again.
Republicans would have us believe that now is the time to come together and
respect President Biden’s call for unity, and question whether Congress can
work as a unified branch if Democrats insist on going forward with, not one,
but now the second impeachment of Donald Trump.
Democrats,
despite their desire to work with Republicans, know they are taking this
unprecedented action because Donald Trump has not once, but twice, committed
impeachable offences. Democrats are not the villains. Donald Trump is the
villain.
Neither
are Democrats the jurors everyone is questioning whether they will do their
duty.
House
managers should stop addressing the Senate as a whole and start aiming their
case directly at the Republicans. This cannot be another, “there were good
people on both sides,” or “no harm, no foul.” When the argument is between
right and wrong, justice can only be on one side.
There
was real harm done on January 6, physical harm and psychological harm, and our
democracy was threatened, and continues to be threatened.
Whether
this crime is punished rests not with the Senate, but with Republican senators,
and House managers need to stop ignoring the elephant—pun intended— in the room,
and forcefully and unequivocally address their case to the only people in the
room that matter.
It
is not a question of, can we allow
the president’s actions to go unpunished, but can you, Republican senators, allow the president’s actions to go
unpunished.
It
is not a question of, can we honor
the oath we took and stand up for democracy, but rather, can you, Republican senators, stand up and
protect democracy.
It
is not a question of, can we muster the
courage to stand up to Donald Trump and say no, no more, enough, but rather can
you, Republican senators, stand up,
finally, and say no, no more, enough.
No
effort has been spared to point out that impeachment is not a trial. That is
not to say a trial isn’t taking place. Make no mistake; the Republican Party is
being put on trial—the trial of public opinion, which I would remind them is
where election are won and lost.
There
can be no doubt how history will look upon this impeachment effort, and at the
behavior of Senate Republicans. History is full of accounts of heroic
individuals standing up for what they believed to be right, as well as cowards
who for political expediency did what they knew to be wrong.
The
senators should be aware of this, but for those that aren’t, House managers
should make the case, so that there can be no doubt, that this impeachment will
not be decided by the Senate. The decision to convict will be determined by
Republican senators, and history will hold them accountable, and the
accountability in question might very well be, who was responsible for the fall
of democracy in America.
Monday, February 1, 2021
The Life, Times & Adventures of Hoag Franklin: Indian Scout, Buffalo Hunter, Lawman & Vaudeville Entertainer
Like many of the people who settled the old west, Hoag lived a full and adventurous life, which would have gone unnoticed had an unpublished manuscript telling his story
not been discovered in an antique store.
Hoag crossed paths with many of the people, whose names we recognize—Calamity Jane,
Annie Oakley, Crazy Horse, Sitting Bull and a host of lesser known individuals,
each of whom played vital roles in settling the west and creating the nation we
know today.
He
fought alongside the legends of his time—Buffalo Bill, Kit Carson and Bat
Masterson.
Yet,
no one has ever heard of Hoag Franklin—until now.
His
story begins when, as a young man still in his teens, he rides off on his first
buffalo hunt before joining a wagon train as a scout, and eventually heading
off to California in search of gold. For the next fifty years, he did almost
everything a man could do as the nation expanded from the Mississippi to the
Pacific Ocean. He even did things few men ever do.
These
are his adventures, in his own words, written in the seaside town of San Pedro,
California at the turn of the last century, a town he visited regularly during
his Salt Lake City to Los Angeles stage coach run.
My latest novel, The Life, Times & Adventures of Hoag Franklin: Indian Scout, Buffalo Hunter, Lawman & Vaudeville Entertainer, with illustrations by Danielle Grandi.
ThemVersUs
Historically,
the roles of the Republican and Democratic parties seem to hinge on blaming the
other party for everything that goes
wrong and taking credit for everything that goes right—and staying as far away
as possible from working together to find real solutions to real problems.
This
is harsh, but justified criticism for two groups that somehow manage to bilk
American citizens out of millions, billions, and soon to be trillions of
dollars every election cycle. For what? Balloons, yard signs and annoying and
harmful 30-second divisive, fear-mongering ads.
The
one thing both parties can ever seem to agree on is American Exceptionalism, not
because they have done exceptional things, but rather because they believe the
American people have done exceptional things, and the parties aren’t above
taking credit for what the people have done.
As
human beings, Americans haven’t behaved much differently than the ancient
Persians or Egyptians, the feudal societies of the Middle Ages, the Conquistadors
of imperial Spain, or the European opportunists who divided Africa up in the
late 19th century. A basic flaw in humanity has defined our behavior
from the earliest days of the Stone Age right through to the Space Age we now live
in. Again, instances of exceptionalism such as what occurred in Philadelphia in
1887 have been rare.
This flaw in the human condition, which
keeps both individuals and, by extension nations, not only in constant
conflict, but prevents them from being truly exceptional, is the Us/Them factor, which after watching a
lot of TV and being subjected to too many pharmaceutical ads, I’ve reduced to one word, ThemVersUs
because
it is so basic to understanding humanity.
We
(us) have always been suspicious, fearful, or threatened by them—anyone who
isn’t us. This isn’t an American problem. Just as we are not exceptional,
neither are we the only culprits in the world. Neither is ThemVersUs a political problem, which government can fix—no matter
how many balloons and yard signs political parties buy, to convince us they are
the solution.
The
ThemVersUs problem, as basic as it
is, manifests itself in many different ways, both between nations and within
nations. Obvious in this country is racism, but it also surfaces in class
struggle, labor relations, economics, health care, housing, education, and
anything else where there are two positions creating us versus them situations—even
mask wearing during a pandemic. Rural communities and large cities distrust
each other, as do sparsely populated states and heavily populated states, and
people owning guns thinking people without guns are going to take their guns
away—by, I dunno, twisting their arms.
Taken
to the extreme, Middle America fears the inhabitants of the two coasts are
conspiring against them and vice-versa. Our forefathers couldn’t have foreseen
this because Middle America back then were the coastal states of Maryland,
Virginia and the Carolinas.
There’s
an old Woody Guthrie where he takes
on one job after another in order to convince his girlfriend what a hard worker
he is, to the point where he just about wears himself out. If we truly want to
lay claim to being exceptional, we don’t have to do a whole lot of things, but each
individual acting in concert with other individuals will actually have to do something exceptional—something that
historically has rarely been done. Namely, deal with the ThemVersUs by learning to get along with them, which ironically,
will actually entail less effort than attacking them, and be easier on everyone in the long run.
If
Americans truly want to lay claim to the title of exceptionalism, we will have
to do something truly extraordinary, learn to live with and not fear them who surround us, or we will suffer
the same fate that has plagued every other society and cursed humanity from its
earliest days—a never ending struggle that has no winners.
It
won’t be easy. Being exceptional has never been easy, certainly not as easy as
being predictable, which requires no special talent or effort. It wasn’t easy
for those 56 men in Philadelphia, but despite their differences, they
understood that ordinary people can do exceptional things, once they stop doing
the senseless things they think they’re expected to do.
The conflict between us and them cannot be won in the courtrooms, or in Congress, or on the battlefield where the war has been waging continuously ever since Cain first determined Abel represented a threat and needed to be killed. It can only be won when we stop fearing them, and learn to live with them—or even better, when we learn that there is no us and them, but only us.