After Trump’s blanket pardon of 1500 January 6th rioters, I dug out my journal of that day and read my entry, the handwriting shaky with fear, describing the violent attack on the Capitol as I watched it unfold on TV. Millions of us were witnesses, and no amount of white-washing can change the facts. I am afraid of what lies ahead in this country, for now unrecognizable as the America of “justice under the law” and “all men are created equal.” Rather than try to recapture the emotions of that day in light of the pardons, I decided to re-post my blog from 2020. Wistfully, I note the optimism of the closing paragraph:
Waves of fury and incredulity pummel my mental shores. Naïve as I am, despite the pundits’ prediction that Senate Republicans would vote to acquit Trump, I believed that dedication to democracy, oaths of office, oaths of impartiality, and love of country would win out over party politics in the face of evidence and the terror of personal experience.
But no.
Buffeted by cross currents, America has been twisted and tortured like its flag in an insurrectionist’s grip. Abused were the stars and stripes on January 6th as they were wielded as a weapon to bludgeon police. Those who derided Black Lives Matter protesters this summer with calls to “Back the Blue” swarmed the Capitol howling “Stop the Steal” as they brandished the American flag along with their arsenal of bats, fence posts, and pitchforks to bloody those defending the Capitol.
When I was a child, I was told to kiss the flag 100 times if it touched the ground by mistake. Was this my parents’ invention or a national rule? I don’t know, but the message was clear. Dave’s father too, a WW II veteran, taught his grandchildren the solemn lesson “Honor the soldiers and the flag.”
Although they sought to appropriate the motives of America’s revolutionaries, the Trump supporters who breached the Capitol can lay no claim to heroism. They desecrated American symbols while impeding certification of an adjudicated election, endangered lawmakers, spread feces, and destroyed and stole national treasures. Thugs were these, not patriots. The fever of doing Trump’s bidding superseded respect for the flag, democratic process, and human life.
What to make of Mitch McConnell? He refused to call the Senate to session when the House Managers were ready to present the case in mid-January. There was time for a trial, and the former president was still in office. Mitch had not the balls to vote “guilty,” but had the gall after the count to affirm the House Managers’ evidence of Trump as inciter-in-chief. Although the Senate had already addressed the Constitutionality by a majority vote, McConnell defended himself with the timing technicality he created.
In his closing remarks, lead House manager Jamie Raskin looked around the Senate chamber at those before him and quoted Benjamin Franklin, saying, “If you make yourself a sheep, the wolves will eat you. Don’t make yourself a sheep.” How else but as sheep are we to see Senators who believed Trump guilty, yet in their fawning loyalty, absolved him of accountability at the expense of our democracy?
What now? In betraying their oaths and ignoring the result of the vote on the impeachment’s constitutionality, those senators eviscerated the Senate of its credibility and power. They did not “defend the Constitution of the United States against all enemies, foreign and domestic” when Trump and his mob sought to hold power despite the vote of the people. They waived their sworn charge, and clung to a technicality already dismissed by majority vote.
By that acquittal, the Senate has granted future presidents a “January Exception” for whatever purposes he or she might have in that final month in office; Congress and the Republic be damned. After his final summation of the evidence of Trump’s efforts to prevent the transfer of power, delight at the attack, and refusal to send help, Representative Raskin said, “If that’s not a high crime and misdemeanor, then nothing is.”
It is work to contain my fury and contempt, but friends remind me of reasons for optimism. President Biden has remained focused on the people and the planet. Vaccinations have doubled. A COVID relief bill will soon pass. The U.S. has re-entered the global community in positive ways, re-joining the Paris Climate Accord and the WHO. In discrediting their vote and abdicating their responsibility, the Senate has re-affirmed what has always been true: it is up to us, the people, to govern wisely with our votes.
6 comments:
Sadly Lea, there are still too many sheep on Capital Hill and it takes a little woman Bishop at the Cathedral to try to talk our new King into being merciful.
The King talks of rounding up foreign criminals in our land at the same time he releases hardened American criminals who have beaten and even killed policemen and women from our prisons What do we tell our children and grandchildren? What is right and good anymore? Is the King’s bursar who showered millions on him during the election, actually a Nazi? Are we really going to make a woman abusing drunk into our next Secretary of Defense? What has our country come to?
Re: The earlier comment about the bishop at the National Cathedral: It was a poorly written message to a captive audience -- Trump -- in front of a national audience. It was intended to embarrass him. It simply fueled the fires of the right. Nothing was accomplished. He sat there and had to take it. A better message would've employed finesse and metaphor and nuance -- Trump wouldn't have understood what the message was, but the national audience would have. A giant mistake.
Yet someone has to speak truth directly to the man and his smirking progeny. The greater indignity for me was watching all the former living presidents and most of their spouses voluntarily sitting in the Rotunda politely absorbing the lies and insults hurled at them for all they had tried to do for the country. Their attendance was framed, even lauded, as a demonstration of “the peaceful transfer of power.” But this is no ordinary transfer of power—it’s a normalization and ceremonial welcoming of a cult leader and would-be dictator. I’m
with Michelle Obama—and Karen Pence— for whom this transfer of power was an obscenity to shun and mourn.
Oh Lea, how did we get here? To see that monster take the oath, after everything he'd done was like a Fellini movie. I couldn't be sadder or more scared.
Regarding the comments above, given her role, I think the Bishop had a responsibility to remind those gathered of Jesus's message. She did not specifically question Trump's acts, but urged mercy. The President takes an oath on the Bible (although he failed to place his hand there) and has waved it around in an appeal to his Evangelical followers. He has said he is a Christian and referred to his love of the Bible...a refresher on what that actually means was within her purview. It was a courageous act, I thought.
Lea,
Can you believe this? How can it possibly be that regardless of all the checks and balances, Trump is the President again-and this time with immunity from SCOTUS? He is the tyrant our founding fathers warned us about, yet congressional Dems seems to be normalizing all of it…If it seems bad now, I imagine it will only get worse later. How did we descend into an American version of Nazi Germany in 5 days?
It’s absolutely heartbreaking….I refuse to obey in advance, and if I have something to say, I will not be silenced! God help us….
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