Democracy and the Rule of Law vs Chaos and Autocracy

Alan Zendell, January 6, 2024

Both President Biden and his likely November opponent, Donald Trump, have clearly laid out their overall plans for governing if they win the 2024 election. There’s no need for input from talking media heads or so-called pundits. Both men’s statements require neither analysis nor interpretation.

Donald Trump explicitly said that Americans can expect him to begin his quest toward dictatorial rule on “day one” of his presidency. For those that claim Trump loves making outrageous statements he doesn’t really mean, we can point to dozens of instances in which he has acted and spoken as if normal rules and even laws don’t apply to him. When there’s that much smoke, responsible people know something’s on fire.

Joe Biden made his position equally clear, yesterday, at a Community College in Pennsylvania. Biden declared that the 2024 election is about whether democracy can survive repeated attacks by Trump and others in his MAGA movement.

There’s not much there to argue about. Both positions are clear enough that even intellectually lazy Americans who get their news from corrupted social media or nurse exclusively at the nipples of far-right cable news channels can plainly see them. Emotions and political bias aside, everything Donald Trump has said and done in the past eight years points to a consistent pattern. He respects, and seemingly adores all of the world’s favorite despots and wannabe autocrats. He kowtows to Russia’s Vladimir Putin and swoons over North Korea’s Kim Jong Un. His most dedicated supporters revere Hungary’s Viktor Orban and Turkey’s Recep Erdogan. The only exception is Iran, because even Trump can’t distort the truth enough to reconcile praising the Ayotollahs with the Islamophobia he fosters.

Extremist MAGA representatives in Congress and media personalities like Tucker Carlson have repeatedly stated that Orban’s Christian Democracy should replace the United States Constitution. But Orban’s politics is neither Christian nor democratic. Rather, it is based on xenophobia, religious prejudice, sexism, and racism. Orban would limit immigration to only those people who support his model, he believes in state-controlled media, and he considers leaders like himself to be exempt from judicial scrutiny. Trump, who has repeatedly threatened to destroy media outlets like the New York Times and CNN for criticizing him, is totally on board with the Orban playbook – which, incidentally, reads very much like the Fascist manifestos that brought us World War 2.

That is the existential threat President Biden has fought since he decided to oppose Trump in 2020. He has been consistent, never wavering from this message. Every piece of legislation Biden has fought for in three years has really been a struggle between what benefits the wealthy elite and what is best for every other American.

Trump has begun using Ronald Reagan’s old tag line: “Are you better off today than you were four years ago?” Let’s see. Is your job more secure with unemployment consistently under four percent during 2023? Have you noticed the massive construction projects repairing roads and bridges in your state? Do you have Internet access you never had before? Did you benefit from Trump’s tax cuts? Would your small business have survived COVID if not for the government payments that kept you and your employees solvent when the world was locked down? Have recent state laws limiting women’s rights to control and have access to adequate health care made your life better? Do you feel safe knowing that Trump’s party refuses to take any action to keep military-style weapons out of the hands of mass killers? Has starving the budgets of public schools improved your family’s life? And finally, there’s inflation, for which neither Trump nor Biden is to blame. It hurts everyone, but under the Biden administration, America’s economy has thrived, growing jobs and wages, more than any other industrialized nation’s.

If you’d like a peek into the crystal ball of America’s future, look at the priorities of the MAGA extremists today. They understand that immigration is a volatile issue, and that Trump will benefit if they can convince Americans that Biden is to blame for our broken system, yet they have refused to approve any of the funding Biden requested to fortify our border and the men and women who police it. They are willing to bring our government to a halt even if it means abandoning NATO’s attempts to fend off Russian aggression and weakening Israel in its war against Hamas terrorism, and by proxy, Iran. All this in the name of power-grabbing.

If that’s the kind of America you want, Trump’s your man. But if you believe in the principles of the country you grew up in, remember that he’s the one trying to destroy it, while Biden is fully committed to saving it.

Posted in Articles | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

New Year, Old Problems

Alan Zendell, January 2, 2024

2023 was a chilling precursor to 2024. There were a few short crescendos, brief periods of tension as we waited to see whether Georgia, New York, and the U. S. Department of Justice would indict Donald Trump and proceed toward trials. An even more intense crescendo as right-wing extremists in Congress chose to hold aid to Ukraine against Russia’s aggression hostage in its desperate attempt to find credibility in its demands to control our southern border and sharply cut entitlement programs. And finally, the day-to-day struggle as President Biden and Secretary of State Antony Blinken tight-roped from capital to capital to keep the Israel-Hamas war from encompassing the entire Middle East.

None of those issues reached resolution in 2023. At no time since the end of World War 2 has our country faced so many existential challenges simultaneously, so the Biden administration will have to act decisively and effectively while constantly under attack by an unusually unscrupulous opposition party during this election year. 2024 is going to be an ongoing struggle between political self-interest and the future of our country.

The presidential election will capture most of our attention, as an aging president who has done a remarkable job of repairing our economy and strengthening our alliances seeks re-election amid doubts that he can remain effective beginning a second term at 82. On the Republican side will be an unprecedented primary season as Donald Trump, who has spent a lifetime putting himself ahead of everything and everyone around him, is being tried under ninety-one criminal indictments, most of which are for felonies. Since his best hopes to avoid convictions are convincing the Supreme Court to grant him immunity and delaying his trials until after the election, court battles will dominate our politics all year. If the courts support Trump, it could be a disaster that destroys everything our country stands for. Even if he’s unsuccessful, the chaos he creates can only weaken confidence in the election.

If Trump somehow loses the nomination, the winner will be former South Carolina Governor Nikki Haley, who doesn’t understand that the Civil War was about slavery, current Florida Governor Ron DeSantis, who has the charisma of a charging bull and whose views are more racist and dictatorial than Trump’s, right-wing extremist billionaire Vivek Ramaswami, who most of us never heard of, or former New Jersey Governor Chris Christie, whose bombastic attacks on Trump are undermined by having fallen on his sword for Trump eight years ago.

Both Ramaswami and DeSantis view Russia’s invasion of Ukraine as something we should stay out of, a point of view that could bring America and Europe into direct conflict with Russia. And while they all attack each other and Biden, another government shut-down looms, as the small right-wing minority in Congress attempts to take advantage of the infighting to tyrannize the rest of the country, and voters in Iowa and New Hampshire kick off the primary season.

All this will happen against a backdrop of conflicting versions of the truth. One of Trump’s best known and most effective tactics for achieving his ends is to lie and project his own immoral and criminal behavior onto everyone else, supported by several major news outlets that do the same thing. Add to the mix the foreign actors that employ skilled hackers and internet influencers who infiltrate our social media to spread misinformation and discord. Facebook has made some token effort to control these, but Elon Musk, who bought Twitter and renamed it X, has declared that it will be a platform for free speech with no vetting or controls.

There’s little we as Americans can do to affect the behavior of the candidates and even less about the attempts of foreign governments to undermine our election. But there’s a lot we can and must do to protect ourselves from them. Since Trump became a politician, millions of Americans have shown themselves to be susceptible to the chaos and lies. That simply has to stop. Americans must overcome the ennui they’ve displayed, the sheer intellectual laziness that results in people believing lies and failing to learn the facts for themselves.

There’s an as yet unproved theory that it’s not necessary to physically invade or attack America to destroy it. All our enemies have to do is sow divisiveness, fear, and anger, and let hate, prejudice, and racism do the rest, and we’ll destroy ourselves from within. There’s a new film on Netflix, Leave the World Behind, that makes the point effectively. The problem our generation faces is that we were raised to believe that America was where the good guys lived and that would magically make us invincible. Neither statement is true. To survive, we all need to find our own truth and use our power to vote.

Posted in Articles | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

A December to Remember

Alan Zendell, December 20, 2023

With twelve days remaining in 2023, it was clear that this was not going to be a typical December. The financial markets were completing a nine-day winning streak with record levels of the major indices, while the extremist wing of the Republican Party, bolstered by right-wing news outlets, continued to scream that our economy was on the verge of collapse and the Biden administration was destroying the country. This, in spite of unemployment remaining at fifty-year lows, our infrastructure being rebuilt, and the terrible inflation that resulted from COVID and the war in Ukraine having finally eased.  

Many food prices remain high, but staples like milk, eggs, and most produce are back around pre-COVID levels. And although Russia still holds Europe hostage over oil and natural gas supplies, war rages in the Middle East, and Iran-sponsored terrorists are attacking commercial shipping including oil tankers in the Red Sea, gasoline prices have plummeted. I paid $2.69 a gallon a few days ago.

All this is a backdrop to the rapidly approaching primary season which will be unlike anything we have seen in our lifetimes. Precedents are being set every day that history will record as the opening act of a desperate fight to preserve American democracy and our Constitution. After eight years of divisive rhetoric and warnings of existential threats to our country, it’s finally happening. There’s no turning back, and everything we’ve held dear about America hangs in the balance.

Within the next two weeks, overshadowing the Christmas and New Years holidays, the U. S. Supreme Court will likely decide our political future. At issue is whether Donald Trump’s actions since the 2020 election make him ineligible to serve as president again. The Court will have to rule on whether the Colorado Supreme Court was correct in ruling that Trump should be removed from the ballot in that state because he incited the January 6, 2021 insurrection at the Capitol. Simultaneously, it will have to respond to Trump’s argument that he has total immunity for any crimes he committed while serving as president.

The Court obviously recognizes the need to resolve these issues before the Iowa caucus on January 4th. No one has to be reminded that the current Court has a 6-3 Conservative majority with three of the right-leaning justices having been appointed by Trump, who expects them to be loyal to the man who put them there.

I find it particularly noteworthy that on the day the Colorado court ruled that Trump was ineligible to run for president, the Dow Jones average was up 260 points, capping an unprecedented rise in value. Anyone who understands our financial markets knows that winning streaks like the one we are seeing generally reflect the moods of major corporations and the wealthiest Americans who are the real movers of our economy. I believe that despite the noise on Fox News, the silent majority of wealth and power in our country would prefer that Trump disappear.

Whatever the Supreme Court rules, we are in for a perfect storm of chaos and unpredictability between now and next year’s election. If the Supreme Court rules that Trump is ineligible to ever hold federal office again, the Republican Party will find itself without a putative leader. The new frontrunner would arguably be Nikki Haley, with Ron DeSantis and Chris Christy nipping at her heels. (I cannot take Vivek Ramaswami’s candidacy seriously.) One of those three would face off against President Biden in November, which will certainly invite a challenge from one of the groups hoping to run an independent centrist candidate against them. This election will likely determine whether the Republican Party exists as a viable cohesive force beyond 2024.

Americans want to celebrate Christmas with their families, party on New Years Eve, and spend the next day watching football or shopping the post-holiday sales. But the mess we’re facing isn’t going away, and unless you spend the holidays in an underground bunker with no internet, it’s going to tarnish all that for many of us, and it should. The best investment we can make in our families’ futures is to remain engaged, because what happens in the next two weeks may determine the course of their lives. The only thing we can be certain of is that whatever we defined as normal American life will no longer exist if we’re not vigilant about protecting it.

Two months ago, Israelis were pursuing their lives, much as we were here in America, although they knew that could end at any moment. One serious act of unimaginable terror that eclipsed our nine-eleven changed everything. A country of ten million people now has almost seven percent of its population actively fighting a war that could determine their ultimate survival. Do you think that couldn’t happen here?

Posted in Articles | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

A Primer for Defeating Trump

Alan Zendell, December 16, 2023

In 2016, Donald Trump introduced a brash, profane style of campaigning that relied on insults, slander, and chaos. He lied pathologically and bragged about it. He knew millions of Americans felt disenfranchised or otherwise left behind by both major parties, and they were angry. He knew millions of evangelists were like lemmings led by corrupt churches who could be won over by promising to outlaw abortion. He knew millions more were ignorant racists looking for a messiah to tell them expressing their hate was okay.

Trump’s two most impressive talents are shameless pandering and his ability to sense other people’s weaknesses and vulnerabilities. He uses them so ruthlessly and consistently, everyone can see it, but it doesn’t matter. His supporters know exactly what he is, but they allow him to prey on their personal needs, prejudices, and desires. Thus, they’re ripe for Trump’s selfishness and narcissism. His supporters feel enabled to behave as he does.

Far more people despise Trump than admire him. If not for our irrational nomination processes,  our anachronistic Electoral College, and extreme gerrymandering which conservative courts are not inclined to curb, Trump would never be elected. If we were a true democracy in which every citizen’s vote carried equal weight, Trump would never obtain a majority because most Americans are fundamentally decent, and he is the antithesis of decency.

While a small minority of extremists are only too happy to carry Trump’s water for him, and several media outlets find it profitable to promote and agree with everything he does, I believe  most Republicans find him disgusting. Yet, they’ve been unable or unwilling to do what is required to silence him. In 2016, they were like deer caught in his headlights. They had no idea how to deal with him, and their own huge egos made the idea of banding together to defeat him a nonstarter. Consolidating behind one candidate would have meant all the others had to back out. We know how that combination of selfishness and cowardice turned out.

The 2020 Republican primaries were simpler because Trump was an incumbent. If the others seeking the nomination couldn’t coalesce behind a single contender in 2016, it was virtually impossible in 2020. To the great misfortune of Americans who believe in democracy and decency, the 2024 candidates seem no more able to stop Trump than their predecessors.

Vivek Ramaswami is an egomaniac whose views are in some ways more extreme than Trump’s, and like many billionaires, he has nothing to lose by pursuing his campaign. Ron DeSantis has an equally huge ego and may be even more dangerous than Trump. His only serious criticism of Trump is that he’s been a consistent loser since 2016. And Chris Christy, despite his bombast and loud condemnation of Trump, has no credibility. In 2016, salivating for a position in Trump’s Cabinet, he became one of Trump’s lapdogs, prostrating and embarrassing himself. Turning on Trump now shows as little integrity as Trump’s former fixer, Michael Cohen’s sudden grasp for respectability – or was it the money his tell-all book made?

That leaves Nikki Haley. The former South Carolina Governor and UN ambassador is smart, talented, and self-assured. She has a grasp of the major issues facing the country and is able to conduct herself like a mature adult who cares about people. I disagree with almost every aspect of her political ideology, although she deserves credit for being committed to NATO and supporting Israel. She’s not my choice to be president, but she’s the best hope for silencing Trump, and that’s no small thing.

The question most of us who believe Joe Biden has been a successful and productive president need to answer is whether we want him running against Haley, who the polls suggest has a better chance of winning than Trump. Is it more important to annul Trump’s influence or to assure Biden’s re-election? I like Biden, but I like America more, and America will be very much at risk if Trump wins again.

The good news is that there’s a way to beat Trump, and Democrats and Independent don’t have to rely on Republicans to do it. If you live in a state with an open primary system you can vote in either party’s primary. Since Biden is running unopposed, voting in the Democratic primary is meaningless. Use your vote to get behind Nikki Haley. If your state has a closed primary system, simply register as a Republican before casting your primary vote. You can still vote for whomever you like in the general election.

In a badly divided Republican Party, Democrats and Independents have the power to clean up the mess the Republicans have made, and probably save their party for them. They may save our country as well.

Posted in Articles | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Will Mike Johnson Support America or Putin?

Alan Zendell, December 13, 2023

Most of us had never heard of Representative Mike Johnson (R-LA) until he was suddenly voted in to replace Kevin McCarthy as Speaker of the House. We quickly learned that he is an evangelistic Christian whose political ideology is uncomfortably similar to that of the MAGA terrorists who held McCarthy hostage and eventually ousted him as Speaker. The unanswered question was whether parallel ideologies implied similar temperaments and agendas.

In his first test, Speaker Johnson used a strong bipartisan majority to avert a government shutdown. Well done, Mike – but before we get too happy, let’s remember that the way the shutdown was avoided was a deliberate setup for the coming debate over defending Ukraine against Russia. What was once a no-brainer has turned into a MAGA extremist extortion plot over demands for increased border security and supporting Donald Trump. We didn’t know, in September, that that battle would expand to include supporting Israel in its war with Hamas.

But let’s be generous. Johnson saved the country from the economic chaos and loss of international standing that a shutdown would have caused. And there’s also that part of  American hubris that suggests leaders who find themselves with unprecedented responsibilities can grow into the job. Some, like Abraham Lincoln and Lyndon Johnson (no relation to Mike) actually did. Rather than behave like Donald Trump, we’ll reserve judgment because this is America, where people are innocent until proven guilty.

As a committed Christian, Speaker Johnson undoubtedly recognizes all the important people in his life with great generosity at Christmas. That would be a good thing if we were assured that they were the right people. But as things stood, today, although there is a substantial bipartisan majority in Congress and among voters who believe that continuing support for Ukraine is essential, the tiny MAGA minority that has already done so much damage to Congress’ reputation, is willing to hold Ukraine hostage until they get what they want.

It’s not clear which way Johnson will go on Ukraine. Is he all in on the MAGA border demands or is he extending the debate so the extremists can’t complain that they weren’t given a voice? Does he value our national security and preserving America’s role in maintaining the balance of power that has averted a third world war for seventy-eight years, or is hurting the Biden administration to help Trump win in 2024 his first priority?

That’s what the budget fight in Congress is about. Members of the House and Senate on both sides of the aisle strongly support Ukraine and recognize the danger of allowing Russia to win. American and European military leaders warn, every day, that a Russian victory in Ukraine could upset the entire world order, strengthening Russia, Iran, and North Korea, weakening our attempts to keep China from dominating east Asia, and irreparably damaging NATO.

Not once in his brief political career has Donald Trump treated Vladimir Putin as the dangerous adversary he is. His extreme narcissism, which causes him to crave acceptance by the dictators who would destroy our democracy and his lust for wealth he believes he can obtain by sucking up to Putin make Trump incredibly dangerous. As long as his base controls the Republican Party, the peril he would place us in will be the centerpiece of every political decision between now and the next election.

That’s quintessential Trump, making every decision on the basis of what’s best for him, and the Hell with the country and everyone else in it. The coalition of Matt Gaetz, Lauren Boebert, Paul Gosar and the other MAGA extortionists is single-mindedly focused on their domestic agenda of banning abortion, sealing our southern border, and assuring that their wealthy donors don’t pay taxes. To that end, turning a blind eye to what nearly everyone involved in national security policy views as critical is tantamount to treason.

It remains to be seen whether Speaker Johnson a smarter, more refined version of Matt Gaetz, or his highest loyalty is to the Constitution and the republic he swore to defend. I hope he will turn out to be this decade’s Lyndon Johnson. He laid the groundwork for that by stating publicly that what he needs, if he is to support giving Ukraine the weapons it requires, is a clear definition of what would constitute victory and a plan for achieving it. For his part, President Biden said today that he’s willing to make significant concessions on border security to get the aid packages for Ukraine and Israel done.

Both men thus drew the boundaries of a reasonable negotiation. If the MAGA crew chooses to be unreasonable, Johnson can overrule them and bring the aid bill to the floor, where it will surely pass. That would really be growing into the job of Speaker. The other choice, according to most experts, would give Putin a Christmas present we will all regret.

Posted in Articles | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

The Supreme Court Must Choose Integrity Over Loyalty to Trump

Alan Zendell, December 12, 2023

When Donald Trump’s lawyers filed a motion that the criminal charges against him should be dropped because as a former president he should be immune from prosecution for any alleged crimes he committed while he was in office, they didn’t expect a favorable decision, and so far they haven’t received one. Trial Judge Tanya Chutkan denied the motion, writing: “Defendant’s four-year service as Commander in Chief did not bestow on him the divine right of kings to evade the criminal accountability that governs his fellow citizens.”

Her decision demonstrated that she understands the Constitution and remembers what the American Revolution was all about. It was primarily about assuring that neither the British monarchy nor any other would ever rule over the United States and assuring that all citizens had a vote in choosing their president. Unfortunately, in 1779, “all citizens” meant white, male landowners, but let’s not quibble. It only took 141 years to correct that oversight. It could all be undone in a matter of months.

Trump didn’t expect to win that battle. The filing was simply a key part of his legal defense strategy to delay his criminal trials until after the 2024 election. Should Trump be re-elected, he would be immune from prosecution for four more years, and in the view of many legal scholars, could pardon himself for all past and future crimes. Judge Chutkan knew that maintaining the scheduled March 4, 2024 trial date was essential if American voters were to know whether Trump was guilty of serious felonies before Election Day.

Special Counsel Jack Smith, the well-respected prosecutor who is managing the DOJ indictments and trials of Trump, also understood Trump’s defense strategy, and knew that it would likely be successful unless he took action to avert what might have been a years-long adjudication of Trump’s claim. Instead of waiting for Trump to appeal Judge Chutkan’s ruling, he petitioned the U. S. Supreme Court to take up the question in an expedited fashion.

Two critically important things are at stake. One is the question of the Court’s integrity. The other is the fate of our democracy, should the Court choose loyalty to Trump over preserving the Constitution’s intent that no one is above the law. We don’t yet know if the Court will grant Smith’s request, but in a hopeful sign, it ordered Trump to respond to Smith’s petition by December 20th.

Most of us knew, on the day Trump descended the escalator in Trump Tower spewing hate and racist taunts, that he was a threat to our democracy. An extreme narcissist skilled in the use of Orwellian Doublespeak, Trump has always known that chaos, obfuscation, and confusion were his greatest allies. He has never been about truth, laws, or facts. He responds only to the demands of his ego, and his own recent statements make it clear that he has visions of being a dictator should he win re-election.

It took Adolf Hitler only four months to subvert and undermine the court system he had been elected to defend, and before long, his Brownshirt militias were marching through the streets of German cities intimidating anyone who didn’t bend a knee to the Fuhrer. If Trump escapes prosecution and wins re-election, the insurrection at the Capitol may turn out to be only the first act in a second American Revolution, in which The Proud Boys evolve into an American Gestapo. As long as Trump retained a rabid base driven by rage and hate, it had to come to this eventually. Jack Smith’s Hail Mary to SCOTUS simply brought matters to a head sooner than we anticipated.

If the Supreme Court grants Trump monarchic immunity from prosecution, they will essentially end the basic protections in the Constitution that underpin our republic. A president with Trump’s values and personality disorders who believes he has the power to act with impunity at all times will do exactly what he told us he would do. He will appoint an army of sycophants and thugs, order them to violate any laws he finds inconvenient, and use his presidential pardon power to assure their continued loyalty.

We were raised to believe the United States was special. We weren’t like other countries, and no matter what the challenge our anointed status somehow made us immune to insurrection and political coups. But every civilization that had the hubris to believe it had reached a level of presumed enlightenment quickly devolved into decadence, corruption of values, and eventually total collapse. If you think it can’t happen here, check out Sinclair Lewis’ famous novel of the same name, or Margaret Atwood’s A Handmaid’s Tale. It surely can, and it will if people like Trump are permitted to go unpunished for their crimes and people like us sit by and do nothing to stop it.

Posted in Articles | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Have We Forgotten?

Alan Zendell, December 7, 2023

Shortly after nine-eleven, a Seattle Times columnist of Japanese descent sardonically thanked ISIS for committing an act so heinous, it would eventually make Americans forget the attack on Pearl Harbor. It seems he was correct. Today, on December 7th, the eighty-third anniversary of the attack, I searched the CNN website for “Pearl Harbor.” I got “No Results Found.”

Are you surprised? While many people hold grudges and remember personal grievances for decades, as a society, we have a tendency to erase bad memories. I guess I’ve forgiven Japan – I’ve driven nothing but Toyotas since 2006, but forgiving is not the same as forgetting. Millions of people around the world deny that the Nazi holocaust ever happened, which is why the motto of the Jewish survivors is “Never forget!”

Psychologists tell us humans naturally try to suppress their memories of traumatic events. It’s a defense mechanism vital for our mental health. But purging our day-to-day memories of painful events does not expunge them from history. We’re taught that if we ignore the lessons of history, the errors of the past will be repeated, but our teachers failed to mention that burgeoning new technologies make each repetition more deadly.

Today, I’m focused on four lessons we cannot afford to forget:
• Appeasing aggressors never works. It simply encourages them.
• Freedom and democracy are not free. They must be constantly worked at and defended, or they will disappear.
• The rules of war only apply when all sides abide by them. Corollary: in modern warfare, no one is a civilian.
• Racism and bigotry never die. They just retreat into the dark recesses of society and fester.

When America elected President Barrack Obama, many of us believed it was a sign that we had evolved past the legacy of slavery. We were shocked out of our naivete when Donald Trump proved that personal grievances, bigotry, and hate were not only still alive and well in America, but they existed in sufficient numbers to give him the presidency. We took our eyes off the ball, and we can’t even estimate what that will cost us as a nation.

Fascism nearly destroyed civilization in the twentieth century. Had the Axis Powers won – for example, had the Germans or Japanese developed the atom bomb before we did – the entire planet might today be dominated by competing autocracies. On one hand, we’d like to forget all that, yet our entertainment media are flooded with every conceivable kind of dystopian future. We suppress our fears and then live our nightmares in films, video games, and limitless exploitive media. That ought to tell us something.

Today, we see the results of our failure to heed the lessons of history in three critical arenas. Vladimir Putin showed us that paranoia, lust for power, and unbridled ambition will always fill every vacuum created by apathy and laziness. Russia’s war in Ukraine is this century’s Nazi invasion of Czechoslovakia. By not meeting force with force in 1939, Allied leaders allowed the war to grow until it consumed whole countries and resulted in more than 20 million military and 50 million civilian deaths. If we do not prevent Russia from destroying Ukraine, there is little doubt that NATO countries will become directly involved with an ever-increasing risk of nuclear war. Yet, extremist politicians who represent a minority of Americans are hamstringing our ability to defeat Putin. They’d rather fight over abortion, rig elections, and blame each other for bad immigration policies for which both sides are culpable.

It took eight decades to forget the lessons of World War 2, but it only took two months for the world to forget the atrocities Hamas committed on October 7th. Less than nine weeks ago, the world understood that Hamas, a terrorist organization whose principal purpose is the destruction of Israel, hides among its own civilians using them as human shields. Hamas knew its murderous attacks on innocent Israeli civilians would leave Israel no choice but to destroy the infrastructure they had built in Gaza. No one denied Israel’s right to defend itself and to destroy the entity that had sworn to exterminate Jews in the Middle East, knowing full well that Hamas had set its own population up as sacrificial lambs. Yet, the same extremist politicians who would abandon Ukraine are now willing to abandon our only reliable ally in the Region.

Now, the same small minority of right-wing extremists in our Congress seem unanimously committed to putting Donald Trump back in the White House. They understand and applaud Trump’s promises to abandon the protections of our Constitution and remain in power indefinitely. There are no longer any mysteries surrounding Donald Trump. His base is solidly behind him. If the rest of us either forget the lessons of history or simply decide that protecting our democracy is too much trouble, we will create our own dystopian future.

Posted in Articles | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

New Years Resolutions in December

Alan Zendell, December 6, 2023

We’ve finally put all those Thanksgiving leftovers into the past, but not, I hope, a clear understanding of what we should be thankful for. Most years it’s loving family and friends. This year was no exception, yet there was a higher priority. Because it faces its greatest threat in more than a century-and-a-half, what was foremost in my mind was what growing up under the Constitution of the United States has meant to the grandchildren of immigrants who fled oppression in Eastern Europe a century ago.

Rather than languish in the between-holidays purgatory of early December, we should be making our New Years Resolutions now. Instead of waiting until we’ve gained ten pounds of holiday weight and then righteously vowing to take them off, why don’t we focus on what each of us can do to save our democracy? If we wait until January to get involved, the heavily funded MAGA pros will have already laid the groundwork for a Trump march through the Primaries.

Yesterday, addressing what a 2024 Trump victory would look like, former Representative Liz Cheney (R-WY) warned Americans that if Trump wins, our 2024 vote may be the last one we ever cast. Cheney, a principled conservative, reminded me that a leader’s integrity is far more important than her political ideology. As Rachel Maddow said about interviewing Cheney, any issue on which two people whose governing philosophies were as opposite as theirs could agree must be critically important and dangerous.

Maddow and Cheney are both correct, and I was encouraged when Heather Richardson’s Letters From an American reported that their interview was watched by sixty percent more viewers that Sean Hannity’s interview with Donald Trump. On the other hand, despite Hannity trying his best to give Trump an offramp from his recent autocratic rants, when Trump was offered a chance to assure America that he would not be a dictator, he said, “Not until day one.”

If Trump is re-elected, future historians will liken Americans to lemmings following the Pied Piper over a cliff. The future couldn’t be clearer. Trump’s entire governing philosophy can be expressed in three words: self over country. Remember his tour of the Normandy battlefields with his former Chief of Staff, John Kelly? The latter reported that Trump viewed all the GIs who perished on D-Day as losers and suckers. “What was in it for them?” he asked Kelly.

Everything Trump does is transactional. Every decision is based on what will increase his power and wealth. The welfare of the nation and the rest of us only matters when they happen to coincide with whatever satisfies Trump’s desperate narcissism on any given day. Trump lobbied the House to shut down the government because he thought it would weaken President Biden, no matter what harm it would have done to our economy and international standing. He’s lobbying Speaker Mike Johnson to withhold funding for defending Ukraine against Russia, because he is more concerned with having Vladimir Putin as his political ally than protecting NATO and Europe from Russian expansionism. If Trump arranges for Putin to occupy Ukraine, he might even get to build a hotel with his name on it in Moscow.

We’re used to making hard decisions; we’ve been doing it all our lives. Who should I marry? Where should I live? Which cruise line is best? But our biggest decision in 2024 will be a no-brainer. Every court at every level that has had a role in verifying Joe Biden’s defeat of Trump in 2020 has ruled that Trump’s claims of fraud and election hijacking were false, and we all saw and heard his attempt to undermine the Constitution and our democracy on January 6, 2021. He boasts continually that if he wins in 2024, his second term will be a bloodbath of retribution against anyone he perceives as an enemy. If that doesn’t sound familiar, let me direct you to Adolf Hitler, Josef Stalin, Kim Jong Un, and Xi Jinping.

Ironically, our best hope for the future may be in whether Liz Cheney’s lesson applies to the Trump-stacked Supreme Court. He appointed three extremist justices, clearly expecting them to pay him back with loyalty whenever a case involving his power comes before them. His likely criminal and civil trial convictions will ultimately be appealed to SCOTUS as will challenges to Trump’s presence on several state ballots.

No one can predict what the Supreme Court will do, but in the end the responsibility to save our democracy lies with us. I’ve never had an easier decision in my entire life. Any vote against Donald Trump, any action, short of the kind of violence he would support, that reduces the chance that he will ever hold power again is more important than anything else we do next year.

Posted in Articles | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

Hate

Alan Zendell, November 18, 2023

I hate rattlesnakes, lima beans, heights, war, avarice, bigotry, lies, terrorism, and hypocrisy. The only thing that eclectic list has in common is that hating the things on it involves no moral dilemma and hurts no one. Hating people is an entirely different thing. For me to hate someone, there has to be a sense of genuine evil about them. The number of people I have truly hated (Adolf Hitler comes to mind) can be counted on one hand, and in no case did it have anything to do with race, color, or religion.

I grew up in a Jewish family in the aftermath of the Holocaust. If ever there was a reason to feel hatred and a desire for revenge…yet, even as a child, I understood that to hate blindly, to allow grief and rage to overwhelm our reason and screen out everything else is a profound and usually pointless exercise that hurts everyone. Too often, we find ourselves emulating the very thing that caused the hate in the first place.

I received my first lessons in anti-Semitism as an undergraduate at Columbia University. As a seventeen-year-old freshman in 1960, four years before the Civil Rights Act was passed, I worked at the Thomas J. Watson Laboratory, IBM’s main research facility applying solid state physics to computer development. On my first day, my boss, an otherwise pleasant, likable guy, informed me that since I was Jewish, IBM policy was that the only place I could be employed was the stockroom…unless, I had a PhD in Physics. Most of the senior researchers were Jewish.

Three years later, I worked at a NASA research institute located on campus as an assistant to a prominent German scientist who was in New York on a NATO contract. In his mid-thirties, he’d been a teenager when WW2 ended. His secretary, a young Jewish woman, was terrified of him. Poor Esther trembled every time she entered his office, and he, being a very decent and gentle man, was extremely troubled by her reaction to him. It was unproductive for everyone, but credit both Esther and the Professor; an hour of open communication was all it took to resolve the problem.

I have witnessed the entire existence of the nation of Israel. I’ve struggled to understand the hate and bigotry that has surrounded that country since it was born in 1948. The blind hatred of the Arab world, which caused every other country in the Mideast to declare war on Israel on its first day of existence, based solely on the fact that Israel became the homeland for Jews who survived the Holocaust, has confounded everyone who wishes to live in peace.

Even so, many of us who unconditionally supported Israel during that entire time also recognized the plight of the Palestinian people, which dates back long before Israel existed. The British, in the waning days of empire, had dominion over the Middle East between the two world wars. From that time until today, every governing authority, from the British protectors to every Arab nation in the region treated Palestinians as refugees with no inherent value, although there’s considerable evidence that Palestinians have in many ways surpassed their Arab neighbors in educating and caring for their people. The tension between Israelis and Palestinians is a legacy inherited from a time when Jews had no country of their own.

By 1990, a young generation of Israelis was tired of war and eager to reach an accommodation with their neighbors. But the influx of millions of Jews fleeing the defunct Soviet Union who had lived under Communist oppression all their lives, changed Israeli politics and gave birth to the extremist movement that brought current Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to prominence. Many of us who support Israel recognize that Netanyahu has not been a positive force for peace. He is responsible for the ever-expanding Jewish settlements in the West Bank that are a clear violation of international law, and he has not been shy about his intentions to annex large portions of Palestinian territory into Israel. He has done nothing to stop militant Israelis from attacking mosques and spreading the same kind of hate-based propaganda his enemies use.

That said, the actions of Hamas clearly fall into the category of genuine evil. After literally centuries of provocations on every side, the region has turned into an intercine brawl in which it no longer matters who cast the first stone. Responsible world leaders, even in Iran, know Hamas’ dream of a worldwide uprising against Jews must be ended. There are mountains of grievances on all sides, and Arab countries, who have survived on the world’s need for oil, are beginning to recognize that their future will benefit from cooperation with Israel. Even religious fervor takes a back seat to money and power.

As both anti-Semitism and anti-Arab hate rise in America, I’m struck by a personal reaction with a sixteen-year-old boy I was tutoring. Dark-skinned and Muslim, he was a big, strong kid with an even bigger heart. I was shocked to find him in tears one day, and after some probing, he revealed that there was a group of militant Jewish kids in his high school that targeted and persecuted him. An investigation by school authorities proved he was telling the truth. I took that very personally. Hate and hypocrisy have no place in my religion any more than any other.

Posted in Articles | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Can Speaker Johnson Stand Up To MAGA?

Alan Zendell, November 13, 2023

Human nature is a fascinating thing. We are simultaneously horrified by and drawn to all manner of mayhem. No one wants to see their friends and family hacked to pieces, yet chain saw massacre and zombie horror films invariably go to the top of the charts. We hate war, yet we’re mesmerized by scenes of combat and destruction. We want our government and military to function effectively, yet we elect people to high office who promise to burn it all down, regardless of the consequences.

Less than a year away from an election that has existential implications for our democratic republic, our elected leaders have reached an impasse that seems unsolvable as long as they continue business as usual. The problem, as always when dealing with human nature, is conflicting loyalties. We hope our leaders can rise above them, but it is clearer every day that most of them can’t. We grew up believing they were a different breed, capable of putting aside petty differences and personal biases when the country needed them to, but eight years of Donald Trump’s MAGA movement proved that they’re not.

We watch in horror as the majority of the Republican Caucus in the House of Representatives allows a small minority of extremists who abhor both the Constitution and the idea of majority rule prevent our government from functioning. They know what must be done, but for most of them, the only things that matter are being re-elected and reaping the perks and benefits offered by lobbyists and donors. Politics always contained these elements, but now it is dominated by them.

The rest of us are part of the problem, too. We’ve become a nation of spectators. We’re accustomed to watching and waiting as others determine our future, and even then, our own values are conflicted. We are fascinated by the fundamental evil and corruption of television shows like House of Cards, The Sopranos, and Billions, and when we see the same things happening on cable news, we’re caught between the hypnotic fascination of watching a slow-motion train wreck and the reality of the consequences.

We have to stop treating the future of our country as a spectator sport, and we’re running out of time. As I write this, we are four days and thirteen hours from a government shutdown. That means that not only will all “non-essential” government functions cease indefinitely, but our ability to function militarily and diplomatically is hamstrung if not completely neutralized. Allies like Israel and Ukraine will continue to see their nations threatened, while member nations in all of our alliances lose confidence in our reliability as partners, and our adversaries savor our weaknesses and vulnerabilities.

The new, and likely temporary Speaker of the House, Mike Johnson has roots that go deep into conservative Christian beliefs about abortion and gender roles, as well as a long-standing commitment to minimizing the size of government. He owes his election to the Speakership to the extremist MAGA gang that ousted Kevin McCarthy, and to maintain their support, he has come up with a plan for funding the government that he knows will be dead on arrival in both the Senate and the White House. He’s living under the same reign of terror that has existed since the Republicans won a five-seat majority, and there’s little reason to believe the terrorists in his Caucus will back down voluntarily.

Most of the country has been waiting for sane, Conservative Republicans, who are still the majority in their party, to assert themselves and stop fearing about Trump’s base. It’s time for Kevin McCarthy to stop feeling sorry for himself and step up to the plate. He whiffed in his last at bat, but he has another chance to unite his party and demonstrate that his priorities are serving the nation and upholding the Constitution.

Or, perish the thought, they can all consider the radical notion of bipartisan cooperation. As it becomes more and more likely that by election day, Donald Trump will be a convicted felon whose business empire is being dismantled because of decades of multi-million-dollar fraud, it’s time for those in Congress who hate him but still fear him to grow some balls. If they don’t have the stomach to fight back against the MAGA movement, how can we trust them to lead us through wars and keep the country safe and secure during what promises to be one of the most chaotic and violent election years in our history?

Speaker Johnson can fix this. All he needs to do is put forth a budget proposal like the one his colleagues in the Senate support and that most Democrats in the House will vote for. That’s not a crime, Mr. Johnson, it’s the way things are supposed to work, and it will relegate the MAGA minority to its proper place in our politics.

Posted in Articles | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment