Friday, January 22, 2021

The Unfinished Nation!

 

Senators orate bio-partisan words of welcome. A cleric gives an invocation calling on an Almighty to bring care, hope, and peace to the nation. Lady Gaga, a classically trained Pop singer renders the National Anthem in a fashion that sets the bar high for any who follow. A black-robed Latina Justice of the Supreme Court, Sonia Sotomayor, administers an oath to a Black-East Asian who becomes our first woman Vice President; the band plays Hail Columbia, the Vice President’s song. The Chief Justice asks Joe Biden to swear that he will preserve, protect, and defend the Constitution. He does. He is proclaimed the 46th President. The usual ruffles and flourishes precede Hail to the Chief, the President’s song. The usual speech calling for change and unity follows. The President vows to be the president of all the people. It is short, effective, inspiring, and appropriate. All that is left is for the usual poem to be read, and the Benediction. The crowd that includes three former presidents can then disperse and go about their day. But wait, something isn’t going as planned.

 Amanda Gorman, the National Youth Poet Laureate, a 22 year-old self-described skinny Black girl descended from slaves and raised by a single mother, stands at the dais and sets the nation ablaze with the powerful reading of her powerful verse. She forces us, those in the stands and the 40 million watching on TV, to examine our conscience. to dig deep into our souls, to right our wrongs, to work for justice, to turn our Creed into reality. “We are striving to forge our union with purpose, to compose a country committed to all cultures, colors, character, and conditions of man… We close the divide between us … We lay down our arms so we can reach out our arms to one another.” The nation is astir. Soul searching is visible in the crowds. President Johnson, in March1965, after Selma, told a Joint Session of Congress, “At times history and fate meet at a single time in a single place to shape a turning point in man’s unending search for freedom. So it was at Lexington and Concord, So it was a century ago at Appomattox. So it was last week in Selma, Alabama.” Congress went on to pass the Voting Rights Act.

 

So it was a few days before in Washington DC, when unruly mobs grew to a seditious insurrection and stormed our Temple of Democracy. These were people who disavow democratic principles, people who do not want a country committed to people of all colors and cultures; by those who celebrate the Holocaust, by those who buy into Q’s conspiracy theories, by those who do not want to believe that all men are created equal.

 This young poet, already a woman of accomplishment, reminded us that our national dream was almost lost. It was a young woman with high ideals who turned an inauguration from simply the usual pomp into a call for deep and lasting national soul searching; once again.

Fifty-six years earlier, at the other end of the National Mall, the Reverend Martin Luther King told us he had had a dream, “that one day this nation will rise up, live out the true meaning of its creed: ‘We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal.’” We are still toiling to make this Union more perfect. We were reminded!

Jon Meacham,[i] a Pulitzer Prize-winning historian of the presidency, suggests that the creed will only become reality when individuals in the arena choose to side with the angels. Lincoln called them our “better angels.” We saw in the last couple of weeks what could happen when we ignore our better angels; when those trusted to guard us ignore their angels. We were reminded of how fragile our democracy is, how it could be brought down after only four years of an onslaught, how easily the crowd can be encouraged to overthrow all that we hold dear, our democracy, how easy it is to be taught to hate, to be suspicious, to wish upon a falling star. Joe Biden is the President, but Gorman made the day. 

President Biden has his hands full for the next few years. He has to demonstrate that his administration can end the pandemic that haunts us and kills thousands each day. He must get the country back to work and the kids back in school. He must provide economic aid to the millions unemployed through no fault of their own, standing in long lines for free food to feed their families. He must revive the manufacturing sector of the economy; he must convince the world that we are a nation that keeps its word, its alliances, its treaties, and that we are a people that can be judged by the content of its character[ii]. He has a hard row to hoe.

 

Biden calls for unity. The ultra-conservative cable news accuses him, on the first day in office, of installing far-left programs that cause disunity. His party’s progressive wing in Congress sees him as too moderate, a middle-of-the-roader. Yet unity is what our people need, some effort to meet in the middle, to do right for today, to work toward the never achievable perfect union, but try to make it better today than yesterday. Perhaps good, effective, and efficient government, conducted by experienced and competent people can bring changes to still the conspiratorial hoards. We will always have a diversity of views; that makes us a great nation. Diversity of ideas, however, is to be argued on the floors of Congress, not in the streets and not through armed insurrection.

 

We wish Biden well, for the sake of the country. We hope the calling of Amanda Gorman sustains itself to help us take stock of ourselves and strive to excite the soul of the nation to meet the expectations of its creed.

 

 

 

 

 



[i] Jon Meacham – The Soul of America – Random House, New York, 2018

[ii] Martin Luther King – I Have A Dream speech – Lincoln Memorial, Washington, DC, 1965

[1] The Hill We Climb – Amanda Gorman – January 20, 2021

Thursday, January 7, 2021

We knew it was coming, but didn’t believe …!

One of America’s most sacred institutions is the peaceful transition of power. Defeated for a second term, John Adams left the White House for Massachusetts and Jefferson moved in. The rest of the world was astonished; leaders didn’t leave office peacefully in those days. And, so it has been since 1801. The peaceful transition of power is one of our great institutions, a light unto the world, the most powerful message about democracy and freedom we can utter. A sitting president tried to upend the hallowed practice, starting with a call back in December for supporters to amass in Washington DC on January 6th for a large rally on the day that a Joint Session of Congress would meet to count the Electoral College votes for President and Vice President. At a rally in front of the White House Trump chanted that he would never concede and urged the crowd to march on the Capital.

And march they did, an organized group of white supremacist, Qanon conspiracy theory hollow-heads, Proud Boys dressed in black, and rag tagged Trumpists who believe the election was stolen, regardless of factual data that shows no fraud, miscounts, stealing of ballots, counting machines hacked by the Chinese or any other set of wild conspiracy accusations.

 Then, for the first time since who knows when, crowds of insurrectionists invaded the Capital grounds, charged the building itself, and breached the doors. Some reached the floor of the House and protested from the dais, some reached the Speaker’s office and caused mischief, some were on the Senate floor. About a thousand terrorists managed to get inside before it was all over. It was an insurrection in the least, an attempted coup by a bunch of seditionists perhaps, but definitely, a challenge to our democracy, to our republic, as Franklin warned, and the result of four years of unmitigated disregard for our institutions. In a feeble attempt to soften the battle, the President asked the rioters to go home, saying that he loved them, these good people. To call what happened yesterday a peaceful protest is to deny facts. To call it anything but an attempted coup is to deny facts. To deny that President Trump fermented these actions is to deny reality.

A Joint Session of Congress, meeting to count the nation’s votes was suspended so that the members could go to a safe place during an instigator’s incursion. The Vice President was evacuated by the Secret Service. The police were overwhelmed and called for reinforcements. Vice President. The National Guard was called to the Capital. The location of congressional leadership was unknown.

I have to admit that I cannot understand who the people are who descended on DC yesterday to protest at the White House and then overtake the Capital. I admit that I don’t understand them or their thinking, or their motives. Somebody will write a book in a month or so to explain what happened, but until then I remain mystified. In every state of the union, the ballots in the last election were counted and recounted. Democrat and Republican proctors were in every counting room to ensure that the process was fair. Government employees in every voting precinct certified the vote count. Election officials in every state certified the election outcome. Where there were questions about the process, officials audited the results. In each state, members of the Electoral College voted for President and Vice President, and their votes were certified and sent to Congress. There was no fraud and there was no steal! So who are these people who are so dedicated to overturning the vote of hundreds of millions of people? Who still believes the President and his sons’ claims of fraud and a stolen election? Surely they are not rational thinkers. I don’t get it.

Those who invaded the Capital, flag wavers all, were doing all they could to disrupt the Constitutional mandate for that day: the day the votes are counted. The irony is overwhelming!

I must say, that I am surprised at the disgust expressed uniformly by cable news platforms. They were unanimous; MSNBC, Fox News, CNN, Newsmax. Their reporting showed how unusual this attempt at sedition, at this potential coup is, for our nation.  Later in the evening, some of the far right-wing channels talking heads began to blame everyone except the mob that tried to destroy our democracy.

Later in the evening, after the Capital was cleared of ruffians, the majesty of our democracy went on full display. The two houses of Congress reconvened, and polite, heartfelt discourse continued. Storming the ramparts did not end the vote count; it did not end our democracy, but let it shine in its glory as our representatives went about their duty. It showed that We The People govern this vast land, not street thugs. At 3:44 AM this morning, the Joint Session of Congress ended, having elected Joe Biden, President and Kamala Harris, Vice President, to be inaugurated January 20, 2021.

Nobody carried more water for Trump in the last four years than Vice President Pence and Senator McConnell. These two men, in the end, could not abide the intended disruption of our form of government, and both did what their oath demanded; they stood to protect and preserve the Constitution against enemies foreign and domestic. Trump had gone too far.

Let us pray for our republican form of government. Let us come down in support of our democratic values. Let us not just pass off these actions as the new norm. This was a coup attempt and our nation’s future was changing before our eyes.

These incursions on our institutions, our Constitution, our way of life must end. Let us hope that when tomorrow’s morning has broken it will be a new day for America.

 

Tuesday, January 5, 2021

The Year Ahead!

“Happy New Year! It’s got to be better than 2020.” How often have you heard that lament in the last couple of weeks? 2020 is over! I don’t want to talk about it! I don’t want to write about it! It’s over! I’m giving myself only three months this year to become accustomed to writing 2020 2021 on checks and other documents. I usually take longer to develop the muscle memory.

For anything to get better, or worse, something has to change. So the only way 2021 will be a better year is if we change the behavior that made the last years such a mess. No change, no change!

We have been a two-party country for many years now, but I cannot remember a time when they tried so hard to pull the country apart. Seventy million people still believe the last election was a fraud. Even Members of Congress, who fear being primaried, are supporting efforts to overturn the election, in spite of the proven legitimacy of the vote in every state. They are willing to tempt the destruction of our democracy to keep their jobs. While they can claim the rules allow for questioning a State’s certified election results, there is a faint scent of sedition in their efforts. We are not born this way; it isn’t natural. We have to be carefully taught to hate at this level.[i] So let’s move forward into a new era, not a Biden era necessarily, but a New American era. We can do this!

We are not perfect, but we strive to be better today than yesterday, and more so tomorrow. It’s in our DNA! That is why we were sent, to be that beacon on the hill that showed the oppressed, those yearning to be free, how it could be so for them too. Let us transform the image into reality. In his book, The Soul of America – The Battle for Our Better Angels,[ii] Jon Meacham urges us to remember what makes us Americans: the constant striving for equality for everyone, the ongoing efforts to help our neighbors, and the willingness to work with those with whom we disagree, to come to the best agreements for our time. Let us find our soul this year!

Parchment in the vault of the National Archives reads, “All men are created equal.”[iii] We can do better this year. Inequality is not new. Historical tension between those who succeed greatly, whether financially, professionally, or politically, and those who choose other routes has proven a challenge for our republic. That tug is greatest for those forced to struggle on an uneven playing field. The pandemic is teaching us about the wide and deep disparity among our citizens. We should right our wrongs.

Millions of children attend inferior schools. Others have insufficient broadband to use home-based learning effectively; others don’t have adequate computer hardware. While the kids will go back to in-classroom learning sometime this year, pedagogy has changed forever. We can level the playing field of education. We can help more families to have access to fresh food so that children don’t have to rely on the schools and libraries for their daily nutrition. We can do more to train parents how to read to their kids, to help them with learning challenges, to make sure they are healthy, have glasses, and have other medical needs met. We can do that. Let’s!

We can change the homeownership paradigm for lower-income people and people of color so that they can join the middle class more easily. We should put an end to redlining and the flagrant abuse of the lending systems. We can make it happen!

We must get our people back to work. The stock markets’ record highs simply illuminate how little it represents the economy of the country. While the top 10% see portfolios grow, millions are out of work through no fault of their own. Hundreds of thousands line up every day for free food so they can feed their families. We must create jobs to replace those that will not come back after the pandemic; mostly low skilled jobs. We can retrain millions of people with new skills. We have done it before. We can do it again. Let’s!

Too many people do not have access to high-quality healthcare. Millions lost access when they lost their jobs due to the covid-19 shutdowns. Why must employment status regulate our access to wellness? The solutions aren’t simple and many people don’t want everyone to have good healthcare, but these roadblocks can be overcome in a compassionate and rich country that should be a model for the world, but isn’t. We can fix this national disgrace. We can help our neighbors get good healthcare when they need it. Let’s do it!

This year, we can focus on reducing the wealth disparity gap. Redistribution of wealth is a touchy subject, but one that needs to be faced every few generations. For the most part, the richest people in America started with a dream, an idea, and built companies that hired thousands of people, and in many cases changed the way the world works. They deserve their rewards. At the same time, however, they built their status with the help of those who worked for them. They had the help of willing legislators at local, state, and national levels. They need to contribute more to the society that lets them be so successful. Most of them agree with this idea.

The wealth gap is wide and deep in the US. Many retired people live quite well on our pensions, social security, and some investments. We may not see the difficulties faced by people who have no defined benefit programs, who work for companies that can’t afford health insurance for their employees, and who work for minimum wages. Work itself has changed and the chronic unemployed numbers hover above extreme. This year we need to ask ourselves if we want to perpetuate a system that has less than one percent of the population, 200,000 people, owning more wealth than the 110,000,000 people at the bottom of the wealth chart. Consider an employee who makes $137,700 per year who will pay $8,537 in Social Security taxes, and the person earning $1,00,000 who will only pay $8,537 in Social Security taxes. Shouldn’t a person making a million dollars a year pay the same percentage of income into the SS pot? This would be a good year to start to create a more equitable economic system. We don’t expect that everyone will have an equal outcome, but we should expect equitable pay back into the system that allowed them to succeed. We can do this!

When 2021 is over, I don’t want to be tired. I stayed up until midnight on New Year’s Eve, mostly to see the year out rather than the New Year in. Virtual is not the same as hundreds of thousands of people in Times Square, on the bridges of Sydney, the Strip in Vegas. When I stay up late at the end of this year, I want to be with lots of people, hale and hearty; a night filled with noise, with good friends, maybe even in a tuxedo. I don’t want much, really, just an end to the pandemic, a unified country, and a government that focuses on the good. Mostly, though, I want us to be America again, a light unto the world. It could be a great year because we know what changes we need to make, and we can make those changes if we set our minds to it. We can, really!

Let’s!

 

 



[i] Rogers & Hammerstein, South Pacific, 1949, New York

[ii] Jon Meacham, The Soul of America, Random House, 2018, New York

[iii] Declaration of Independence, In Congress July 4, 1776