Earlier this month, on Veterans Day, while speaking at the opening of the new military museum at Ft. Belvoir, Virginia, the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff of the Armed Forces, General Mark Milley, affirmed the following: "We are unique among armies, we are unique among militaries. We do not take an oath to a king or queen, or tyrant or dictator, we do not take an oath to an individual. No, we do not take an oath to a country, a tribe or a religion. We take an oath to the Constitution, and every soldier that is represented in this museum—every sailor, airman, marine, coastguard—each of us protects and defends that document, regardless of personal price."
General Mark Milley |
General Milley, the country’s top general officer, was referring to the
same oath that I and many other veterans of my era—and those before and since—have
sworn to. It begins like this: “I do
solemnly swear that I will support and defend the Constitution of the
United States against all enemies, foreign and domestic; that I will bear true
faith and allegiance to the same...”
I still stand by that oath, and so too, apparently, do the Armed
Forces...at least for now. But a lot of surprising things have been happening
over the course of the past four years, and those who have chosen to understate
or ignore them could be in for some very unpleasant surprises in the future, as
might we all.
The fact that General Milley felt called upon to reaffirm this oath —especially
on Veterans Day, a sacred day for military personnel and veterans alike—is
telling within the current unprecedented context. Especially after Milley’s commander
in chief saw fit a few days before to carry out a shake-up at the top of the
chain of command, starting with the firing of the defense secretary and
continuing with the sacking of some high-ranking Pentagon officials. The
president made little secret of why he was doing this. He was seeking to entrench
“Trump loyalists” in the military two months out from what, considering the
November 3 election results, should be his final day in office. He also made it
clear that he was rejecting those results and planned to stay put, which
rendered the Pentagon shake-up pointed and ominous.
It’s not hard to surmise, then, that General Milley knew precisely whom
he was referring to when he said that soldiers “do not take an oath to an
individual.” Because ever since Donald Trump took office in January of 2017, he
has been demanding loyalty, not to the Constitution or even to the United
States, but to him personally, from everyone on the roster of State, and he has
deemed anyone who refused to comply a “member of the deep state”—yet another
fantasy of his own fevered imagination.
The concern is, however, that such is the power of the image of the presidency—a personal power comparable only to that of the Pope within the Roman Catholic Church in terms of mass belief in the superiority of the personage holding the office—that these paranoid fantasies that flourish in Donald Trump’s mind have a contagious effect on his following. Indeed, nearly every time Trump supporters chide Trump critics for pointing to this particular White House resident’s severely flawed personality, they do so by harping on “lack of respect for the institution of the presidency”, rather than acknowledging that this president’s estranged relationship with truth and reality is like none other in the history of the office he holds.
Unfortunately, the Republican Party leadership’s prioritizing of winning
over American democratic ideals is such that the majority-Trumpian GOP is
perfectly willing to not only indulge but also to fan the flames of this fever
in hopes of being able to cling to power at the expense of the people’s faith
in the most noteworthy experiment in democracy in the history of the world. And
this is only serving to institutionalize the climate of distrust that Trump and
Company are seeking to breed, thus pitting the somewhat less than half of the
population that is convinced Trumpian propaganda is true against the more than
half the population that realizes that it is a pernicious lie.
Over the course of the past couple of weeks, I have engaged repeatedly
with Trump-supporters on the social media. Some are too dismissive to develop
any rapport with whatsoever. Suffice it to say that on presenting my views on
democratic ideals I have no few times been referred to in these post-election
days as “a communist”, “an activist”, “an ass”, “a simpleton”, and “an
imbecile”—more specifically, “a full-of-shit imbecile”. But those who have
maintained sufficient logic and manners to present salient arguments have, to a
man and woman, clung to the sole and valid idea of what the president and his
campaign apparatus can legally do to challenge the election
results.
None of these people, unfortunately, seems to be listening when I
repeatedly agree that any candidate has certain legal recourse available when
he or she has reason to suspect fraud. They have again and again accused me of
wanting to forego certification of the vote and the legal rights of the
president and the GOP and simply allow the media to call the election. In fact,
nothing could be further from the truth or more ludicrous to anyone at all
familiar with my ardently democratic principles for which I have, in another
time and place, literally put my life on the line. I fully agree that no vote is final until certified and
that, if there is a shadow of a doubt about corruption, it should be
investigated. As in any other lawsuit, however, not on the basis of party
passion, disappointment over outcome, political ambitions, candidate preference
or unmitigated hearsay, but only on the basis of hard evidence and indisputable
facts.
The other argument of mine that Trump supporters consistently
ignore—because, I suspect, they have absolutely no valid stance with which to
rebut it—is that while any and all proper legal recourse in the courts is
valid, intervention by the Department of Justice, and more specifically, by the
attorney general is not. Period. The only time that the attorney general can
legitimately intervene in an election process is when all other legal recourse
has been exhausted and election results certified, despite there still existing
apparent and compelling evidence of irregularities. Otherwise, there is a hard
and fast rule that the attorney general—who represents every citizen of the
United States, not the president or a party—cannot intervene to cast doubt on,
or to seek to overturn election results, especially when this key public
official is doing so in the name of the ruling party and administration to
which he or she is beholden. Attorney General William Barr has very apparently
run afoul of this rule by announcing that the DOJ would be opening a
pre-certification investigation into claims of voter fraud to the detriment of
the incumbent.
This is a clear violation of democratic principles. The aim of the rule
against the DOJ’s getting involved prior to finalization and certification of
the election is self-apparent: It is to ensure that no president can become a
dictator by using the machinery of government to neutralize the chances of an
opponent’s winning the race. Barr, and by association, Donald Trump, have
violated that trust.
The thread-bareness of Trump followers’ affirmation of the legality of
the incumbent’s attempts to stall the inevitable and to refuse to concede the
other candidate’s election victory lies in a question of legitimacy. The fact
is that, to date, after dozens of filings, none of the suits brought by the
Trump campaign has managed to make one iota of difference in the overall
election results. And the court decisions handed down have mostly been rebuffs
so severe that if Trump or his campaign were capable of anything even
approaching shame or honor these findings would be a source of profound
embarrassment.
For instance:
In a suit in Michigan in which Republican poll-watchers tried to block
certification in Detroit alleging fraud and misconduct, Circuit Court Judge Timothy
Kenny ruled that, “it would be an unprecedented exercise of judicial activism
for this court to stop the certification process of the Wayne County Board of
Canvassers,” adding that “Plaintiffs’ interpretation of events is incorrect and
not credible.” The same suit was taken to a federal court under a new title
where Trump’s team ended up dropping legal action after a lawyer for the city
of Detroit suggested that the president’s campaign was seeking “to try the same
case in multiple courtrooms hoping that somebody will provide an endorsement of
their baseless conspiracy theories.”
Also in Michigan, four voters sought exclusion of all votes cast in
three counties on allegations of fraud and irregularities. They did this with
no corroboration, claiming officials had counted the ballots of ineligible
voters and citing unverified reports of software glitches and dead people
voting that had appeared on Fox News. The suit was later dropped.
A suit regarding the Detroit vote that was only cosmetically different
from the one thrown out of court by Judge Kenny and later dropped by a federal
court was filed again in yet another court, but was dropped by the plaintiffs
themselves only a few days after filing.
When Michigan swung hard toward Biden, a desperate Trump campaign team again tried to halt the count, this time presenting an affidavit from one poll-watcher who said that another poll-watcher (whom she refused to name) told her that she had been told by unnamed poll workers to change the date received on a ballot.
Trump attorney Rudy Giuliani |
Michigan Court of Claims Judge Cynthia Stephens interpreted the
so-called affidavit as “I heard someone else say something.” Addressing the
plaintiff, she said, “Tell me how that is not hearsay. Come on now!”
In Pennsylvania, the Trump campaign sought to block certification of
voting due to minor errors in otherwise properly signed and cast absentee,
mail-in and other ballots. Common Pleas Court Judge James Crumlish denied the
viability of any of the claims.
Four Pennsylvania voters later sought to block all votes from four
counties alleging violation of the right to equal protection due to different absentee
balloting practices from one county to the next. Shortly afterward, seeing the
hopelessness of the claim, the Trump team decided to request withdrawal of the
suit. The court dropped it and three more similar cases from the docket.
In Montgomery County, Pennsylvania, the Trump team sought to block the
counting of six hundred mail-in votes because the Election Board had notified
the voters that they had forgotten to fill in missing information on their
ballot envelopes. When the attorney for the plaintiff was asked by the judge if
any of the errors involved fraud, he admitted that they didn’t. Judge Richard
Haaz disallowed the petition to annul the ballots saying, “Voters should not be
disenfranchised by reasonably relying upon voting instructions provided by
election officials which are consistent with the Election Code.”
These are just a few examples of the similar fates of all of some thirty
court filings on behalf of Trump since Election Day. Perhaps the most
humiliating was when Trump’s personal attorney Rudy Giuliani, a supposed legal
eagle who hasn’t actually practiced law in decades but is reported to be
pulling down twenty thousand dollars a day in Trump-campaign-paid legal fees
was chided by a federal judge for the suit he filed last week in Pennsylvania.
District Court Judge Matthew W. Brann, who heard Giuliani’s argument,
said that what Trump’s lawyer had presented to the court was “strained legal
arguments without merit and (with) speculative accusations.” The judge
indicated that what Giuliani filed wasn’t tied to the actual complaint or
supported by any evidence.
“In the United States of America, this cannot justify the
disenfranchisement of a single voter, let alone all the voters of its
sixth-most-populated state. Our people, laws and institutions demand more,” the
judge concluded.
Suffice this sampling of the Trump campaign’s exercising of its legal right to date to conclude that while legal, what the president is doing is less than legitimate. The pathetic nature of the filings up to now appears to be nothing more than a smokescreen for the election loss and, worse still, a ruse to create “dozens of court cases” questioning the results, even if those cases are quickly and unceremoniously dropped by the Trump team, in order to create a superficial climate of doubt regarding the election results and the clear legitimacy of President-elect Biden’s win. At last count, although many results still require final certification, Biden had a 5.98 million popular vote lead over Trump and is expected to command a more than seventy-vote lead over Trump in the Electoral College. Given the anemic performance of the Trump campaign’s legal team to date—it’s hard to see how they might have some ace up their sleeve when they’ve failed so miserably to produce any compelling evidence in court up to the present—those results are unlikely to change significantly, if at all, in favor of the incumbent.
The only conclusion, then, is that Trump’s entire strategy—such as it is—in refusing to do what every other president in living memory has done for the good of the Union and concede, is to sow discord, to undermine faith in the system, to basically slash and burn democracy so that if it doesn’t conform to his ambitions it will no longer be viable for his successors and will leave them with an ungovernable population.
These are the tenets of fascism. To scratch, claw and bite one’s way like
a rat to the top of a personality cult that rewards dictatorial charisma over
democratic vigor and that prefers blind loyalty to individuality and the
dictates of a populist mob to respect for civil rights.
Already in Georgia this week—where the Republican governor and secretary
of state have done the right thing by placing party beneath country and by not
only ensuring an absolutely transparent election but also by certifying the
results after a machine count and a hand count—pro-Trump protesters took to the
streets to object to the clearly fair outcome. They declared themselves “the
new Republicans” and dubbed “traitors” the governor, the secretary of state and
a handful of other Republicans who have suggested it’s time for the president to
concede and open the way to transition.
As the final results are confirmed and certified, it is likely that this
kind of unrest could become much wider spread and perhaps more violent, since
Trump’s disregard for democracy and his efforts to cast doubt on what one of
his own appointed—and subsequently fired—Homeland Security officials called “the
most secure election in history”, have “succeeded” in creating the perception
among an estimated seventy percent of Republicans that they have been cheated
and that the election has been stolen from them. It seems, from my experience,
to be futile to ask any of these election deniers why on earth, if the
Democrats really did “throw” the election, they would have permitted the GOP to
do so incredibly well in the House, where the party gained numerous seats, or
in the Senate, where control has come down to the fate of two run-off elections
in a single state. They simply glaze over and repeat the litany that Trump was
cheated, when nothing could be further from the truth.
Having resisted and survived dictatorial rule elsewhere in the world, I
am disheartened and gravely concerned about the trend that Donald Trump’s four
years in office have wrought in my native US. Polarization of rival parties,
the prioritizing of dogma over truth, the successful impact of
institutionalized lies and propaganda on the thinking of an enormous proportion
of the population and the elevation of a sociopathic and narcissistic
personality to Pope-like levels of popularity based on such critically
destructive ideologies as racism, xenophobia, ultra-nationalism and hatred of “the
other”.
I return often to the question that I have heard Americans ask time and
again: How could a country like Germany ever have fallen under the spell of a
dictator like Hitler? All I can do is point to what is happening right now and
say that history repeats itself.
The conservatives who helped bring Hitler to power by largely “democratic”
means, never believed that he would be able to use the clout that they had
bestowed on him as chancellor to later create a single-party dictatorship. But
the echoes of the past are there when, going into this election, we heard Trump
repeatedly say that the only way he could lose was if there was fraud. Just as
German conservatives fancied that they could “control” Hitler and “tame” his
Nazi followers, so too the GOP thought that they could control Trump and his
followers. Instead, their party has been usurped and is now the party of Trump
and they are being held hostage by Trump’s base, which they so fear losing that
they are willing to try and help them subvert democracy by continuing to deny
the indisputable facts of this month’s election.
German journalist Theodor Wolff wrote in the Frankfurter Zeitung shortly after the Nazis won power in the
country’s parliament that there was nothing to fear from Hitler. Although
Hitler would surely fight the left tooth and nail and although it was true that
he was backed by a virulent and violent base, there was "a barrier, over
which violence cannot proceed" in Germany. Germany, he claimed, was a
nation that was too “proud of its freedom of speech and thought” to allow
itself to live under tyranny.
The right was sure it could control Hitler |
In January of 1933, Wolff wrote: “It is a hopeless misjudgment to think
that one could force a dictatorial regime upon the German nation. [...] The
diversity of the German people calls for democracy.”
It is truly hard to watch what is happening in the US right now and not
be reminded of this. Although democracy has apparently willed out, make no
mistake that if Trump and many of his followers could overturn this free and
fair election by whatever means necessary and with total disregard for
democracy, they almost undoubtedly would.
What happens over the next four years after the worrying events of the
last four will be of capital importance in determining the survival of American
democracy. To paraphrase Theodor Wolff, will “the diversity of the American
people (continue to) call for democracy?”
We shall see.
4 comments:
Wonderful! Thank you.
Thank you for reading it, Cathy!
In the week that has transpired since this post, much has happened, including, finally, the commencement of the transition to the new administration. But Trump's voters, incited by Trump, have not yet accepted the result of the election. The USA is a dangerously divided country right now.
Yes, Diana, to my mind, the most divided since the Civil War and certainly since the civil rights era and Vietnam. What's at stake this time is democracy as a whole. When you have a former US Army general--and convicted, but presidentially pardoned felon--like Michael Flynn walking out of prison and calling for martial law to overturn free and fair election results, we're witnessing a sea change toward what could well be darker days.
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