America Did This to Itself
And now we all must suffer through it.
November 6, 2024,
4:14 PM ET
This time, the nation was on notice. Back in 2016, those of
us who supported Donald Trump at least had the excuse of not knowing how
sociopathy can present itself, and we at least had the conceit of believing
that the presidency was not just a man, but an institution greater than the
man, with legal and traditional mechanisms to make sure he’d never go off the
rails.
By 2020, after the chaos, the derangement, and the
incompetence, we knew a lot better. And most other Americans did too, voting
him out of office that fall. And when his criminal attempt to steal the
election culminated in the violence of January 6, their judgment was
vindicated.
So there was no excuse this year. We knew all we needed to
know, even without the mendacious raging about Ohioans eating pets, the
fantasizing about shooting journalists and arresting political opponents as
“enemies of the people,” even apart from the evidence presented in courts and
the convictions in one that demonstrated his abject criminality.
We knew, and have known, for years. Every American knew, or
should have known. The man elected president last night is a depraved and
brazen pathological liar, a shameless con man, a sociopathic criminal, a man
who has no moral or social conscience, empathy, or remorse. He has no respect
for the Constitution and laws he will swear to uphold, and on top of all that,
he exhibits emotional and cognitive deficiencies that seem to be intensifying,
and that will only make his turpitude worse. He represents everything we should
aspire not to be, and everything we should teach our children not to emulate.
The only hope is that he’s utterly incompetent, and even that is a double-edged
sword, because his incompetence often can do as much as harm as his
malevolence. His government will be filled with corrupt grifters, spiteful
maniacs, and morally bankrupt sycophants, who will follow in his example and
carry his directives out, because that’s who they are and want to be.
Tyler Austin Harper: Blame Biden
I say all of this not in anger, but in deep and profound
sorrow. For centuries, the United States has been a beacon of democracy and
reasoned self-government, in part because the Framers understood the dangers of
demagogues and saw fit to construct a system with safeguards to keep such men
from undermining it, and because our people and their leaders, out of respect
for the common good and the people of this country, adhered to its rules and
norms. The system was never perfect, but it inched toward its own betterment,
albeit in fits and starts. But in the end, the system the Framers set up—and
indeed, all constitutional regimes, however well designed—cannot protect a free
people from themselves.
My own hope and belief about what would transpire last
night was sadly and profoundly wrong—like many, I have the emotional and
intellectual flaw, if that’s what it is, of assuming that people are wiser and
more decent than they actually turn out to be. I feel
chastened—distraught—about my apparently naive view of human nature.
I dare not predict the future again, particularly as it
comes to elections and other forms of mass behavior. But I daresay I fear we
shall see a profound degradation in the ability of this nation to govern itself
rationally and fairly, with freedom and political equality under the rule of
law. Because that is not actually a prediction. It’s a logical deduction based
on the words and deeds of the president-elect, his enablers, and his
supporters—and a long and often sorry record of human history. Let us brace
ourselves.