General Discussion
Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsDRUMPF exposed "a pre-existing rot" - brilliant essay by Rob GOODMAN (long read)
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ROB GOODMAN has worked as the speechwriter for House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer and Senator Chris Dodd. His work has appeared on the floors of both houses of Congress, national television and radio, and the op-ed pages of The New York Times, Washington Post, and The Wall Street Journal. He is the author of Rome's Last Citizen.
http://www.politico.com/magazine/story/2017/01/what-trump-taught-us-about-american-democracy-214596
[font size=5]What the King of Hawaii Can Teach Us About Trump[/font]
A political fable from 1819.
By Rob Goodman
.... I cant be the only one who has lost count of the democratic [FONT style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: yellow"]normsthe unwritten, informal, but hugely important rules that help us govern ourselvesthat now seem to be gone with as little consequence[/FONT] as the taboos in the story. If youre running for president, you dont even raise the possibility that the election wont count if you dont win. You dont threaten to throw your opponent in jail if you do win. If you change your mind about throwing your opponent in jail, you dont explain it as an act of mercy, because thats not how the rule of law works. If youre running for president, and especially if you get elected, you release your tax returns, so voters can know that youre not financially compromised by foreign governments, or by corporations seeking to do business with the United States. You put your assets in a blind trust, so you never confuse your self-interest with the public interest. You dont accuse millions of Americans of voter fraud without evidence. You dont compromise civilian control of the armed forces. You dont let your team threaten to lock up journalists who investigate you.
[FONT style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: yellow"]You dont do those things, until, one day, you do.[/FONT] The only thing holding you back in most cases is the force of custom, and there are times and placesHawaii in 1819, or America in 2016[FONT style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: yellow"]when custom is so weak that its no force at all.[/FONT]
Of course, Donald Trump didnt need to be a political genius to realize that norms like these were historically weak. He only needed to watch the news. In just the last eight years, [FONT style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: yellow"]weve watched the unthinkable become the debatable and then the unexceptionable.[/FONT] Weve seen President Barack Obamas Supreme Court nominee denied even a hearing for nearly a year, and weve seen his other nominees blockaded at an historic rate. Weve seen real, live U.S. senators promise that no justice nominated by a Democratic president would ever be confirmed. Weve seen credible threats to default on the national debt. Weve seen the presidents budget director denied even the right to propose a budget to Congress. Weve seen the president expand executive power in response to all of this, in a way thats troubling even to some liberals. Weve seen the Senate filibuster go from rare to routineand watched Senate Democrats retaliate by partially nuking the filibuster. It was laughable when a member of Congress interrupted the State of the Union to call the president a liaruntil a movement calling the president a liar about his birthplace launched his successor to power. ....
Instead, we have to come to terms with living in a time of [FONT style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: yellow"]post-norm politics[/FONT]by which I dont mean that all of our political norms are suddenly defunct, but rather that [FONT style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: yellow"]the continued rolling back of norms weve taken for granted has to stop surprising us[/FONT]. Rather than thinking [FONT style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: yellow"]reactively[/FONT], and [FONT style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: yellow"]feeding the Trump outrage cycle[/FONT], we ought to understand him as exposing a [FONT style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: yellow"]pre-existing rot[/FONT]. We need to think about why norms fail in general, and how to act when we cant rely on them. Only then will we stop underestimating the sheer difficulty of one day rebuilding them. ....
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KT2000
(20,587 posts)which is what it appears trump wants. When the social fabric is destroyed it is everyone for themselves, which is the world he lives in. That is where he wins.
Big Blue Marble
(5,150 posts)Brilliant piece, highly explanatory, at a profound level as to what has, is, and will be, changing in our
society and how to prepare ourselves mentally to be up for these coming challenges
uponit7771
(90,364 posts)UTUSN
(70,740 posts)malaise
(269,157 posts)a country is a practicing liberal democracy. Apparently 'a peaceful transfer of power' regardless of everything else is fine.
UTUSN
(70,740 posts)That is, we don't take timely steps to expose and fix things. We let things happen until, like, *fifty* years later with the JFK assassination conduct a little commission that revises the findings from back when.
And back to how we all got here - because of Coup 2000 - probably all of us remember our leaders on a stage vowing to do something about the electoral process that broke so spectacularly then. And nothing happened, and here we are again with the same outcome.
We all play "If I Were King of the World" like in college bull sessions, about how we would dictate common sense, sweeping fixes to how things work, and we list all the kinks of our political mechanisms, like the Electoral College. I would do away with almost all of the gridlocking Checks-and-Balances, all the Gerrymandering, turn into a single house of Congress and a parliamentary system, etc., etc., but the reality is that the real law of society is that a system like the Roman Empire has to collapse completely - from "A PRE-EXISTING ROT" as the essayist says - instead of rejuvenating. Amirite?!1
malaise
(269,157 posts)but there have been many other coverups. Serious fixes are required or the USA is over