America’s new 9/11

It’s been a couple of weeks since the country decided to elect arguably the least qualified and most inappropriate candidate in our history to its highest office. For many of us, the shock has yet to wear off … and for me, I doubt it ever will.

On election night I was watching returns come in, and as it became clear that Donald Trump was going to win, I struggled with finding a feeling to compare with what was going through my head. It hit me about 2 a.m. I had the same feeling coming to grips with a Donald Trump presidency as I did on Sept 11, 2001. “Oh no,” you’re thinking, “he’s not going to go 9/11 on us, is he?” Yes he is. The comparisons are very apt.

While no disrespect is intended to those who lost their lives that day, or to their families who I’m sure still grieve, I want to focus on the long-term ramifications of that terrorist attack.

Back on that gloomy September day, it became clear to me that Fortress America was no more. The oceans that protected us from enemy attack for a couple of hundred years were as porous as the borders that separated European countries. Even before the second tower fell, I knew life in these United States had been changed forever … and it was unlikely that the change would be for the better.

Since that time, my fears were confirmed. With the passage of the Patriot Act, our civil liberties have been severely curtailed; and there is no end in sight to government attempts to monitor our activities.

Simply invoking the word “terrorism” gives the government license to do whatever it pleases in spying on its own citizens. While we would like to think that spying is all for a good cause, countless examples of government overreach have proved that more than metal and glass came crashing down on 9/11.

And while we can rebuild a building on the site of that tragedy, we will never again see our rights to privacy restored. And most disturbing is most Americans are happy collaborators in the restriction of their previously precious rights.

So too, on Nov. 8, 2016, our country was changed forever. And it’s really hard to see how any of these changes will be positive. More striking are the swift actions by the Trump transition team to confirm our worst fears for our country’s future. His appointments to key positions guarantee whatever progress we have made toward making our country a true beacon of liberty, justice and equality is about to be reversed.

The United States has never actually been the place where liberty, justice and equality reigned supreme. Our greatness has always been the promise that someday we could become the place that actually delivered on the ideals of our Declaration of Independence.

It’s been a long and tortuous road for many from the days of slavery, Native American genocide, Jim Crow laws, Japanese internment, repression of women’s rights, suppression of dissent, voter suppression, criminalization of homosexuality, etc., to where we sit in 2016. Progress in these areas has always carried the promise of even greater liberty, equality and justice in the years to come.

But on Nov. 8, the American people decided that enough was enough. Early in the transition process, Trump has hit us across the head with a two-by-four to let us know what lies ahead. With a white supremacist as his chief strategist, a confirmed homophobe as secretary of education, a treasonous former general as secretary of state, a confirmed racist as attorney general, an isolationist as commerce secretary, a radical Islamophobe as national security adviser, and a raging Benghazi conspiracy theorist as CIA director, there can be no doubt whatever progress we have made since 1950 in this country is about to be reversed.

So who is to blame? There’s plenty to go around. The inept nature of the GOP in finding a viable candidate to run against Hillary Clinton, the FBI’s efforts to prevent a Clinton presidency in violation of federal law, Russian duplicity in Trump’s campaign, Clinton miscalculations in key states, possible fraud in electronic voting, etc. Fingers can be pointed in many directions.

But ultimately, of course, the blame lies with the 60 million people who actually thought a Trump presidency was a good idea. I understand aging, uneducated white guys lining up behind the guy who speaks in sentences rated at the third-grade level. Their world has been upside down for 60 years, and it was never coming back. But what about the rest?

If you’re in law enforcement or in the military and you voted for Trump, turn in your badge. You’re about to be asked to do things that violate your sense of duty to the American people. You will be asked to assist in the systematic registration of people because of their religion. You’ll be asked to limit the freedom of movement and expression of many Americans who oppose Trump’s master plan. You’ll be asked to attack innocent people in other countries. You’ll be on the front lines of an America run amok.

If you’re a teacher and you voted for Trump, turn in your certificate. You have broadcast to your students that racism and bullying are legitimate principles of civil discourse. You have sanctioned the objectification of girls and women as proper conduct. You have announced that the truth is actually an impediment to learning and thinking.
If you’re a person of color and you voted for Trump, there are no words for you. In a landslide of racist rhetoric and actions throughout Trump’s life and campaign, what glimmer of hope did you see that your life would be better under a Trump presidency?

If you’re a woman and you voted for Trump, turn in your vagina. You’ve already ceded control of it to a man who would grope it for sport. How little you must think of yourself as a person to endorse this man as your president, and how little you must think of your daughters and granddaughters to put this fiend in a position of influence in their future.

Yes, Nov. 8, 2016, is our new 9/11. But this time we did it to ourselves. Democracies always get the government they deserve. I will spend many years wondering what we did to deserve this.

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