The January 6th Insurrection (a Dorf on Law classic)
Note to readers: This is my final column of 2021, and there truly is no alternative but to re-post the column that I wrote on January 7, less than a day after Trump-incited seditionists stormed the U.S. Capitol in an attempt to overthrow the government and the Constitution. Now that this horrible year is almost over, even my game attempt at optimism in the final full paragraph of that column seems hopelessly naive. Nonetheless, I will end here as I did on January 7: Peace!
by Neil H. Buchanan
The
United States, I have suggested more than once, is quite possibly a
"dead democracy walking." After returning to that metaphor in a column
barely more than a month ago, I wrote: "If we are too far gone to prevent the worst from happening -- if the end
is only a matter of time -- then the best we can do is to prepare for
what is inevitable. The beginning of such preparation is a clear-eyed
assessment of where things stand, understanding why it seems certain
that things will still turn out badly."
To
try to put this in personal terms (and to steer the metaphor away from
its original use to describe the victims of state-sponsored death),
imagine receiving the devastating news that you have contracted a deadly
disease and have only a short time left to live. Thankfully, I have
thus far never been confronted with anything even remotely along those
lines. I can imagine, however, that no matter how much one tries to
anticipate what the process will be like when the pain and breakdown
ultimately become unmistakable, the actual experience of symptoms would
still come as a shock. The vestiges of denial and hope on which one
relies for solace begin to flicker.
Yesterday felt like that, as I watched the news from Washington.
By
now, it has become a cliche to predict the worst and then say, "I hope
I'm wrong." The sentiment is a good one, but as far back as the early
Obama years nutcases like Glenn Beck (remember him?) were predicting
that our first Black president would lead a
fascist/communist/Muslim/socialist takeover, only to turn to the camera
and say with wide-eyed mock innocence: "I hope I'm wrong." As I sit and
think about yesterday's terrifying events at the United States Capitol
building, I certainly am not tempted to say, "See, I was right all
along!" I am saying not only that I wanted to be wrong but that even
though something like this has long seemed inevitable, seeing it
happening was still a shock.
My thoughts are too jumbled right now to allow me to pen a longer piece, so I will point to two of my Dorf on Law columns that seem especially relevant.
The first, which I have already republished as a Dorf on Law "classic" over the recent holidays, is titled "There Will Be (More) Blood," originally published on October 20, 2020. It includes this:
"Most importantly, the biggest story continues to be that Trump simply cannot stop encouraging his most extreme supporters to be ready to support him with violence. Blood has already been shed because of Trump this year. Shockingly but not at all shockingly, he seems to want more blood to flow."
"The second article, published four years earlier to the day (October 20, 2016), is titled "Donald Trump, Insurrectionist." Discussing the third presidential non-debate before that fateful election, I wrote:
"Donald Trump announced at the debate that he will not accept the results of the presidential election, unless he wins.
"If that is not a plan to foment insurrection, I do not know what is. This is not the kind of thing that one says lightly, but it is chillingly accurate...."Trump has now announced to the world that his losing will prove that the election is rigged against him. He will thus arrogate to himself the right to say that he did not lose fair and square. If you are not scared, you should be."
Perhaps
yesterday's events -- a riot incited by the man who is still somehow
President of the United States -- will change history in a good way,
somehow purging our body politic of the disease that has been killing us
for these long, depressing years. I hope so. The Trump mob did not
achieve its goal yesterday, and that is good. Maybe this will break the
fever, but even if it does, we have a long path to recovery ahead of
us, and success is by no means guaranteed.
Peace.