Thursday, November 7, 2024

REFLECTIONS ON THE 2024 ELECTION AND RESOLUTIONS FOR THE AFTERMATH

       Tuesday, November 5th, 1605, is the date of the Gunpowder Plot, a Catholic attempt to blow up the House of Parliament in opposition to James I.  Tuesday, November 5th, 2024, is the date of Trump’s successful attempt to win the presidency and restructure the American political system.   Like millions, I am stunned by this outcome, the more so because of my predictions of a Harris win and a “blue wave.”  I am among many of the worst of political prognosticators.  My only consolation is not that I had much company, but that I had a higher, though obviously now mistaken, opinion of the present majority of American voters.  I do not adhere to the pieties in response to political ugliness: “this is not who we are” and “there is no place in this country for [whatever is ugly]).  The results of the 2024 election are who we are at this time and in this place—at least for now. 

Friday, November 1, 2024

EXPLAINING TRUMP'S ELECTION (IF IT HAPPENS)

 “The most important election of our times”—how many times have we heard that phrase every four years?  But this election, the phrase applies because, in no previous election for a century-and-a-half, has the issue of the survival of democracy arisen. 

As I write this blog less than a week before Election Day, the race between Democratic Vice-President Kamala Harris (and Minnesota Governor Tim Walz) and Republican former president Donald Trump (and Ohio Senator James “JD” Vance) appears to be very close in both the popular vote and the Electoral College vote.  (I still stand by my prediction of a “Blue Wave,” a November surprise, but I admit that it looks shaky.)  Once Harris replaced President Joe Biden on the Democratic ticket, the expectation was that she would dramatically improve Democratic chances of winning the presidency.  After the debate between Harris and Trump established her strengths and his weaknesses as a candidate, the expectation was that she would pull well ahead of him.  For Harris and Walz are not only strongly supported by their party, but also winning some support from the Republican party.  Indeed, former elected officials like Liz Cheney and her father Dick Cheney; senior flag officers, including those who have worked with Trump; and former White House personnel have vigorously criticized his fitness for office.  Nevertheless, at best, she has pulled even with him; neither candidate has achieved a lead in the national polls greater than the margin or error, and the same is true in the seven “swing states.”

 

Throughout the campaign, Harris has been cogent, compelling, and compassionate in her appeals to all Americans; Trump has been confused, erratic, insulting, and hateful in his appeals to his base of Christian nationalists, Catholic and evangelical fundamentalists, and other MAGA followers.  She has acted with civility and decency; he has defied decorum and indulged vulgarity.  She has “stayed on message” about, among others, abortion rights, a thriving economy, reduced undocumented immigration and crime, and moderately progressive taxes, with an emphasis on opportunities for the middle class.  He has aired his grievances about voting fraud, the 2020 “stolen election,” and politically trumped up civil and criminal charges; wavered on abortion; babbled about climate change; and stressed racist claims of uncontrolled immigration and immigrant crime as part of his more general view of America in decline (as a “garbage can”).  They also differ greatly on policies about NATO, Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, Israel’s military operations in Gaza and Lebanon, health care, gun control, and climate change.  The candidates and their policies could hardly be more different.

 

The same is true of their attitudes toward the rule of law, constitutional government, the operations of government, the agencies and people who make government work.  Remarkably, although the president-elect, in taking the oath of office, must pledge to protect and preserve the Constitution, Trump has said that he may need to dispense with regulations, laws, and even the Constitution.  (Presumably, in view of a recent Roberts Supreme Court decision, dispensing with them might be “official acts.”)

 

Given such stark contrasts, the question is how a close election is possible.  Given the early expectations for Harris to surpass Trump, the question becomes what has restrained Harris and sustained Trump in the polls.  Since Harris is well qualified by education, experience, and personality, racial and gender bigotry must play a role in retarding her ascent.  Also geographical bigotry; San Francisco, where she worked, is a by-word for uninhibited and untraditional political policies.  Trump is the antithesis of a conventional political candidate.  He is ignorant and uncurious (“unserious,” as Harris has called him), dishonest, erratic, impulsive, narcissistic, uncouth, and charged with or guilty of many and diverse civil and criminal offenses.  Bottom line: Harris is handicapped despite her assets; Trump succeeds because of his liabilities.

 

I explain this “Trump paradox” as a function of the discontents prominent in populations conservative in politics or religion.  I address religious discontents first since it is more easily understood.  Certain religious conservatives—many, but not all, evangelical fundamentalists and Catholics—are inherently imperialistic; they want religion predominant in society.  Short of controlling influence, they are frustrated, angry, and disposed to set aside inconvenient considerations of manners, morals, or religious tenets to acquire it.  Trump has courted these religious conservatives, and his appointment of three Supreme Court justices who fulfilled their promise to overturn Roe v. Wade has secured their loyalty to him and support for his candidacy.

 

The political discontents are more varied.  Some express discontent with the economy, despite its robust performance since the end of covid.  Or with levels of immigration or crime, both of which have been in decline for many months.  Or with various social policies, many of which do not affect them personally: LGBTQ+ issues, abortion, and contraception, with inter-racial marriage on the back burner.  The disregard of the facts and the disparity between their lives as lived and these political positions point to the factor which I believe matters most in this election, namely, the resentment felt by Trump supporters who believe that elites—bi-coastal, college-educated, professional or academic—scorn them.  (A special subset is the “incels,” horny single men 18 to 35, who cannot get a date, get laid, and get control of women, to whom Trump has promised to be their “retribution,” which does nothing to get them a date, laid, or control.)  To the degree that these supporters believe themselves scorned by these elites, to that degree they resent and resist information and advice from them.  Static polls indicate that endorsements by authorities or celebrities in the entertainment, social, political, or military domains like Taylor Swift, Oprah Winfrey, Liz Cheyney, and John Kelly, among many others, have failed to move these voters to support Harris.  The ultimate in rejecting authority, whether it be of persons, norms, or facts, is Trump’s liabilities which defy them.  The irony of the “Trump paradox” is that this anti-authoritarianism is the basis of his support and his authoritarianism.

 

In fairness, anti-authoritarianism is as American pie.  After all, the American Revolution was a rebellion against monarchial authoritarianism.  Unfortunately, anti-authoritarianism persisted because the colonies did not enjoy a tradition of a long-established, long-respected government; it had to invent one—which is why American democracy is often regarded and referred to as an experiment.  Its new government, however noble its intentions, lacked the authority traditionally invested in government and giving it stability.  Its governing charter, the Constitution, emerged, not gradually, with popular acceptance evolving as it evolved over the years, but suddenly, with underlying concerns about mob rule—today’s term: populism—embedded in its restrictions on representative governance, and with that great rift-maker, slavery.  What it thought was a barrier against mob rule, the Electoral College, has turned out to be ineffective because the country’s expansion was in agrarian areas, with small, undereducated, and underserved populations with long-standing resentments against “Eastern” bankers and corporate magnates, the elites of their day.  Ironically and probably unknown to him, the New Yorker Trump embodies that widespread resentment, just how widespread to become manifest in the election results, especially if he wins the presidency, in a few days.  If he does but democracy has a second chance afterwards, those who believe in the experiment will have to adjust the Constitution to accommodate, eventually to eradicate, resentment of elites.

Sunday, October 27, 2024

PROTESTING ISRAEL; PROTECTING JEWS

 A personal note: I find it difficult to address the current conflict in the Middle East because it is not only extraordinarily complex and apparently intractable, but also emotionally and morally fraught.  Although unaffiliated and unobservant, I am a Jew committed to Judaism as an ethical monotheism; to its ethical principles, moral values, and historical mission; and to the survival of the Jewish people.  But I am no Zionist.  I am a Jew who empathizes equally with Israelis and Palestinians, struggles to appreciate their perspectives and positions, and tries to judge, when judgment is called for, fairly.  I do not write “as a Jew”—a phrase used by many Jews which presumes that all other Jews agree with their views.  I make no such presumption.

Thursday, October 10, 2024

ARE YOU A PERSON? AN AMERICAN CITIZEN? AN ENFRANCHISED VOTER?

    In its day, the Declaration of Independence was a unique document, the first political document whereby a subordinate political entity declared itself coordinate.  So says its first paragraph; its second paragraph states the principles justifying the rebellion:

 

    We hold these truths to be self-evident, [1] that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.—[2] That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed,—[3] That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their Safety and Happiness.

 

These great words are the gist of the Declaration.  However, since its day, they have been patriotically revered but politically debated or disregarded.  Most but not all citizens have regarded them as the charter of basic American rights.  Those who supported slavery and fought for its survival, and those who have continued to support and fight for doctrines of supremacy and dominationracial, religious, or sexualover others reject the extension of these rights to all and identify themselves as unAmerican citizens of the United States.  Yet these words have never had legal standing, and only a dozen years later, the drafters of the Constitution, many of whom had signed the Declaration, ignored its assertions about the equality of "all men” and their rights.

 

    Unrecognized is the Declaration’s implication that these rights extend beyond "all men,” propertied or white, to all adults regardless of their race, religion, or sex.  The portentous words which get little attention are the concluding ones of the second clause, "deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed.”  These ten words make three important points.  One, the "powers” of government must be "just” according to its laws.  Two, those "powers” are derived from—that is, justified by—the "the consent of the governed.”  Three, those "governed” are those living under the laws of the land.  The clear implication is that the Declaration implies that "the governed” are all individuals, without distinction of any kind, living under those laws.  (This language seems to permit resident non-citizens, including immigrants, to "consent” or not.)  The converse is that government "powers” are unjust with the consent of only a minority of the governed.

 

    A problem with this franchise of consent-givers is the breadth of those "governed,” who would include minors, temporary residents, and visitors from other countries.  But the problem is not a significant one.  Criteria for defining these categories are relatively easily constructed to exclude them from the political process.  Other exclusions, given the principle of equality and the rights "unalienable,” are impossible to justify.

 

    Yet the drafters of the Constitution turned their back on the inclusive democracy which this third point makes.  They did not universalize "the governed,” define individuals as persons or citizens, or describe their political entitlements.  They assumed that voting would constitute the means of expressing "consent” but did not establish standards of eligibility or election procedures.

 

    Some of these deficiencies were left to the Fourteenth Amendment (1868), particularly Section 1, which reads:

 

    All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside. No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.

 

In the context of this post-Civil War amendment, "persons” meant Black as well as White (but not "Red”) individuals, defined them by birth or naturalization was "citizens,” and declared that states may not curtail their "privileges or immunities.”  So far, so good.

 

    But not for long.  Section 2 muddles the concepts of person and citizen, and relies on a sexist understanding of both.  It reads:

 

    Representatives shall be apportioned among the several States according to their respective numbers, counting the whole number of persons in each State, excluding Indians not taxed. But when the right to vote at any election for the choice of electors for President and Vice-President of the United States, Representatives in Congress, the Executive and Judicial officers of a State, or the members of the Legislature thereof, is denied to any of the male inhabitants of such State, being twenty-one years of age, and citizens of the United States, or in any way abridged, except for participation in rebellion, or other crime, the basis of representation therein shall be reduced in the proportion which the number of such male citizens shall bear to the whole number of male citizens twenty-one years of age in such State.

 

It begins by "counting the whole number of persons,” including women but excluding untaxed Indians (i.e., those living on reservations).  It retreats by restricting the electorate to males, when it specifies the penalties for any state which denies "the right to vote…to any of the male inhabitants” of the state.  States could deny women the right to vote without penalty, yet they could grant women the right to vote, as Wyoming did in 1869.  This amendment made explicit what had been implicit from the beginning, that the federal government recognized women as persons (five fifths, not three fifths, like slaves) for some but not all purposes, usually as citizens, never voters.  Its muddle was its progress from "persons” to "male inhabitants” (who might not be citizens? who might be recent immigrants?) to "male citizens” who could vote.

 

    Even so, Section 2 is not without merit.  Its penalty for restricting the franchise suggests a possibility for dealing with the various (intended, attempted, or actualized) infringements of voting rights.  States which unreasonably restrict the franchise by imposing poll taxes, requiring literacy tests, improperly purging their voting rolls, imposing unwieldy administrative requirements or other undue burdens on voters, or arbitrarily restricting access to or use of voting equipment or facilities, among other means, without cause could be penalized under this section of the amendment.  However, I doubt that its penalty has been enforced.

 

    In this regard, the asymmetry between Republicans and Democrats is becoming increasingly pronounced.  Republicans are doing everything possible to restrict the franchise of voters likely to cast votes for Democrats (and to challenge the validity of the election).  Democrats are trying to resist current or proposed restrictions.  The different approaches to the extent of the franchise by exclusion or inclusion is a measure of allegiance to democracy, specifically, the commitment to the vote as the means to establish "the consent of the governed.”

 

    The point of analyzing this aspect of Constitutional history is to note the potential threat posed by an "originalist” argument that the Founders and some government officials after them did not encode a democratic franchise in the Constitution, and only decades later added amendments extending it.  Even so, the Fourteenth Amendment protects citizens only from state infringements, not federal ones, which were not then imagined as possibilities.  The same cannot be said of the Nineteenth Amendment"The right of citizens of the United States to vote shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any State on account of sex”, which extends the franchise to women.  Still, the Fourteenth and Nineteenth Amendments protect the rights of male and female citizens in a way which legislation or court decisions—Roe v. Wade is the obvious example—cannot.

    The specification of persons by race or sex leaves open the possibility of denying personhood or citizenship on the basis of religion.  A belief held by many Christians in their superiority as persons can be distorted into a diminishment or denial of the personhood of believers in other faiths, like Jews, Muslims, Buddhists, and Hindi, among othersdistortions which can be used to circumscribe their citizenship and restrict their voting rights.  Indeed, it remains an open question implicitly answered by assumptions about who is a person as a first qualification for citizenship.  Fundamentalist Christians believe that a human zygote is a person entitled to the rights of citizenshipan assumption with obvious implications bearing on abortion and contraception.  Without legislation or, better, an amendment defining personhood, a Supreme Court decision is likely to make a basic decision which will ignore or defy the religious convictions of millions of Americans and violate the two First Amendment provisions on religion. 

Friday, October 4, 2024

YVETTE HERRELL: WILL SHE RUN FROM HER CONGRESSIONAL RECORD?

In case you missed it or want a refresher, I post here the link to this blog, first posted on 7 June 2024: https://firstimpressionssecondthoughts.blogspot.com/2024/06/yvette-herrell-will-she-run-from-her.html.

The materials which Herrell's campaign, the New Mexico Republican Party, and supporting PACs have distributed show that Herrell is avoiding her record and her current positions.  Instead, those materials offer vague promises, and use inflammatory language and distorted representations of Vasquez and his record.  They do not inform voters that Herrell supports restrictions on, if not the elimination, of abortion.  They do not inform voters that she was and, if re-elected, will again become a member of the Freedom Caucus, the obstructionist "conservative" faction in the House of Representatives.  She voted to overturn the 2020 election results because she believed that Trump won but was defeated by voting fraud of one kind or another in swing states.  If Trump wins, she will rubber-stamp his proposed nominees and legislation; if Harris wins, she will resist her proposed nominees and legislation.

Friday, September 27, 2024

WHAT IS IT LIKE TO BE A SUPPORTER OF TRUMP?

      I found myself wondering, not for the first time, what makes it possible for Trump supporters to think and feel as they do about this grotesque political anthropoid.  Which led me to re-read Thomas Nagel’s famous philosophical paper "What Is It Like to Be a Bat?” (1974).  My training in linguistic philosophy a decade-and-a half earlier did not prepare me for this discussion, and the passage of time has not increased my ability to understand its arguments.  The gist of it seems to be that there is neither an objective nor a subjective way of understanding, much less experiencing, the experience of a bat.  (This conclusion means no more to philosophers than it means to others—that is, almost nothing; to them, it is the arguments establishing this conclusion which matter.) 

The experiential distance between man and bat is, of course, much greater than that between man and man.  Nevertheless, I have no first-hand way to explore, much less experience, the compound of thoughts and feelings which support the visceral bond of Trump supporters to this political animal.  Those thoughts and feelings differ in their nature and their intensity, from the extremists of the kind who attacked Congress, many dressed and acting as if in computer action games, to the moderates who have reflexively voted Republican or have doubts about Kamala Harris (and Tim Walz).

 

I puzzle about these matters because, as a former consultant and teacher, my work required me to understand and communicate with those whose thoughts and feelings were quite different from my own.  In today’s political environment, understanding and communicating are almost impossible or quite rare for two major reasons (I ignore the reluctance or refusal of most people to engage in political discussion "across the aisle”).

 

One reason is that some words used in political discourse, even when their dictionary definition is accepted, carry different emotive or moral values.  For example, the word "bigot.”  Some people regard the label as a badge of shame; some, with indifference; some, as a badge of honor.  If so, attaching labels of moral opprobrium to, say, white supremacists can have little or no constructive effect; they cannot be shamed into abandoning their allegiances or their convictions.  Other words are transmuted or transvalued; Republicans (not Democrats) are "real Americans,” insurrectionists are patriots, compromise is treachery, moderation is weakness, etc.

 

Another reason is the now-common quarrel about what the facts are or whether they are relevant to a political preference or policy.  There are now, apparently, not only facts, but also "alternative facts,” many of which constitute stories of conspiracies.  In the quotidian world of everyday living, the proliferation and acceptance of non-truths threatens not only rational discussion, but also and more importantly sensible decisions.

 

Trump and Vance campaign according to an anti-factual rhetorical doctrine: a lie really big no one will believe is rigged, so it will be believed.  Their campaign presents a fact-free, dystopian vision of an America in decline; their falsehoods pronounced on social media, at rallies, in friendly interviews, even in a presidential debate enter the informational mainstream.  For example, Trump has repeatedly bad-mouthed the American economy.  A Harris poll in late May for The Guardian reports that 56% of Americans thought the country was in a recession (it was not), 49% believed the stock market was down for the year (it was way up), and, 49% said unemployment was near a 50-year high (it was near a 50-year low).  Thus, 58% believe that mismanagement by the Biden administration had worsened the economy.

 

Most Americans’ eyes glaze over when they see macroeconomic numbers, but their ears perk up when they are told about someone’s bad news.  Even so, it is hard to believe that they accept racist Big Lies about immigrants raping (white) women, murdering (white) people, and eating (white) peoples’ pets.  For many of them live in or near cities and towns with immigrants; can stop, look, or listen; yet learn nothing of the sort.  So the question is why they believe such stuff as fear campaigns are made of when the real world of their quotidian experience refutes it.

 

Whatever the answer, clearly, Trump’s true believers do not acquire the facts and accept the truth about the economy or immigrants and just about anything, everything, else.  They are naïve or needy in accepting whatever Trump presents to them; insensitive or indifferent to his falsehoods, distortions, or contradictions; and incapable of critical thinking.  Bad at dealing with the realities of the outer world, they are worse at dealing with the realities of their inner world.  Their illusions about the outer world parallel the delusions of their inner world.  They are incapable of introspection because they lack the detachment to observe, examine, and understand their thoughts and feelings.  Without self-awareness, they are also without mental or emotional self-control; ignorance and impulse prevail.  Morality and ethics are transactional; they have no conscience.  Their propensity for bigotry, cruelty, and violence reflects their anger and resentment at their frustrations in education, in employment, or of aspirations to popularity, power, or prestige.  (A notable electoral cohort is socially inept and sexually frustrated young males known as incels, for involuntary celibate; for them, it is no longer a man’s world, so misogyny prevails.)

 

Of such people, the true believers in Trump, many might want to say that they are bat-shit crazy or their complicity in that man’s imponderable evil is itself imponderable.  I prefer a story, probably apocryphal, instead.  On a day in Auschwitz, one Jew came upon another deep in prayer.  The one asked the other what he was doing; the other answered that he was praying.  The one asked why he was praying; the other answered that he was offering thanks to God.  The one asked what he was thankful for; the other answered that he was thankful that God had not made him like them.

Friday, September 13, 2024

THE RULE OF LAW DOES NOT RULE IN LAS CRUCES

      In this campaign, more than in any other which I can recall over the past 76 years, the rule of law—not “law and order”—is a major, maybe the major, issue.  In considering the issue, I looked back to the earliest continuing law in the Western World, the Ten Commandments.  Notably, they fuse legal requirements and religious guidance, and are not merely associated with, but essential to, Judaism.  Thus, Jewish law has the inherent approval and inalienable support of religion.  So, too, Islam, its sibling; not, Christianity, its offspring, with its different relationship to law.

     Arguably, Christianity offers no legal (and little moral) guidance.  The argument would begin by noting Paul’s repudiation of Jewish law and Christian antipathy to that law ever since.  As a member of a discussion group of members of Peace Lutheran Church who read a book about reforming Christianity in the 21st century, I observed that Christianity had no code of conduct as Judaism had, with its 613 laws.  That statement of fact prompted an angry response from two members who demanded to know why Jews needed so many laws; surely, the Ten Commandments were sufficient.  Silence for a moment.  So I replied that it was appropriate only for Jews to choose which and how many laws they want for themselves.  The objection to the number of laws likely unread suggests discomfort with submission to the rule of law.