“Somebody said 'treasonous.' I mean -- yeah I
guess, why not. Can we call that treason? Why not. I mean, they certainly
didn't seem to love our country very much.”
--Donald Trump on Democratic Senators and Congress members who didn’t clap for him in his
State of the Union speech.
Really? We have a
temporary resident of the White House whose definition of loyalty to the United
States of America is loyalty to, and expressed enthusiasm for, his boneheaded
ideas and false claims of greatness? We would expect such autocratic
monomaniacal pronouncements from Vladimir Putin, Kim Jong-un, Rodrigo Duterte,
or any other egomaniac warlord. Hitler and Stalin were such demented
oppressors. Saddam Hussein, Augusto Pinochet—the anti-democratic autocrats are
easy to name.
If the new definition
of treason is being willing to not clap for Trump’s utterances, I hereby
formally and publicly admit to treason.
If we still live in a
democracy, I charge Trump with treasonous statements. If there were one united
value embedded in the Declaration of Independence, the Constitution, and the
Bill of Rights, it is the right to dissent, politically and publicly, without
fear of reprisal. Let the views contend in our public discourse.
Instead, this is how a
country slides from democracy toward dictatorship, one thought control episode,
one veiled threat, after another. We are on a very slippery slope here and the
signs are not good.
We have zero
guarantees of the future of democracy in the US. Indeed, Freedom House, a
nonpartisan think tank which measures and ranks all countries on Earth every
year in the aggregate values and indices of democracies, has us sliding downward. They analyze both the US role in promoting
democracy worldwide and practicing it at home. They note that this slide began
slowly in 2010—the year the Republican rightwing gained control of the House--and is
accelerating dramatically since Trump took office.
Meanwhile, we see the
strongman sort of government using Trump’s tactics now and in history. In
Cambodia in September, dictator Hun Sen trumped up charges of treason against a candidate for office, Kem
Sokha, who dared to call for peaceful changes toward more democracy and more
human rights. Sokha faces 30 years in prison, where he has been since his
arrest five months ago.
In Venezuela in August, despot Nicolas Maduro engineered a path to
charge political opponents with treason, targeting Julio Borges and other
opposition leaders with potential arrest and imprisonment. Borges is out of
office as of last month.
This is a slippery
slope toward tyranny. Trump is the most treasonous occupant of the White House
since Richard “Break-and-Enter” Nixon. He too deserves a swift exit from power
for his foul rule, his abdication of responsibilities to defend democracy and
right to dissent, and his lies about collusion with Russian government operatives to steal our election.
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