Last week's George Will column in the Washington Post said it all. I am sure you have read about it or seen sections of it. Here it is in its entirety, including the T.S. Eliot quote which Will used to characterize Republicans in Congress as "quiet and meaningless
As wind in dry grass
or rats’ feet over broken glass . . "
Trump must be removed. So must his congressional enablers.
Columnist
June
1, 2020 at 3:18 p.m. EDT
"This
unraveling presidency began with the Crybaby-in-Chief banging his spoon on his
highchair tray to protest a photograph — a photograph —
showing that his inauguration crowd the day before had been
smaller than the one four years previous. Since then, this weak person’s idea
of a strong person, this chest-pounding advertisement of his own gnawing
insecurities, this low-rent Lear raging on his Twitter-heath has proven that the
phrase malignant buffoon is not an oxymoron.
Presidents,
exploiting modern communications technologies and abetted today by
journalists preening as the “resistance” — like members of the French
Resistance 1940-1944, minus the bravery — can set the tone of American society,
which is regrettably soft wax on which presidents leave their marks. The
president’s provocations — his coarsening of public discourse that lowers the
threshold for acting out by people as mentally crippled as he — do not excuse
the violent few. They must be punished. He must be removed.
Social
causation is difficult to demonstrate, particularly between one person’s words
and other persons’ deeds. However: The person voters hired in 2016 to “take care that the laws be faithfully
executed” stood on July 28, 2017, in front of uniformed police and urged them “please don’t be too nice” when
handling suspected offenders. His hope was fulfilled for 8 minutes and 46 seconds on Minneapolis pavement .
What
Daniel Patrick Moynihan termed “defining deviancy down” now
defines American politics. In 2016, voters were presented an unprecedentedly
unpalatable choice: Never had both major parties offered nominees with higher disapproval than approval numbers .
Voters chose what they wagered would be the lesser blight. Now, however, they
have watched him govern for 40 months and more than 40 percent — slightly
less than the percentage that voted for him — approve of his sordid conduct.
Presidents
seeking reelection bask in chants of “Four more years!” This year, however,
most Americans — perhaps because they are, as the president predicted , weary from all the winning — might
flinch: Four more years of this ? The taste of ashes, metaphorical
and now literal, dampens enthusiasm. The nation’s downward spiral into acrimony and sporadic anarchy has had
many causes much larger than the small man who is the great exacerbator of
them. Most of the causes predate his presidency, and most will survive its
January terminus. The measures necessary for restoration of national
equilibrium are many and will be protracted far beyond his removal. One such
measure must be the removal of those in Congress who, unlike the sycophantic
mediocrities who cosset him in the White House, will not disappear “magically,”
as Eric Trump said the coronavirus would. Voters must
dispatch his congressional enablers, especially the senators who still gambol
around his ankles with a canine hunger for petting.
In
life’s unforgiving arithmetic, we are the sum of our choices. Congressional
Republicans have made theirs for more than 1,200 days. We cannot know all
the measures necessary to restore the nation’s domestic health and
international standing, but we know the first step: Senate Republicans must be
routed, as condign punishment for their Vichyite collaboration, leaving the
Republican remnant to wonder: Was it sensible to sacrifice dignity, such as it
ever was, and to shed principles, if convictions so easily jettisoned could be
dignified as principles, for . . . what? Praying people should pray, and
all others should hope: May I never crave anything as much as
these people crave membership in the world’s most risible deliberative body.
A
political party’s primary function is to bestow its imprimatur on candidates,
thereby proclaiming: This is who we are. In 2016, the Republican Party gave its
principal nomination to a vulgarian and then toiled to elect him. And to stock
Congress with invertebrates whose unswerving abjectness has enabled his
institutional vandalism, who have voiced no serious objections to his Niagara
of lies, and whom T.S. Eliot anticipated:
We
are the hollow men . . .
Our
dried voices, when
We
whisper together
Are
quiet and meaningless
As
wind in dry grass
or
rats’ feet over broken glass . . .
Those
who think our unhinged president’s recent mania about a murder two decades
ago that never happened represents his moral nadir have missed the lesson of
his life: There is no such thing as rock bottom. So, assume that the worst is
yet to come. Which implicates national security: Abroad, anti-Americanism
sleeps lightly when it sleeps at all, and it is wide-awake as decent people
judge our nation’s health by the character of those to whom power is entrusted. Watching, too, are indecent people in Beijing and Moscow."
Will, a life-long Republican, left the Party in 2016, and is the heart, soul and conscience of Republicanism. He is no wild-eyed liberal, Democrat nor radical. He embodies conservatism. Those who still support Trump should heed his words. They have no excuses.
JL
And continue to keep social distancing, washing your hands and wearing a mask when out! Coronavirus is still with us. See prior blog postings.
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