These are my long winded thoughts on the 1st anniversary of the Capitol riot:
I miss the conveniences of American life, some family and friends, but that's about it. I turned 18 during the great recession and I saw 1st hand what George Carlin meant with his bit about "
The reason they call it the American Dream is because you have to be asleep to believe it." While I never understood the appeal of
Make America Great Again personally as America was never great to begin with in my opinion, I do understand
why Trump won, and
why many, if not all of us, have family members who have been lost to the Trump/QAnon/Anti-vaxxer cult, and only some of the blame is on Republicans.
January 6th was a surprise to me not because it happened, but because it didn't happen earlier.
For 50 years, Republicans and Democrats have worked together to hollow-out the middle class and destroy upward economic mobility. The difference is Republicans are simply better at messaging, and transformed themselves in to a revanchist party for the white working class to take advantage of the very people whose lives they destroyed. You might be asking, what do I mean by this? Starting with Nixon, and accelerating under Reagan and Clinton, classical liberal, followed by neoliberal economic policies were pursued and adopted by both parties, free trade agreements were signed and ratified by large bipartisan majorities in the Senate, and the social safety net was slashed and burned on the lie that as goods became cheaper, and taxes for the wealthy and corporations reduced, the money would trickle down to the lower classes. As we all know, this never happened, and instead we saw the large, sustained, transfer of wealth from the bottom and the middle to the top. As for this being bipartisan? Well, Alan Greenspan was the chair of the fed under 4 presidents who basically shared the same economic beliefs, despite Clinton being a Democrat, and that's just one example, of many.
Now why does this matter? Well, when the middle class stopped growing, and jobs went overseas, the income and sales taxes went away too. Instead of raising taxes on those who profited from this, counties and states opted to cut education funding, social programs, library budgets, public transit, you name it, to make up the difference. We're all familiar with what happened to Detroit, but there's hundreds of Detroits across the rust belt and Midwest, and many of us have driven through them, or seen them featured in articles and documentaries about the opioid epidemic, counties that can only afford 4 days of school a week, and so called "
deaths of despair". These also happen to be the hometowns of many of the most diehard Trump supporters too, because while he lied about caring about these towns and wanting to help them, he did identify their pain as real, and stemming from economic destruction, and this is where MAGA comes from:
nostalgia, revanchism, and fear. Like an infected wound these things fester, and when you and your children have a lower quality of life than your parents, or at least compared to when you were a child, and you watch FOX and OAN every night and hear Hannity talking about fake electoral fraud, when your Facebook feed is a confirmation bias that makes money off of rage, filled with "news" about "pedophile Democrats", you get people who have nothing to lose decide to storm the Capitol in the belief that they are 21st Century versions of Paul Revere going to save America from continued decline. It's easy to dismiss these people as idiots and cranks, but something broke them and caused them to become the literal flag wearing gun toters they are, and that something was/is America.
A year into Biden's presidency I am convinced, just like he said when he ran, n
othing would fundamentally change, and it hasn't, and this is why I'm not optimistic for America's future, and why I personally don't have melancholy when I see and read about the riot and think about our country overall, as this is the America I know, the one I grew up with. Empirically the America of yesteryear never was, otherwise we wouldn't be in this position, so the reality is that there's nothing to go back to, and the future, while not written in stone, is clear to me in it's likely outcome: The Republicans will double down on being the party of white working class grievances/anxiety and QAnon/Anti-vaxxers/maskers, while the Democrats will continue to pursue, with shrinking success, college educated suburbanites who clutch their pearls at Trump for being too brash (despite otherwise agreeing with him), while tanking among millennials and zoomers by
ratfucking (pardon the term, but it is a real one; I've linked to the Wikipedia article) the candidates and positions they support, they'll take black voters' votes for granted, and do stupid, cringey things like
the kneeling in Kente cloth in the rotunda, or
having the cast of Hamilton preform via Zoom on CSPAN today that just makes your average Americans beg them to just stop.
These are the things I see when I reflect on America, the Capitol Riot anniversary, and why I'm not quite indifferent, but am most definitely not surprised. Trump was undoubtedly an awful president, but I often find myself wondering if the reason so many American liberals find him repulsive is because he's the most American president of the last hundred years: he's greedy, he's racist, he's lazy, he's arrogant, he's rude, he's vane, and he's proudly stupid: he's the telos of America, personified, and I believe that's what upsets Democrats the most. In closing, these criticisms/thoughts on America shouldn't be interpreted as an endorsement of Argentina, I write an equally critical long form post about my adoptive home, but I'll save that for next year's election perhaps