I'm of two minds on this lately. Lira, I'm with you, I'm a long term optimist and think the US will weather this, painfully and awfully, but will survive. History is encouraging in that regard. Also, MAGA really does seem like a cult of personality. Trump can't have many more years left in him, at least as a viable head of the cult, and who's next? It can't be Vance (and Trump has said as much lately).
In the meantime, some level of collapse or incompetence-driven failure seems inevitable, with resulting loss of popular support. (Firing and trying to rehire nuclear watchdogs and bird flu experts in recent days is a good example.) The combination of tariffs, deportations, upsetting allies and adversaries alike, alienating former supporters (feds and vets who lose their jobs due to DOGE, people who start to feel threatened reductions in Medicare/Medicaid/SNAP, any number of spurned voters), inability to deliver on campaign promises like lowering inflation, continuing to make an utter mess of diplomacy re: Gaza or Ukraine with resultant isolation (US and Israel vs the rest of the world)...I just don't see how that plays out in Trump's favor long term. That's not even counting government inability to provide basic services in light of all the DOGE firings. I wonder how tax season will go? Midterms should be interesting.
At the same time, it's encouraging to see federal judges at many levels challenging and freezing the administration (and for now the administration saying they will appeal, but abide by the decisions made). I don't know that anyone with long term perspective on the GOP side wants to start impeaching judges or get a decision up to the Supreme Court with less-than-certain outcomes...certainly setting a precedent for Democrats to respond in kind in the future would not be desirable.
This bit from a column in The Guardian in the days after the inauguration has been echoing in my head, and I'm inclined to agree:
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Here is another prediction: these men will not succeed in all their schemes. They will not deport as many people as they say they will; he will not change the law as much as they pledge to; they will not, cannot, capture the institutions as completely, or bury dissent as successfully. They cannot do everything they aim to do. Because politics is not over; because our institutions are not all collapsed; and because the existing institutions are not the only methods of resistance and refusal.
The Trumpist movement that ascended to power on Monday is relying on a tired, defeated America, one too diminished to do anything but submit to their demands and schemes. But the American spirit is indefatigable: it loves freedom and equality, abhors tyranny, values minding your own business and hates, above all, to be told what to do. When Trump was last in office, Americans found, at the end, that they did not like it. They will not like it now, either, and that dislike, however tardy, will have political consequences.
https://www.theguardian.com/comment...american-spirit
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All that being said, the other side: what damage happens in the meantime? Even if institutions survive, how many people suffer? How many years will it take for the US to recover its image (not that it was ever that great, but this seems like a recent low)? What will it look like to restore some level of faith in political systems?
Again, history is encouraging for me. If the country has seen its way through arguably worse periods of nativism, populism, and outright oppression (too many to list), not to mention the Civil War, survival and recovery looks likely. And many other countries have gone through far worse and survived, albeit at terrible cost.
I can't say that I entertain the idea we won't go down this path again in the future. It seems it's in our DNA at this point. And we seem awfully unwilling to even admit there's a problem (much less learn from our disastrous mistakes).
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I say all that, then see the official White House account has posted this on Twitter (ASMR Deportation): https://x.com/WhiteHouse/status/1891922058415603980
It shouldn't be surprising or shocking at this point, but I am rendered speechless. The cruelty and dehumanization is so wanton, so callous, so casual and flippant...I really am at a loss. How much lower can we go from here? If this continues, I'd imagine his more moderate supporters (the anyone-but-Kamala types like my extended family) may finally start having real second thoughts. Maybe.
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