Recall to memory the Sixth of January,
Riot, insurrection and plot
For no justification should the January Insurrection
Ever be forgot
A little over one year ago today, lame-duck President Donald Trump directed an unruly band of his followers to “fight like hell” to overturn the election of Joe Biden, in the hope of disenfranchising me and the 81 million other Americans who voted to bring to an end Trump’s dyscivic reign.
“Dyscivic” means “antagonistic to civilization.” It’s a word coined by alt-right pundit Vox Day to disparage the aspirations of “social justice warriors” like myself. I am a writer, and I hereby confiscate “dyscivic” and repurpose it to mean “antagonistic to the civic structures of our society” – which Donald Trump was.
Of my good friends who voted for Donald Trump, at least two voted for him precisely because they expected he would be disruptive to our existing system. One specifically said, “I voted for Donald Trump because I hoped he would blow up the Republican Party, and I’m waiting for the Democrats to go next.”
Keep waiting. Even though progressives like AOC and moderates like myself don’t always get along, we recognize that we share the same end goals, that our principles are compatible, and they’re worth fighting for together, even if we might disagree on methods.
I don’t get the same sense from my most right-wing friends, who viciously lambast politicians from their own party for not “getting on the Trump train” in every possible respect – even when those politicians have multi-decade records voting for precisely the positions my friends loudly advocate for.
Reliance on trust is toxic to any organization. It encourages dependence on personal relationships – even friendships – developed over years or decades, and makes the organization resistant to new information delivered by new people. When that trust is in leadership, it becomes loyalty … which is deeply dyscivic.
The purpose of government is to put the use of force under rational control. To prevent one man from using that force to execute their own personal will, we create civic structures that corral the use of power. We loan power, not grant it; and when you loan power to someone, you watch them.
Over four years, we watched Donald Trump demand loyalty on an unprecedented scale in American politics – from his followers, from fellow politicians, from the machinery of government. He turned on his appointees when their understanding of their civic duties conflicted with his own petty desires.
And when the American people had had enough – when even some of my Trumpian friends switched parties because they could not abide what he was doing to our political system – Trump spat on those of us who dared to vote against him, and then tried to pretend to his followers that we did not exist.
Well, sir, our voices were heard. And we won’t be silent. We know that you and your followers are going to try again – I remember watching your suppoprters meeting in the dark in the months leading up to the insurrection (holding 10pm rallies in the parking lot of a nearby grocery store). We’ll be watching.
For I’m not the only one. Here’s a few quotes from my fellow Americans around the web:
http://wilwheaton.net/2022/01/one-year-later/
We all know how that turned out. All but seven Republican Senators — forty-three of fifty members in the upper chamber — protected him and embraced his Big Lie. In the year since, they have doubled down on it, and they have not stopped insisting that we did not see what we saw one year ago today with our own eyes.
And:
https://whatever.scalzi.com/2022/01/06/january-6-one-year-on/
And yet, after perhaps 48 hours of unrehearsed shock, the Republican party rallied around this traitor to the republic and the constitution, and tried to rebrand an actual coup attempt into overexuberant tourism.
And not about January 6th, but important all the same:
https://angrystaffofficer.com/2022/01/03/american-war-and-american-memory/
Why is this important? Because as we look ahead into another year at the beginning of a new decade of a constantly changing world, America needs to take a hard look at herself and ask whether we are remembering or forgetting the right things. This is not only vital to our collective consciousness as to who we are as a nation, but to the success of future military operations.
I assert that remembering the right things isn’t just vital to our success in military endeavors, but to each of us personally, in the aggregate, as a nation, and as a civilization. If we don’t remember the true story – good and bad and ugly – then those who make up stories for their own convenience will rule the day.
Remember, the Big Lie was the foundation for the Final Solution.
Let’s make sure that doesn’t happen here.
-the Centaur