People are now trying to rewrite the history of what happened on January 6, 2021, just as they try to create a narrative to support the Big Lie about the 2020 election. |
December 7, 1941
- Japanese carrier-based fighters and torpedo bombers attack Pearl Harbor,
Hickham Airbase, and other military and civilian targets on the Hawaiian island
of Oahu. The United States came together as a nation to respond to this ‘date
that will live in infamy,’ building a massive war machine, mobilizing industry
and ultimately prevailed. Some of the outgrowths of that event were the
acceptance of women in jobs that had been traditionally closed to them, the
ultimate integration of the armed forces and the end of racially segregated
units, and a more vibrant economy.
September 11, 2001 - a group of terrorists,
mostly radicalized middle class Saudi Arabians, hijacked civilian airliners and
flew them into the twin towers of the World Trade Center in New York City, the
Pentagon in the nation’s capital, and had plans to fly one into the Capitol but
were thwarted when passengers rose up and took it back forcing them to crash it
in a field in Pennsylvania. The country came together briefly in mourning of
this dastardly attack. The outcomes were, however, not quite so positive. It
resulted in the Patriot Act, legislation that curtailed a lot of our cherished
freedoms, distorted our foreign policy by putting counter terrorism at the
forefront and minimizing our use of soft power diplomacy which had been
relatively effective in general, tarnished our image as the ‘city on the hill’
through actions such as rendition, treatment of prisoners at Guantanamo Naval
Base, and led to an upsurge in anti-Muslim sentiment in the U.S. that was often
little more than mindless racism.
January 6, 2021 – A mob of supporters of
the outgoing president who had been promoting the ‘big lie’ that the election
was ‘stolen’ from him and the will of millions of American voters should be
ignored stormed the U.S. Capitol building, attacking police officers with bear
spray, fire extinguishers, and staffs holding the American flag, extensively damaging
the building and forcing lawmakers who had gathered to certify the results of
the November election to flee for their lives. This attack on one of the most
important symbols of American democracy played out live on national TV and was
viewed by millions of people around the world in real time. Politicians from
both parties decried the violence immediately and called for the president to
ask his supporters to stop the violence and go home—something he failed to do
for several hours—and when he finally did it was such a tepid request it almost
amounted to a ‘thank you for what you’re doing, you can go home now, we love
you,’ message. It didn’t take long, though, for many of those politicians of
the president’s party to begin to backtrack on their condemnation of the
rioters—hell, let’s call them what they were, insurrectionists—who had been
chanting that they wanted to hang the vice president, and had erected a gallows
on the Capitol grounds. They have since tried to rewrite the events of that day;
blaming the violence on leftist infiltrators, saying the rioters were actually
just loyal Americans exercising their Constitutional rights, and in some cases
even saying that the violence was justified. The big lie of a ‘stolen’ election
continues to be flogged by the former president, many of his congressional
enablers, and the far right media, despite volumes of evidence and adjudicated
court cases to the contrary. State legislatures controlled by the ousted
president’s party have written and in some cases passed hundreds of laws
designed to make it harder for people to vote and many still cling to the
fallacious belief that somehow the election was rigged to cause their man to
lose. This despite the fact that many of their party won in the same districts
where he lost.
As sad as it is to say, an event that
should have been as unifying as December 7 or 9/11 has had just the opposite
effect.
We as a country are now more divided than
we’ve been since the days leading up to the Civil War when the country was
almost torn apart by a cabal of men determined to preserve a system that
allowed them to hold others in perpetual bondage.
Even after a mob had forced them to flee
for their lives, a majority of Republican members of the House of Representatives
voted not to certify the votes in those states where Donald Trump lost, and in
many by a significant margin, even when down-ballot Republicans won their
races. Except for a hand full of Republicans who lived up to their oath of
office to ‘support and defend the Constitution from all enemies foreign and
domestic,’ Republican lawmakers refused to hold Trump accountable for his
actions inciting the events of January 6, just as they had refused to hold him
accountable for his actions to coerce the nation of Ukraine to take actions to
damage his political opponent in the election.
Despite many in the right wing media
pleading via email and text for Trump to do something to stop the violence,
these same personalities continue to support his lie about the election and try
to downplay the events of that day. They continue to try to rewrite history.
Approximately 65 million self-identified
Trump supporters in a recent poll continue to believe that he actually won the
election and that it was ‘stolen’ from him, and 23 million believe that
violence is justified to achieve their aims.
When asked if January 6 was an attack on
the government rather than just a peaceful demonstration that was ‘manipulated’
by the FBI to hurt their candidate, only 29 percent of Republicans polled said
it was an attack, as opposed to 95 percent of Democrats and 56 percent of
Independents.
While most people will probably pay little
attention to this, those of us who are aware of history as something other than
a pain in the neck course in school that you have to pass in order to graduate
but can promptly forget, this is troubling.
These attitudes seemed to be hardwired and
they reveal a country that is seriously divided. The last time such divisions
existed, we almost lost our ‘united’ states. We the People cannot afford to sit
idly by and allow such a thing to happen again.
There’s not much one can do about the ‘hard’
right whose beliefs seem to be set in concrete. But those who can’t be bothered
to go out and vote, or who would rather find out what happened on ‘Survivor’
than track the legislation being considered by their state legislature, need to
sit up and take notice.
Democracy is never guaranteed. It is gained
at a great price, and a price must be paid to maintain it, or it can be lost.
January 6, 2021 is a date that should be
remembered, and like December 7, 1941, it should be a call for all of us as a
nation to rise up and fight to protect what the Founding Fathers gave us, the
goal to create a ‘more perfect union.’
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