Today is a day of despair for America. We are plunged into an anticipatory grief. (Moira Donegan/Guardian)
Today is a day of despair, and it would be futile to tell those who fear and grieve for what is to come in America that they will be OK. It would also be dishonest: many of us, in truth, will not be OK.
Donald Trump has decisively won the American election. He and his Republican allies have promised mass deportations that will ruin lives and sunder families; they have threatened to dismantle the Affordable Care Act and appoint the anti-vaccine conspiracy theorist Robert F Kennedy Jr to a position of authority on public health. They have pledged vast cuts to social security and Medicare, the persecution of dissidents and violent suppression of Trumps political enemies. There will almost certainly be a nationwide abortion ban and this will further degrade womens citizenship, rob them of their dignity, steal their dreams and ruin their health.
For those of us aware of what Trump is capable of, this morning has plunged us into a cold kind of anticipatory grief. There are people in America who are reading the news with worry, who are bracing themselves for crackdowns and unrest, and who will, inevitably, be confirmed in their anxiety; who will discover that they have even more to fear from the coming administration than they now know. Im thinking of all the ordinary Americans who are alive now, thriving or struggling in this declining country, who will have their lives destroyed or cut short by what is coming.
For many, Trumps victory will remind them of nothing so much as his 2016 upset over Hillary Clinton. Once again, his vulgarity, corruption, pettiness, narcissism and bigotry have been rewarded, at our expense; once again, the nation will be plunged into chaos as his vanity, greed, incompetence and anger take precedence over the national interest; once again, a violently and grossly misogynist man has been elevated to a position of superlative power over a flawed but competent, hardworking woman.
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more (six more paras): https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2024/nov/06/trump-wins-election-consequences-despair-america
There's no good news, nor much comfort in this op-ed -- just a thought that if you think it's bad for you, think how bad it is for the people tsf relentlessly targets. And think about what you can do to protect not just yourself, or those you love, but everyone who will be persecuted by tsf.
(BTW, I'm dropping tfg for tsf. Whoever started "tsf" knew what they were saying.)