Letters from an American - September 2, 2024
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September 2nd, 2024.
In an interview with right-wing host Mark Levin on the Fox News channel last night,
Trump complained about the new grand jury indictment of him for trying to steal the 2020 presidential election.
Whoever heard you get indicted for interfering with a presidential
election where you have every right to do it, he asked. In fact, no one has a right to interfere
with a presidential election. Several federal laws prohibit such interference. Legal analyst
Joyce White Vance added, this is the banality of evil right here.
Trump asserting he can override the will of the voters to claim victory in an election he lost.
And he will do it again.
We must vote against him in overwhelming numbers.
Former President Trump is approaching the election of 2024
the way Southern white supremacists approached elections from 1876 to 1964.
He has made it very clear he is not trying to win the votes of a majority of Americans.
He and his loyalists are trying to intimidate his opponents to keep them from voting, while egging on his supporters to commit violence.
from voting while egging on his supporters to commit violence. They are bringing the tactics of the reactionary Southern Democrats after the Civil War forward to the present day in an attempt
to impose the same sort of minority rule on the nation as a whole. Trump has made it clear he's
not trying to win the popular vote. When his primary challenger Nikki Haley dropped out of
the race in March, Trump's
team made no effort to win over her voters. It was President Joe Biden's re-election team that
reached out to them. A few days later, when Trump's daughter-in-law, Laura Trump, and his
loyalist Michael Watley took over the Republican National Committee, they killed the plans of
former RNC chair Ronna McDaniel to open 40 satellite campaign offices
across 10 battleground states. As the dispatch noted, that meant very little ground game,
doors knocked on, phone calls made, or volunteers organized. The new leadership of the RNC also
fired 40 out of 60 employees whose job was field organizing. Trump was clear
what he was doing. Rather than worrying about attracting voters, he intended to play out the
game of the big lie that he had won the 2020 presidential election. Since the 2020 election,
at least 28 states have passed laws making it harder to vote in 2024.
Whatley was a chief proponent of the big lie that justified those laws, and Trump put him in place
saying he wanted the RNC to prioritize election integrity efforts. The campaign is focused on
lawsuits to make it harder to vote and to put their own loyalists into positions where they
might be able to affect the certification of the 2024 vote. As Peter Nicholas reported at NBC News
yesterday, Republicans have filed dozens of lawsuits that seem designed not only to game
the system, but also to convince supporters that the election is rigged against Trump.
to convince supporters that the election is rigged against Trump. That lie was the argument Florida Governor Ron DeSantis made to justify creating an election police unit in 2022 to stop
what he claimed was illegal voting, although voter fraud is vanishingly rare. The unit conducted
raids, mostly in the early morning, primarily against black Americans
shortly before the 2022 election. Most of the cases were later dropped, or those charged agreed
to a plea deal without jail time. The raids did, though, depress voting. In its 2023 annual report,
the Office of Election Crime and Security wrote,
Enforcing Florida election law has the primary effect of punishing violators,
but enforcement also, and equally as important, acts as a deterrent for those who may consider
voting illegally or committing other election-related crimes. Now, MAGA Republicans have joined Trump in arguing that Democrats are trying to get
non-citizen immigrants to vote for their candidates, although a federal law in place
since 1996 makes it clear that it is illegal for non-citizens to vote in elections for president
or members of Congress. It does not appear to matter to Republicans that there is no evidence
that non-citizens try to vote. As House Speaker Mike Johnson, a Republican of Louisiana, said in
May, we all know intuitively that a lot of illegals are voting in federal elections, but it's not been
something that is easily provable. Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton also created an
election integrity unit in the wake of the 2020 election. And on August 21st, 2024, after Fox News
channel personality Maria Bartiromo repeated a baseless rumor about non-citizens registering to
vote, Paxton launched what he called an undercover investigation that, just days later,
launched raids against Latino activists. It is evident through his pattern of lawsuits, raids,
searches, and seizures that he is trying to keep Latinos from voting, Latino leaders say.
This pattern echoes the Republican era intimidation of black voters
and their white Republican allies, and it does so with the same justification, the idea that
business regulation, social welfare, infrastructure, and civil rights policies are socialism. Those
policies had nothing to do with the actual principles of socialism, which call for the government to control the means of production.
This socialism echoed the argument of Southern white supremacists who used it to attack black voting in 1871 after the 15th Amendment, ratified the year before, made it unconstitutional to stop someone from voting on the basis of race.
As newly enfranchised formerly enslaved men who owned little property,
because enslavers took what they produced,
and white Republicans voted for lawmakers who would rebuild the South,
white supremacist Democrats maintained that the roads, schools, and hospitals
a healthy society needed could be paid for only
with tax dollars. Since white men owned most of the property, such improvements were, they said,
a redistribution of wealth. In the 19th century, that argument led first to voter suppression
and then to the argument that anyone who did not vote to keep the white supremacists in power
was a danger to society. Good Americans must keep such dangerous people out of any proximity to
power. In that light, outright violence to maintain the rule of the minority was a demonstration of
civic virtue. True to form, Trump and his supporters have made it clear they
consider their ascendancy imperative to recover America from the carnage into which they allege
President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris have led it. And if their opponents are
truly as dangerous as they insist, those opponents must be capable of any of the actions MAGA
Republicans falsely attribute to them.
Trump and his campaign advisor, Corey Lewandowski, have recently asserted the lie that Democrats
kill newborn babies, for example.
And Trump told the right-wing Moms for Liberty organization on Friday that schools are operating
on children to transition them to a
different sex. In a direct link to the ideas of the late 19th century that white supremacists
used to justify taking power, Trump routinely calls Vice President Harris a communist.
Trump's lies have become cartoonish as his attachment to reality has slipped, but behind them is a demonizing of his opponents that echoes the past argument that certain people must be kept from power and, possibly, purged from society.
for attacking the U.S. Capitol on January 6th, 2021,
told the court they believed they were defending American democracy
from those who were destroying the country
and had stolen the election.
Trump has championed those arrested
for trying to install him into the presidency,
saying they are patriots who have been treated unfairly
and have shown incredible courage and sacrifice, and has
promised that if reelected, he will pardon the nearly 1,000 people found guilty of crimes related
to that event. A gala to celebrate and raise money for those attackers, the J6 Awards Gala,
was scheduled to be held at Trump's Bedminster, New Jersey, golf club this Thursday,
but has just been called off until after the election. The celebration of violence is now
deeply embedded in the MAGA movement, with leaders like North Carolina Lieutenant Governor Mark
Robinson, the Republican nominee for governor, who recently attacked an assortment of enemies and assured his audience,
some folks need killing. As Josh Kovinsky of Talking Points Memo wrote on August 27th,
this violent tendency has become for MAGA Republicans a fantasy about deploying the
military against American citizens. Yesterday, on the same day that Trump declared he had a right to
interfere in a presidential election to put himself in power, the pro-Trump owner of X,
Elon Musk, reposted to his nearly 200 million followers a statement suggesting that women and
men who can't physically defend themselves are inferior to alpha men
and are not good participants in government
because they lack the ability to think critically.
This is why a republic of high-status males
is best for decision-making, the original post said.
Democratic, but a democracy only for those who are free to think.
Over the statement, Musk posted,
interesting observation.
Letters from an American was produced at Soundscape Productions,
Dedham, Massachusetts.
Recorded with music composed by Michael Moss.
This is your world. Composed by Michael Moss.