When Democracy Trembles: A Call to Resist, Rebuild, and Hope
Hope always arises when hopelessness abounds
You try to speak, but the words won’t come—the shock and horror feel unbearable. The country has entrusted the presidency to a man who believes he holds a mandate to rule as a dictator. It all seems unspeakable.
We must allow ourselves a moment to mourn, to grieve, to shake off the initial shock. This process cannot be bypassed; otherwise, we risk staying stuck in a comforting numbness that will, in time, drain us of the energy we need to support our loved ones and actively work for restoration.
In the days ahead, one of our main tasks will be to confront reality. In face-to-face conversations, phone calls, and texts, we must acknowledge to each other that many of our fellow citizens either reject or don’t understand the American experiment in freedom and democracy.
We must also acknowledge that we are entering the gravest political crisis since the Civil War, and Trump will pursue his agenda with a sense that he has earned an unassailable mandate, and he really in fact, did.
In Washington, Trump will install loyalists in the highest positions and purge mid-level government managers of all but those who declare their allegiance. Federal employees may not be forced to sign loyalty oaths, but their (justifiable) fears will compel them to comply and silence any dissent.
We should expect that Trump will fulfill his promise to deport millions of undocumented immigrants. Local, state, and federal law enforcement, and possibly troops, will be enlisted for this purpose. Families and communities will be torn apart as law-abiding spouses, parents, workers, and taxpayers are arrested and sent to camps (though they’ll be given a more palatable name) for processing before removal from the country.
Trump will also push harder than ever to build his border wall. He’ll dismantle agencies, including the Department of Education, that protect everything from our food supply to air quality. Public health policy will fall under someone intent on dismantling vaccine programs, and, should a pandemic arise, any government response will be discouraged.
The outlook for economic and foreign policy is equally dire. Trump is likely to impose the massive tariff scheme he’s proposed, driving up prices on everything from rare earth materials needed by tech manufacturers to the TVs on Walmart’s shelves. The economic repercussions will worsen as trading partners retaliate, impacting farmers, manufacturers, and other export-dependent industries. Make no mistake: a recession is coming—and it will be global.
As the world economy suffers, Trump will abandon Ukraine in its fight against Russian invasion, will likely seek an untenable peace and we can only hope that Europe understands it is finally time to step up, in a massive way.
Meanwhile, rivals in China, North Korea, and the Middle East will see the end of Pax Americana. China may decide it’s time to invade Taiwan, and disrupt the global supply of microchips that run the world. North Korea will intensify its nuclear ambitions. Iran will grow more aggressive. Terrorist organizations will become emboldened. Foundations of stability, such as NATO, will strain and may fracture.
In foreign and economic affairs, there may be little we can do to prevent the coming pain. Our work will lie in the domestic sphere, where we must prepare ourselves. We will need to deploy our voices, our resources, our presence, and our hope.
Our voices must rise, individually and collectively, to give courage to our friends and allies. Our financial support is vital to sustain current institutions of resistance and build new ones. Legal defenses and mass protests need both our funding and our presence. And we must nurture hope.
All in all, this battle will take a little longer that we hoped, but in the context of history, it will seem like a brief moment. It’s difficult for me to see a future AFTER Trump that embraces the same hate and anger, Americans usually correct from bad choices. This fight is exhausting, but generations have given their lives for freedom, we’re just required to keep engaging politically. Really, a small sacrifice in comparison. My belief is that history will just this as a very low point, but will praise how Americans fought back and defended their freedoms. The best part of the story is yet to be written.
In times like these, hope can seem elusive. Yet history’s darkest episodes have shown that surrender is not an option. The sun rose today. It will rise tomorrow. We must draw inspiration from each new dawn—and carry on.
I stand with you, I won’t surrender. I’m not intimidated, not afraid, not cowering. Though discouraged, I’m doubling down. Our children and grandchildren deserve no less. Will you stand with me?
Yes! Yes! A million times yes, Adam, I will stand with you and I will stand up for my country. Thank you, Adam!
We must realize that half the country agreed to what Trump said he was going to do. Thus, there's no point in blaming anyone other than that part of the electorate. They knew exactly who they were voting for. There's no excuse "well, I was voting against...." No, Trump and Vance, Musk and RFK Jr were all very, very clear with what they planned to do and Harris and Walz, the Obamas and all the others weren't wrong in hammering it home because, now, there is no excuse. We now know what those who voted for Trump wanted or were willing to accept. They voted for that, for a criminal, a sociopath on full display, and we all now have to ride it out. If in two years when all this has been done, there is still a slim majority that says "yay, this was all great, let's keep doing this" then we have to accept that the US has slid back into the days of McCarthy and earlier, other times when we all lived in our silos and the war in Europe cost far more lives than it should have if the US hadn't stood aside for so long.
If in two years, that's still the case, and if in two years there is still a free Europe out there, then I am going there. I'll be almost 75 but I don't care. Because, honestly, we who voted against Trump don't deserve any blame at all in this and bashing our heads for four years at our age--we don't deserve that either. We stood strong during a lot. We stood strong during COVID. But standing strong against a criminal madman supported by more than half the voting American population is a bridge too far. I'll do it for two years, until the midterms. But no farther.
I am buying all my expensive goods, like tires, now so it bolsters our current economy. I have unsubb'd from every single corporation that supported Trump. I am weaning myself off Amazon but it played such an important part during COVID, and I live in a small town, that's going to be tough. I will pull in my spending and buy simple food from my local co-op. I believe that what he proposed will cost everyone and the sooner those of us who warned about price rises DON'T pay those prices, the sooner those very people who didn't want to pay Biden's prices, will realize what high prices really mean.