A Liberal
Dose
March 2,
2023
Troy D.
Smith
“Two Years
After Trump- Where Are We Now?”
I am writing this on the second anniversary of my beginning this
column. I still have a lot to say, and the world keeps giving me more every
week,
but I thought this would be an appropriate time to reflect on the past two
years. I wrote that first column just a few weeks after the events of January
6, 2021, and that day was very much on my mind. I titled my first installment
“History Is the Key to Everything.” I explained why I thought that was true,
and then compared January 6 with Bacon’s Rebellion of 1676 (a charismatic
populist leader born to wealth and privilege stirring up the working poor to
attack the capitol). I noted that in the final months of Trump’s presidency he
had been “trying to forbid all of America from honestly looking at its past.
This came as no surprise, since he daily tried to forbid the world from
honestly looking at the present (or anything else).” I concluded that “In my opinion,
it is my job as a historian to help people face the past even when they don’t
want to, even when it is uncomfortable, in order to better understand the
present and to make a better future. Come to think of it, maybe that’s
everybody’s job. Let’s start doing it, together.”
I
was worried about a lot of things two years ago. I worried that Trump losing
the election, while a very good thing, would only further inflame the passions
of his most hardcore supporters and potentially lead to even more violence,
fueled by a misguided feeling of persecution on their part (because neither
they nor he could accept that he lost). I worried that a wave of hardcore Trump
politicians would get elected into swing state legislatures or as state
attorneys-general, and be in a position to decide which votes “counted” in the
next election. I worried that Trump’s base would be more mobilized in 2024 and
that he would once more win the Republican nomination, and potentially get back
into the White House where he could wreak way more havoc than even before. I
also worried that some other politician -more canny, more competent, and less
mentally unbalanced than Trump -would use Trump’s methods more effectively and
continue to poke at the exposed nerve of aggrieved Trump supporters and thereby
be in a position to become, in some ways, more dangerous than Trump himself.
In
short, I was worried about the future of our democracy.
Where
are we now, two years later?
Trump’s
star seems to have waned somewhat with conservatives. In the last month or two,
in fact, I have seen the Trump flags -which once seemed to be everywhere around
the county -slowly, day-by-day, start to come down. I still would not dream of
counting him out, though. Meanwhile, his legacy continues in several ways.
Multiple states have passed laws -allegedly as a response to practically
nonexistent “voter fraud” -restricting voting opportunities, thus excluding
many constituents who would normally vote Democratic. Multiple states have
passed draconian laws about how race and gender issues and history can be
addressed in the classroom (which is, hardly at all). Roe vs. Wade was overturned, thanks to Trump-appointed Justices.
Now states are passing laws against drag shows. I guarantee you that many more
children have been sexually abused by pastors, scoutmasters, and teachers than
by drag queens, but no one is trying to ban those groups from being near
children (well, except maybe for teachers). Meanwhile, racist hate groups have
proliferated and hate crimes have increased.
Ron
DeSantis is right in the middle of it all, presenting himself as a more
palatable, watered down version of Trump; George Santos, at the other extreme,
is like the ultimate post-modern interpretation of Trump, for whom “fact” does
not even exist as a concept.
And
I still have plenty to write about.
--Troy D. Smith, a White County native, is a
novelist and a history professor at Tennessee Tech. His words do not
necessarily represent TTU.
You can find all previous entries in this weekly column HERE
A list of other historical essays that have appeared on this blog can be found HERE
Author's website: www.troyduanesmith.com
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