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Trump's Unhinged CPAC Rhetoric & Why A New American Civil War Has Moved Further From The Realm Of Fantasy













"The United States is premised on an agreement about how to deal with our disagreements. It's called the Constitution. We trust our system of government enough that we abide by its outcomes even though we may disagree with them. Only once in our history -- in 1861 -- did enough of us distrust the system so much we succumbed to civil war . But what happens if a president claims our system is no longer trustworthy? - The Baltimore Sun, Mar. 3


Looking back on a Civil War volume ('War of the Rebellion: Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies Series I,  Vol. 13)  documenting a history of battles and skirmishes during the Civil War, I was able to see how my Southern ancestors tried to roust the invading Union Army.  

Most insightful was on pp. 68-69 encountering the annals of the Wisconsin Cavalry and another Missouri Union unit in a skirmish near Searcy Landing, Ark. This was in the vicinity of my dad's ancestral family farm.  It intrigued me that my Northern ancestors could well have been battling my Southern ancestors. In a remarkable way I am a product of both North and South, a southern (Arkansas-born) father and northern (Wisconsin--born) mother.   I daresay you won't find too many like me on that score.

But what pains me now, as I've noted before, is that this nation may well be on the brink of a new civil war. One not brought on by slavery or state's rights, but  by Trump's lawless residency as embodied in his insane, polarizing and unhinged rhetoric - like Saturday at the paranoid CPAC ghoulfest, e.g.



And earlier by the outrages of  his militant goons and followers, i.e.

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Trump's unhinged performance, attacking every and anyone who's mounted the slightest opposition to his traitorous occupation ought not surprise anyone . We knew it was coming after  a tumultuous week in which his own fixer - Michael Cohen - revealed the true nature of this cheat, racist and criminal in a House Oversight hearing.  Cohen pointed repeatedly for his unfitness for office, which was confirmed by his  siding with his autocrat Kim Jong Un in regard to the horrific end of 22 -year old Otto Warmbier, i.e  insisting he "took Kim at his word" that he "knew nothing about it".   In a pig's eye. 

Trump said he "had no choice" and had to walk "a fine balance" which is an out right lie like the 8,700 others  this POS has spewed thus far.  In fact, as is his wont,  he merely demonstrated how he grovels at the feet of other autocrats (like Putin, Duterte, Saudi Prince Salman bin Saud et al) and chooses to believe these degenerates over his own intel agencies. Meanwhile,  his own zombie followers love it.  They especially relished it Saturday when he told these losers the sane segment of the country wanted to "take them out".  Well, not literally, but more metaphorically - by excising the metastasizing cancer of Trump.

We now know, for example, that Michael Cohen warned in his televised House Oversight Hearing:

Given my experience working for Mr Trump, I fear that if he loses the election in 2020 that there will never be a peaceful transition of power.”

His warning ought to be taken dead seriously.  And as I've written multiple times before, no nation with two segments of the population  who subscribe to radically divergent realities, can ever find comity or civility. I even argued that in many cases the only way out is Civil War, one side subduing the other so a unified nation can emerge again.  Is this hysterical balderdash? Not at all!

Trump in his two hour and two minute CPAC harangue even invited the furies be brought down on his head, and the heads of his followers by declaring we (the sane side) "hate our country".  No we do not, we hate the refuse and cancerous maggot attempting to befoul it and destroy the Constitution and rule of law.   We who behold this wannabe tyrant in action, and haven't yet succumbed to "outrage fatigue", see how every bedrock principle at the heart of our nation is being undermined and contaminated by bigotry, xenophobia, run amuck nationalism and an insane autocrat who has no clue how to be a leader. 

All of this in tandem, and now more than ever after yesterday, has many thinking people - including scholars-  perceiving that a Civil War may well be in our future. Not that any rational person would want such cataclysm, but that it may be the only way to set the ship of state aright from the monstrous infection that invaded from November, 2016.

 Take Barbara Walter, a professor of political science at the University of California at San Diego. Originally she had said her first instinct was to dismiss any talk of civil war in the United States. “But the U.S. is starting to show that it is moving in that direction,” she said. “Countries with bad governance are the ones that experience these wars.”   She isn't alone.

Robert Reich, a former secretary of labor -  now a professor at the University of California at Berkeley -  wrote in The Baltimore Sun  how  he  imagined a new American civil war, in which demands for Trump’s impeachment lead to reactive calls from Fox News for “every honest patriot to take to the streets.”.   As Reich put it: 

"The way Mr. Trump and his defenders are behaving, it’s not absurd to imagine serious social unrest.   That's how low he's taken us."

Well it isn't that hard to imagine given the awful scenes out of Charlottesville when thousands of white nationalists and Nazis marched openly while attacking innocent protesters, e.g.
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So merely seeing the photos, images, including knowing a protester-  Heather Heyer- was killed (run down)  by one of these odious madmen, ought to set alarms ringing.

Reich's sobering take  got some unlikely support last week from Steve Bannon, Trump’s former chief strategist who said in an interview on 'Face The Nation':. “I think that 2019 is going to be the most vitriolic year in American politics since the Civil War, and I include Vietnam in that"

Meanwhile, echoing Cohen,  Joshua Geltzer, a former senior Obama administration Justice Department official, wrote a recent editorial for CNN urging the country to prepare for the possibility that Trump might not “leave the Oval Office peacefully” if he loses in 2020.  He wrote:



“If he even hints at contesting the election result in 2020 . . . he’d be doing so not as an outsider but as a leader with the vast resources of the U.S. government potentially at his disposal.   "These are dire thoughts,” Geltzer wrote, “but we live in uncertain and worrying times.”

He urged both major parties to require their electoral college voters to pledge to respect the outcome of the election, and suggested that it might be necessary to ask the secretary of defense and the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff to reaffirm their loyalty to the Constitution over Trump.  But will Trumpie Republicans, now more a cult like Jim Jones' in Guyana - who all took the purple cyanide kool aid, do that ?  I doubt it.

Another  historian from Stanford University’s Hoover Institution (not exactly my 'go to' source),  when asked last summer in an essay in National Review. prophesied that the United States “was nearing a point comparable to 1860,”  i.e. about a year before the first shots were fired on Fort Sumter, S.C.

 Concerns about a civil war  extend beyond the pundit class to a sizable segment of the population. An October 2017 poll from the company that makes the game Cards Against Humanity found that 31 percent of Americans believed a civil war was “likely” in the next decade.

More than 40 percent of Democrats described such a conflict as “likely,” compared with about 25 percent of Republicans. The company partnered with Survey Sampling International to conduct the nationally representative poll.

The source of these surreal expectations? Look no further than the increase in distrust of our own  democratic institutions.  The Economist Intelligence Unit’s Democracy Index, a measure widely cited by political scientists, demoted the United States from “full democracy” to “flawed democracy” in January 2017, citing a big drop in Americans’ trust for their political institutions.

Similarly, Freedom House, which monitors freedom and democracy around the world, warned in 2018 that the past year has “brought further, faster erosion of American’s own democratic standards than at any other time in memory.”

Those warnings about the state of America’s democratic institutions concern political scientists who study civil wars, which usually take root in countries with high levels of corruption, low trust in institutions and poor governance.

Boaz Hameiri, a professor at the University of Pennsylvania sounded an apt cautionary note that Violence is most likely to occur, Hameiri added, when political leaders use “dehumanizing language” to describe their opponents.

Most experts worried that the talk of conflict, armed or otherwise,  serves to raise the prospects of unrest and diminish trust in America’s already beleaguered institutions.   But this has already happened!  The gangrene has already set in, and multiple limbs are dead or dying and need to be chopped off. The cancerous lesions have spread since Trump took over (thanks to the Russians help) and now those tumors, lesions need extreme surgery.  

Is there some hope we can escape the expected conflagration? Maybe. But that depends on a certain subset of Trump voters coming to their collective senses next year - and finally seeing the error of their choice.  I am not referring her to the zombies, the cult followers and kool aid drinkers.  I am referring to those named by Peggy Noonan in her piece yesterday (p. A13).  Those who "did not care what he did or said when he became President or now"  only what he did, e.g.

"Trump has come through from the courts to the economy and he still 'hates all the right people'"

Unswerving belief in that codswallop without becoming changelings is what holds greatest peril for the nation.  The abject failure to appreciate that whatever tiny benefit has accrued from the "economy" (incomprehensible given the farm foreclosures and millions no longer getting tax refunds!)  or the "courts" are chicken feed compared to the possibly irreversible damage to the nation's norms, laws, and principles. 

See also:
by Larry Beinhart | March 2, 2019 - 7:27am | permalink

And:

Trump derides Mueller probe, mocks Democrats and Jeff Sessions at CPAC 

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