Boston Herald

Trump and supporters fight facts with fiction

- Jeff ROBBINS Jeff Robbins is a Boston lawyer and former U.S. delegate to the United Nations Human Rights Commission.

It’s been disclosed that the White House will be fumigated before Joe Biden moves in, and one hopes that the chemical agent will be extra-strength. It’s unclear whether mere fumigation will be enough to remove the disease that Donald Trump has spawned in the American people’s house. Even if one round suffices to rid the White House of COVID-19, it may take additional rounds to eliminate the other toxins that four years of epic corruption have produced in our body politic.

By God’s grace a vaccine will protect us from the coronaviru­s. But there is no vaccine for the disease of ugly anti-Americanis­m that has infected large swaths of the country, promoted and spread by a president who cares not one whit about the country he purports to lead. The extent of the damage Trump has wrought was illustrate­d in yet one more new way last week, when a majority of Republican­s in the House of Representa­tives and 18 Republican state attorneys general demanded that a Supreme Court dominated by Republican appointees declare that the winner of last week’s election — Biden — be declared the loser, and that the loser — Trump — be declared the winner.

Put another way, despite the fact that the voters, the states and the courts have all determined that Biden won the election fair and square and there is zero evidence to the contrary, these Republican­s demanded that the election results be disregarde­d and that Trump be installed as president for a second term.

The sad truth about these officials and the millions of Americans who support them is this: They either do not know what democracy is or they do not approve of it. They either do not know what America is, or they reject it.

Indeed, some of them have begun to wonder whether, if America really insists on distinguis­hing between fact and fiction and on honoring elections, they belong elsewhere. Conservati­ve commentato­r Candace Owens ruminated that if the election results weren’t going to be overturned, Trump supporters should simply take a page from the seven proslavery states that withdrew from the United States in 1861 and formally pull out of the country. “You actually don’t need a bloody war to secede – just an agreement,” she noted. Talk radio host Rush Limbaugh, Trump ally extraordin­aire, allowed that if Donald Trump were not made president again, America would “trend towards secession.” Unless Trump was declared president, Limbaugh said, “It can’t go on this way. There cannot be a peaceful coexistenc­e of two completely different theories of life, theories of government, theories of how we manage our affairs.”

After the Supreme Court, including three justices appointed by Trump himself, quickly concluded that his bid to overthrow the election he had lost was too meritless even to consider, the head of Texas’ Republican Party denounced the court, saying that it was time for the states whose attorneys general had filed the frivolous lawsuit to leave the United States and form their own country. “Perhaps lawabiding states should bond together and form a union of states that will abide by the Constituti­on,” he said, true to Trump World’s near-fetish for rubbish.

Even lemmings have the common decency to jump off cliffs alone, without physically dragging others with them. The same cannot be said of MAGA Land, whose inhabitant­s seem to have seceded from America in spirit if not formally.

“Before entering upon so grave a matter as the destructio­n of our national fabric, with all its benefits, its memories and its hopes,” implored Abraham Lincoln shortly after the secession that triggered the Civil War, “would it not be wise to ascertain precisely why we do it?” Those patriots and adults left in the Republican Party would do well to insist to their brethren that this question be asked, and asked again. The future of America may depend on it.

 ?? AP ?? BY WHAT MEASURE? A supporter of President Trump holds a sign Sunday as Trump’s motorcade departs the Trump National Golf Club in Sterling, Va.
AP BY WHAT MEASURE? A supporter of President Trump holds a sign Sunday as Trump’s motorcade departs the Trump National Golf Club in Sterling, Va.
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