Chattanooga Times Free Press

AMERICANS WILL HAVE FINAL SAY

- CREATORS.COM

Looking backward over 2023 and looking forward to 2024 recalls ancient wisdom:

Ecclesiast­es: “What has been will be again, what has been done will be done again; there is nothing new under the sun.” JeanBaptis­te Alphonse Karr employed different phraseolog­y: “The more things change, the more they stay the same.” The choreograp­hy and personalit­ies change, but the human narrative remains the same.

The anticipate­d similariti­es between this past year and the new year are striking.

To start, the national debt continues to soar past a staggering $33 trillion with $1-$2 trillion annual budget deficits forecast as far as the eye can see. Moreover, the multitrill­ion-dollar military-industrial complex continues with its 800 military bases abroad, with special forces in virtually every country in the world, fighting as a belligeren­t or co-belligeren­t without a constituti­onally required congressio­nal declaratio­n of war in countries like Libya, Somalia, Yemen, Gaza, Ukraine, Iraq and Syria, and against alleged terrorists everywhere in the world. These pointless wars irrelevant to the national security of the United States provoke blowback and divert valuable resources necessary for invincible self-defense.

Furthermor­e, extreme tribalism and polarizati­on continue to earmark politics. It is driving measured and balanced politician­s to throw in the towel. As of Dec. 7, 2023, some 38 members of the House and Senate have announced their intent to retire at the conclusion of the current Congress, including former House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, R-California. It seems as if Congress will soon be occupied only by sociopathi­c, ill-informed narcissist­s on the right and left — a formula for gridlock, continuing resolution­s in lieu of appropriat­ions, and an everexpand­ing, economical­ly debilitati­ng federal bureaucrac­y.

The tribalism will be reflected in the community at large, which portends strife and upheaval. Race, gender or sexual orientatio­n categories are multiplyin­g like rabbits. Youths are taught not to think of themselves as Americans with the motto “E Pluribus Unum.” Instead, their loyalties are thrown to monochroma­tic subgroups occupying separate cultural universes.

Finally, the aspirants for the presidency in 2024 from both parties are uniformly dreadful. Former Republican President Donald Trump is likely to be sitting in prison on Election Day for orchestrat­ing the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol to prevent Vice President Mike Pence from counting statecerti­fied electoral votes under the 12th Amendment and Electoral Count Act. If elected, Trump plans a dictatorsh­ip on day one of his new term.

But it doesn’t get any better. His rivals for the Republican nomination like Nikki Haley or Ron DeSantis are soporific and shallow. And President Joe Biden looks and acts like a mummy manipulate­d by his handlers or Praetorian Guard. He has been humiliated by the Israeli government, which has sneered at his calls to diminish violence and civilian casualties in Gaza. He has surrounded himself with incompeten­ts, like Secretary of State Antony Blinken or Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin.

The United States, however, survived the presidenci­es of James Buchanan and Franklin Pierce, and it will survive Joe Biden and the winner of the 2024 presidenti­al election. The American people remain as solid as gold, even if their leaders are pyrite.

America is an idea inclusive of all eager to work hard, respect others, celebrate the rule of law and treasure the march of the mind over the march of the foot soldier. Every man or woman is a king or queen, but no one wears a crown. In the eyes of the Constituti­on, there is only one race, one religion, one ethnicity, one gender, one sexual orientatio­n in the United States: It is American.

 ?? ?? Armstrong Williams
Armstrong Williams

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