Sentinel & Enterprise

Our nation is at more risk than our species at the present time

- By John M. Crisp John M. Crisp, an op- ed columnist for Tribune News Service, lives in Georgetown, Texas, and can be reached at jcrispcolu­mns@gmail.com.

Which should we be most worried about, our species or our nation?

First, our species: Our world’s most prominent leaders, as well as 20,000 diplomats, executives and activists, are convening in Glasgow this week to talk about the threat that climate change presents for our species.

But climate activist Greta Thunberg recently summed up 30 years of talking about climate change this way: “Blah, blah, blah.”

There is reason to believe that her cynicism is justified. Despite considerab­le alarmist handwringi­ng and well-intentione­d rhetoric, we’ve actually done very little to slow climate change.

But then there’s our nation to worry about. We could describe our current political dysfunctio­n in various ways, but last week a very ominous number emerged from a recent Politico and Morning Consult poll. Two thousand registered voters responded to this question: “Do you think the results of the 2020 presidenti­al election should be overturned?”

Thirty-five percent said “Yes, definitely” or “Yes, probably.” Among Republican­s, 60% said the same.

The indication that one in three Americans believes Biden’s presidency is illegitima­te and that he should be replaced by former President Donald Trump is not as alarming as this position is based on essentiall­y no evidence.

When it comes to election skepticism, the burden of proof is on the doubters and deniers, and in the case of the 2020 election they simply have not been able to develop any evidence that rises above anecdote, assertion and innuendo.

On the contrary, a wide array of academics, politician­s, historians, state officials and people who study such things have found that no credible evidence of election fraud exists and certainly not any level that would affect the outcome of the 2020 election. Election results have been challenged in the courts more than 60 times, and judges appointed by both Republican­s and Democrats have found no merits in the suits.

Republican­s as prominent as Trump’s former attorney general William Barr have asserted that the election was secure and honest. Shortly after the election, Barr told the Associated Press that U. S. attorneys and FBI agents had investigat­ed complaints and “we have not seen fraud on a scale that could have effected a different outcome. in the election.”

Yet the lie persists and has been the driving force behind unnecessar­y audits, threats against election officials and a slew of new laws that are designed to make voting harder rather than easier.

Where does the lie get its strength? As far as I can tell, it depends largely on the idea that the Constituti­on grants the power to control elections to state legislatur­es and, thus, Republican­s contend, changes in election procedures have to be approved by the legislatur­es.

The reductio ad absurdum suggests moving a polling station by a local election official would require the convocatio­n of the legislatur­e to approve it. In practical terms, Republican­s are applying this rationale to cast doubt on voting practices that encouraged record turnout in the middle of a pandemic. And Republican­s are deeply threatened by record turnout.

This specious rationale serves as the basis for most of the misguided skepticism about the election, despite that even if the rationale were accurate, it doesn’t indicate that voter fraud actually occurred or that one side would benefit over the other.

Yet the Republican­s have managed to beguile a significan­t portion of our nation into believing that the election was fraudulent. And without faith in our elections, we do not have a democracy.

So, which is the greater threat, climate change or this Republican lie? I predict our species will survive climate change, even if the world turns into the place that philosophe­r Thomas Hobbes described in 1651: “No arts; no letters; no society; and which is worst of all, continual fear, and danger of violent death; and the life of man, solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and short.”

But can our democracy survive this systematic and intentiona­l erosion of faith in our elections? No.

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