The Day

America will not return to ‘normalcy’

- JOHN KASS Tribune Content Agency

They were ridiculed by Barack Obama as bitter clingers hanging on to their guns and religion. Hillary Clinton put them into her basket of deplorable­s.

Asthe lawyers sink their teeth into what remains of the election between President Donald Trump and Joe Biden, as they prepare to do battle in the courts, America is reminded of what happened 20 years ago: Those excruciati­ng 35 days of George Bush vs. Al Gore and the high drama of those dangling Florida chads.

What’s different in America between then and now? Everything.

Just look at the plywood on the downtown storefront­s of the big cities for postelecti­on violence.

America has undergone a profound and confusing realignmen­t. But we’ve had difficulty processing it as a people, with journalism becoming infinitely more tribal and partisan and Big Tech putting its news thumb on the scale for the Democrats.

And despite some weepy nostalgia expressed by a few of the squishier pundits longing for a return to “normalcy” — whatever that is — America won’t revert to the centrist reign of the wise men. The center of both political parties collapsed long ago under the sodden weight of the corrupt elites.

The left knows this. Conservati­ves know this. And no matter how the 2020 elections go, there is no returning to “normalcy.”

All that plywood on glass storefront­s in downtown Chicago, New York, Washington, Los Angeles, the boarded-up windows along Rodeo Drive, tell you how much things have changed in the 20 years since Bush and Gore. That plywood is a declaratio­n of realists. Merchants risk their own money in business. That wood cuts through the political spin offered by liberal Democratic mayors.

Are the mayors really worried about the Knights of Columbus coming downtown to trash and loot if Trump doesn’t prevail? Are they worried about being devoured by suburban Girl Scout troops?

No. They’re worried about the same thing that the merchants are worried about. They’re worried about the left and looters who have engaged in political violence as an expression of force for months. Protests that began as a legitimate, angry reaction to the tragic death of George Floyd at the hands of Minneapoli­s police, soon morphed into something else. They had little to do with Floyd and everything to do with the 2020 presidenti­al campaign.

Forgive me, but I don’t remember the cities furiously boarding up 20 years ago, or governors ordering the National Guard to stand ready, as Gore’s lawyers faced off with Bush’s lawyers in Florida. And many of today’s angry woke warriors, including those who’ve thrown frozen water bottles at the heads of cops in those “mostly peaceful” protests, were far too young to remember.

Twenty years ago, the Democratic Party still had its share of moderates, who talked about the American Dream of a colorblind society, where merit was rewarded. All that’s changed. The universiti­es have done their work. Now the Democratic Party is ruled by identity politics. And those who dare talk of a colorblind society are denounced as racists to be sent to sensitivit­y sessions.

Just 20 years ago, the Democratic Party was still the party of the working class, of the little guy, who worked with their hands and stood on their feet and put in their shifts — people who don’t make a living on Zoom.

Twenty years ago, Republican­s were the party of the elite, of Big Corporate, the party of suburban middle managers climbing that ladder to the C suite.

But now, in the realignmen­t that began long before Trump was elected in 2016, Democrats have become the party of Big Tech and of Wall Street. And the technocrat­s, including federal bureaucrat­s (and some pundits) aren’t as worried about their paychecks. They meet and work on Zoom. They have the ability to send their kids to private schools that are not on coronaviru­s lockdowns.

And the old Democratic working class? They’re with Trump. They sent their kids to those endless Republican-backed Middle Eastern wars. They watched as their jobs were outsourced to foreign lands. They grieved as their communitie­s were savaged by opioid addiction.

They were ridiculed by Barack Obama as bitter clingers hanging on to their guns and religion. Hillary Clinton put them into her basket of deplorable­s.

And now, for wanting their kids back in school, for wanting to be able to work and earn their living, they’re denounced as belonging to a dangerous cult.

All this leaves them no place to go. They’ve been put into a pot, with the lid on and the heat turned up.

Whoever prevails in this election, I’ll consider that man my president and pray he does well. But America isn’t a rubber band ready to snap back to “normalcy” or what it was just 20 years ago.

The center is broken. We’re in the time of populism now.

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