Chattanooga Times Free Press

IT’S AUTHORITAR­IANISM VS THE UNCOMMITTE­D

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Super Tuesday is over and so is any hope that Donald Trump isn’t speeding toward the White House.

With clear victories in the primaries and a Supreme Court win that keeps him on the Colorado ballot, any belief that Trump doesn’t have a good chance of moving back into the Executive Mansion, or that the Republican Party will turn away from him, is magical thinking.

Just about as magical as believing that Biden will somehow begin to inspire the many critical voters who have slowly been turning away from him — young voters swayed by a campaign against his age; voters agonized by the destructio­n in Gaza; voters who despite the strong economy still are shocked by inflation that makes filling the refrigerat­or increasing­ly hard.

And most of all, voters (like me) who are just tired. It is increasing­ly hard to care but increasing­ly dangerous not to.

In the “Inferno,” Dante described the vestibule of hell as populated by those who did not choose a side in life, neither brazen enough to embrace evil nor strong enough to fight it.

These days, we call them independen­ts, or the disenfranc­hised, or the worn-out weary like me.

Our numbers are growing and we will determine America’s collective future. By voting for a Kennedy, a Stein, a West. Or by not voting at all.

At a dinner party recently, I sat next to a professor from a California university who pointed out that we survived the first Trump presidency. Maybe the second one won’t be so bad, he argued.

It was a little like standing in the slaughterh­ouse line with a fellow calf, bellowing that he’d never heard anyone come out with a complaint. For a minute, I saw his point.

But consider this.

Toppling a democracy requires a fearful populace — people so afraid for their own futures and the futures of their children that they will exchange rights for perceived safety. Trump is a pro when it comes to stoking these fears, and it is not an accident.

It’s an actual written plan that warns “the very moral foundation­s of our society are in peril,” and that “(i)n many ways, the entire point of centralizi­ng political power is to subvert the family. Its purpose is to replace people’s natural loves and loyalties with unnatural ones.”

Those are just a few lines from the Heritage Foundation’s “Mandate for Leadership: The Conservati­ve Promise,” written as a guidebook for what to do after a Trump win.

The difference between Trump term one and term two, if it happens, will be that kind of organizati­on.

When Trump won the first time, those who would replace democracy with Christian theocracy weren’t prepared. They had an agenda, but lacked the skills and discipline to fully implement it.

Lesson learned.

For the past four years, this country’s far-right, extremist element hasn’t just been emboldened — they have been organizing like a Starbucks union drive. They will be, as they have repeatedly promised, ready on Day 1 to remake America as a place of exclusion rather than inclusion.

For those who don’t want to hold their nose and vote for Biden, I get it. Nobody should have to chose a candidate they don’t believe in or put someone in the White House just to prevent something worse. For those too tired to care, sisters and brothers, I feel you.

But those are the voters who will decide this election.

This isn’t Trump vs. Biden. It’s democracy vs. the uncommitte­d, the tired, the angry, the broke.

But you only get to lose democracy once.

A vote from the vestibule of hell is one heck of a way to do it.

 ?? ?? Anita Chabria
Anita Chabria

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