In December 2016, I was told, “It doesn’t matter to the average person who is President. It doesn’t really affect everyday people.”
In response, I said parents would be ripped away from their children because of the election. I said people would start losing their health care and some would die as a consequence. I said public lands would start shrinking and environmental protections would be radically rolled back.
As I said in a blog back in 2016 after that night, that smirking person said:
I was being “alarmist” and “overly-dramatic” regarding Trump and his supporters, that it’s not “that bad”, that I should be more tolerant and caring regarding his supporters, some of whom are my neighbors, that they aren’t “bad” people, that being polite and listening to them would be good for me…
My pushback against this person made observers uncomfortable. I ended up losing some people I considered friends because I dared to talk openly after that night about the horror show that quickly unfolded after January: the ban on Muslim immigrants, the canceling of green card status for people who have lived and worked here for many years, the scaling back of the affordable care act and the taking away of health care coverage from thousands (soon millions), the flat wages while prices rise, the layoffs of thousands of people and closing of businesses, the scaling back of public lands, the elimination of various environmental protections, the elimination of protections for home buyers and people with student debt, Nazis proudly marching in the streets of the USA, emboldened and empowered by the President, the President’s open adoration of violent regimes (Russia, Saudi Arabia, North Korean, etc.), the separation of children and their families at the borders, the internment camps for immigrants, and, of course, the rich getting oh-so-richer while critically-needed safety net programs were eliminated.
So, yeah, I was right about the consequences of election night – in fact, I underestimated the consequences. But I take no pleasure in being right about it. None. I would have loved to have been wrong.
I didn’t really think about then was how the Presidency would affect me, personally, so quickly: two much-needed jobs in the pipeline completely disappeared within weeks of the election because of anticipated federal budget cuts. Former clients have greatly scaled back because of federal cuts. We’re holding our breath over a quickly-approaching green card renewal as we read horror stories of denials.
When I say elections are going to have dire consequences and affect real people, I’m not imagining things nor exaggerating. All of this affects real people, and if it hasn’t affected you, then you are privileged.
It’s not enough to vote in November – ask neighbors if they are registered. Ask them if they need a voter guide from the League of Women Voters (your state has them online). Ask them if they know where their polling place is. Ask your college-student sons and daughters’ friends the same.
Also see Silence means approval
Leave a Reply