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John,
When the Constitution was adopted on June 21, 1788, it immediately became
the exception to the rule of human history, announcing to the world that
we would be governed by laws and not by men. To guard against human
tendency to concentrate power and authority — to keep would-be kings,
dictators, strongmen and thugs from wresting control of this noble
experiment — a system of checks and balances was implemented. There would
be separate branches of government, and a division of power and
responsibility between them. And in the sole branch of government where
power is not shared but held by one person, the executive, there would be
a further check: impeachment.
Though imperfect, and even immoral in its initial acceptance of slavery
and the slave trade, the Constitution was a breathtaking departure from
the course of human events and enabled America to become a singular,
inspiring idea.
Under the Constitution, disagreement is adjudicated without violence and
power is transferred peacefully. And though never fully realized, within
it there is enshrined the aspiration that we will all be treated equally
under the law and that each of us will have equal opportunity to guide the
affairs of this country through free and fair democratic elections.
Looking at so much of the rest of the world and almost the whole of human
history, it is clear that without the Constitution we would have suffered
the rule of men and not enjoyed something approaching the equal protection
and promise of just laws.
Today, two hundred and thirty-three years after its adoption, it has been
replaced by something else.
"Functionally a monarch," is how Presidential historian Jon Meacham
described Donald Trump earlier this week, after a feckless Senate majority
refused to call witnesses, subpoena documents, or hold anything remotely
resembling a fair trial after his impeachment by the House.
Some Republican senators — like Marco Rubio and Lamar Alexander — even
conceded that what the President did in extorting a foreign power for his
own political benefit was wrong and impeachable.
They just weren’t going to do anything about it.
Republican Senator Lisa Murkowski told reporters that "Congress had
failed"… as though she is a passive spectator of Congress instead of a
majority Senator who in fact possesses extraordinary leverage and power to
keep it from failing.
Perhaps she should have looked to Mitt Romney, her only colleague in the
majority to vote to convict Donald Trump — becoming the first and only
Senator in our history to vote to convict a President from his own party.
Romney explained that "the Constitution is at the foundation of our
Republic’s success, and we strive not to lose sight of our promise to
defend it."
At its core the President’s trial — our country’s trial — comes down to
this question: will we have the rule of men or the rule of law? Those
Senators who accepted the argument that the President can do anything he
chooses as long as it helps his re-election, as his defense team argued,
support the former. Those who choose to hold him accountable because of,
in Mitt Romney’s words, "an appalling abuse of the public trust," support
the latter.
By a 52–48 vote, our country, through our representatives in the Senate,
chose the rule of men.
Only some men, to be sure. Those powerful enough, shameless enough,
enabled enough, to live above the law.
This past Saturday I saw a photo of white men in camouflage, tactical gear
and face masks, armed with military-style assault weapons in the Capitol
Building in Frankfort, Kentucky. It was chilling to witness this
defilement of democracy by armed thugs who sought to intimidate lawmakers
and the citizens they represent.
Getty Images News [1]Verified @GettyImagesNews
[2]@GettyImagesNews Gun rights activists carrying semi-automatic
firearms walk through the Capitol Building on
January 31, 2020 in Frankfort, Kentucky.
[ [link removed] ]Gun rights activists carrying firearms in
Kentucky Capitol #1[ [link removed] ]Gun rights activists
carrying firearms in Kentucky Capitol #2
It wasn’t an aberration. Two weeks ago, similarly heavily armed and masked
men paraded through the Virginia capitol in an effort to intimidate
lawmakers who had the audacity to introduce bills requiring background
checks on firearms purchases. And it wasn’t unconnected to the impunity
with which the President acts or the breakdown of the rule of law in our
country.
Donald J. Trump [5]Verified @realDonaldTrump
[6]@realDonaldTrump [ [link removed] ]Trump's tweet
Those men marching up the capitol steps in Kentucky are listening to
Donald Trump. They anticipate a tide that is turning, and in the obscenity
of their act of masked intimidation presage the beginning of rule by men
and not by laws. Just like the white nationalist thugs who marched in
Charlottesville in 2017. Or the man who drove 600 miles from Allen, Texas
to El Paso, Texas last August, intent upon repelling an "invasion of
Hispanics." A man inspired by Trump, incited by Trump, and acting on the
hateful, violent, dehumanizing rhetoric employed by Trump. A man who
killed 22 people — children, women and men — people who wrongly believed
that the law and the institutions of this country would protect them.
This is now where violence waits, in the shadows and increasingly out in
the open, watching this hideous farce in the Senate… waiting for the next
signal from Donald Trump, knowing now that any remnant of restraint is
fast breaking loose.
We are watching in real time the destruction of the most noble experiment
in the whole of human history, a descent, as Adam Schiff put it, into
"constitutional madness." And if we are unable to stop this slide, the
victims will number more than just our democracy, our Constitution and the
institutions that have produced the most successful country in the history
of the world — they will include any of us not able to purchase power or
arm themselves with it.
This was the end of Adam Schiff’s closing argument to the Senate on
Monday:
I put my faith in the optimism of the founders. You should too. They
gave us the tools to do the job, a remedy as powerful as the evil it was
meant to constrain: impeachment. They meant it to be used rarely but
they put it in the Constitution for a reason:
For a man who would sell out his country for a political favor. For a
man who would threaten the integrity of our elections. For a man who
would invite foreign interference in our affairs. For a man who would
undermine our national security and that of our allies.
For a man like Donald J. Trump.
They gave you a remedy and they meant for you to use it. They gave you
an oath and they meant for you to observe it. We have proven Donald
Trump guilty, now do impartial justice and convict him.
Despite the outcome in the Senate and this darkest of moments for our
country, my faith is still in the optimism of the founders. And it is in
the people of El Paso who demonstrated that what happened here in August
was not the victory of violence and lawlessness, but instead the triumph
of a community that has stood resilient in resisting racism perpetrated at
the highest levels of power, a city that has demonstrated extraordinary
strength, compassion and kindness in the face of a welling evil in this
country.
We are tempted to despair, and that is understandable. But we must
understand that should despair take hold it will leave us defenseless
against the greatest challenge America has yet faced.
Perhaps the most alarming thing that came out of Iowa this week was not
the incompetence of the party and the failed technology that leaves us
still in the dark as to the final results of the caucus… what should most
concern us is that turnout might have barely kept pace with 2016 levels,
and fell well below the historic turnout of 2008. We’re in the middle of a
national emergency, and people are staying home.
Discussing this with a friend, he reminded me of how despair spread across
Germany in the 1930s — of all the people who were not Nazis, but neither
were they simply passive observers of the Nazis of all that transpired…
the countless thousands who were completely devastated by what they saw
happening to their country, felt utterly powerless to stop it, and, over
time, quietly retreated from the world into darkness and despair. And
today? How many millions are so heartbroken by what has come to pass in
America that they have already retreated from the world?
I refuse to be one of them. I still have faith in this country, faith that
we can follow the optimism of our founders, faith that we can follow the
example of El Paso… but it will take all we have from all of us who are
willing to fight to save this country to make it so. And in this struggle,
as Lincoln said at another defining moment in our history, "we shall nobly
save, or meanly lose, the last best hope of earth."
Beto
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