Seven
months into a year ravaged by a pandemic, the future seems as uncertain
as ever. Everyone is pinning their hopes on a vaccine as a miracle
return to the “way it was”. A way back to the days of packed stadiums,
award shows, movie theaters, parties, bars, planes and trains without a
care.
Many
in the US, the nation with the highest global death toll, are in
denial, and the virus continues to find hosts unhindered. If the present
trend continues, about 200,000 people are expected to succumb by the
end of the year.
Even
though hospitals and medical professionals have become better at
managing outcomes, people continue to die. And the daily ticker climbs
new heights.
After
months of looking at the daily score card, a numbness has set in.
People don’t seem to be fazed by the numbers and are settling to a new
dark normal. Those who have lost loved ones are devastated and others
who have been able to dodge the bullet are careful and are also
beginning to get complacent.
The
polarization and the politics around how to deal with the virus has
almost made it impossible to implement a national methodical approach to
deal with this crisis.
When
daily mixed messaging from the top muddies a coherent consistent
national response, and wearing of a mask becomes a matter of “freedom”
one wonders how this crisis will stem. And so people are tuning off and
going about their lives, taking risks as they would with anything else.
From denial, delusion to alarm, people in power have botched the response to this catastrophe.
In
March the president was quick to label himself a “war time president”,
but did little to act like one. With the most death of Americans
recorded from a single event since the last big war on his hands, his
erratic behavior and philistine actions have only made matters worse.
And the people propping him up refuse to see that and are toeing the
line defending the indefensible.
While
this virus leaks and spreads unabated, there is another crisis emerging
on the horizon. This one could be more damaging in its outcome.
A question that started as a rhetorical distant possibility is now becoming a plausibility.
On
talk shows, newspapers and news programs, many have raised the question
“what if” the November election were sullied, cancelled, postponed or
indefinitely suspended by the current president? What if he refuses
leave?
Many
laugh it off as liberal delusional fantasy, but now three months away
from the election, judging by the president’s words, it is seeming like a
possibility.
Republicans
have often used voter suppression as a skillful tactic to win
elections. Low voter turnout has historically benefited the party and
they have done everything possible to make this a consistent reality.
From
gerrymandering districts, to forcing voter ID cards and raising the
specter of fraud in elections when there is next to none, they have
tried time and again to make voting difficult for mostly people on the
lower rung of society. These maneuvers have disproportionately
disenfranchised communities of color in southern states.
With
the pandemic being a real impediment to voter turn out, they are making
sure yet again it works in their favor. By casting doubt on mail in
ballots, even though they are widely used in every election, they are
attempting to suppress votes. Especially because recent polls show the
president trailing.
When
billions of dollars are moved everyday via computer screens, and highly
sensitive data is shared through phones and other electronic devices,
it is appalling that in the United States the voting process is as
primitive as it is. Republicans have favored the status-quo in this
regard for reasons that are to their advantage.
The
election process remains a contentious issue in a democracy that prides
itself as a beacon to the world. Being one the largest democracies in
the world, American elections historically have had record low turnouts
and little has been done to change this in any meaningful way. Other
than celebrities aiding campaigns like “rock the vote”, nothing has been
done to address this crucial problem in any systemic way.
When
asked in a recent interview if he would concede defeat in the election,
the sitting president of America was non-committal. When his Attorney
General was asked during a congressional hearing by a sitting
congressman, if mail in voting would lead to massive voter fraud, his
response was that there was a high risk, if a blanket conversion for the
upcoming general election were to take place.
With
a pandemic raging since March very little has been done to make sure
the elections in November will be certain, conducive and malleable to
the crisis. It is now being made all but certain that there will be a
low turn out.
Apart
from internal threats, there is a continuing danger to the American
elections being meddled with from the outside. The present
administration continues to downplay this threat.
Acknowledging
there is a threat, the Attorney General did not reveal if there was
anything being done to combat it in any decisive manner.
The
president has always referred to the Russian invasion as a “hoax” and
has rarely brought it up in his numerous calls with Vladimir Putin Even
if he did, he has casually accepted the denial offered.
The
social unrest that started with the murder of George Floyd is still
simmering in parts of the country. The president and his Attorney
General have characterized it as “anarchy” and “terrorism”.
They have
refused to accept there is systemic racism in the nation’s police and
have seen calls to de-fund or restructure it as an assault on the
criminal justice system.
So
they have dug in and with little else to fall back on, have decided to
rebrand the president as the “law and order” leader who would make sure
Americans are kept safe from rioting mobs tearing down statues with
tough militarized measures. This might play well with the base and those
afraid of a demographically changing America and a perceived erosion of
entitlement and privilege.
As
the president casts doubts on the election schedule and his inner
coterie goes along with that assessment, some of his ardent supporters
and prominent members of his party have politely broken ranks on this
issue. Dismissing it by saying “it is just Trump being Trump” and the
media is over sensationalizing his remarks.
Throughout
history fascism and authoritarianism have sneaked in by quietly
suspending democratic norms and institutions, citing internal and
external threats.
If
for any reason the integrity of the election is damaged by a delay or
compromised by declaring it “rigged” or “sullied”, America would enter
uncharted territory. The “banana republics” and “failed states” it tends
to look down upon, from a position of rule of law and checks and
balances, will be a thing of the past. America will not only have the
dubious record of burying the largest number of civilians this year, but
also will become the largest failed democracy on the planet.
What
we know is a drop and what we don’t, is an ocean. From the virus to
other mysteries and unexplained phenomenon, this has been the mantra
that has defined human existence and constantly challenged us to reason,
innovate and evolve.
Behind
all the shocking statements and absurd UN-presidential and UN-American
rhetoric that is spewed on a daily basis, there is a lot we do not know
and probably never will, until may be it is too late.
It is what it is.
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