online salon for art, news, essays, and organizing action

Author: NR24

  • The Power of a Lie

    The Power of a Lie

    When I was in college, a friend of mine was dating my roommate, so it alarmed me when I heard him having sex with the other roommate. When my friend confronted me about it, I had a choice: either tell the truth, or lie to cover for my roommate. It struck me that in situations like that, the truth is the only place to stand. Only truth has integrity. Because if you lie, you are lying FOR somebody. My friend was crushed to learn that her boyfriend was cheating on her, but she was grateful I had told the truth.

    What does this story have to do with the current political landscape? It turns out, a lot.

    Can we remember when Russia first invaded Ukraine and annexed Crimea back in 2014? Russia lied about it by claiming ignorance about the “little green men” who had seized the peninsula. After the second invasion, the lie was that Ukraine (!!!) had started the war. Putin’s supporters and Russian media enthusiastically confirmed his version of events. However, the fact that these claims were laughable misses the point. The goal of the lies is to rewrite history and thereby control the future. Importantly, the lies offer a simple challenge to the faithful: will you fall in line behind the party line (the party lie)? Because if your allegiance is to the truth, you are against us comrade.

    Does this sound familiar? It should. This is exactly the playbook that Trump displayed when he claimed (just like Putin) that Ukraine had started the war. The terrifying thing was watching his loyalists fall in line behind his absurdity, suddenly arguing how beautiful the emperor’s clothes were. Or remember the “Covfefe” butt-Tweet? Instead of recognizing it as a simple accident, the far-right went into overdrive insisting it was some sort of legitimate message, further evidence of Trump’s brilliance. Of course, the biggest example of this is the lie that the 2020 election was stolen — about 70% of Republicans suspected voter fraud, despite (or perhaps because of) there being no concrete evidence to support that claim.

    When our “leaders” are falling all over themselves to demonstrate their loyalty to a lie, we are witnessing the fascist toolkit to undermine democracy and pluralism. It goes hand in hand with attacks on universities and education or anything that might provide critical inquiry into the kind of myths that are required for authoritarian/fascist politics. Critical thought? Free elections? A free press? No comrade, those do not conform to our authoritarian vision.

    Our country is in real trouble when our elected officials are looking more and more like North Koreans who believe that Kim Jong Un was sent by God and never needs to defecate or that Kim Jong Il invented the hamburger. They either genuinely believe the insane claims, or they are too terrified to disagree with them when loyalty is critical for survival. How pathetic are we when a prerequisite for party membership is that our “leaders” must lie to demonstrate their loyalty? We can disagree on policy, we can disagree on solutions, but when we disagree on truth itself, we are sliding towards fascism because when you lie, you are lying for somebody. And when you live in that propaganda dream world, you cannot solve any real problems because you have prioritized lies over the truth. Can we as a country at least recognize the importance of the truth as the only antidote to the lies? Can we call out the enablers before it’s too late?

  • Representative Democracy (Where is Susan?)

    Congress has a recess this week, so many of us are asking for town halls with our elected members (sign our petition here). This is an opportunity for the community to communicate with their representatives so that We the People™can have some faith in knowing that our government is representing us.

    And that’s where this idea of “Representative Democracy” really breaks down. Susan Collins has yet to return a single message — not a phone call and not even a canned email response. Nothing. And she hasn’t held a town hall meeting with her constituents for years (Newsweek). There are petitions asking her to show up, but so far, nothing. I have spoken to aides or gotten messages back from Angus King, Chellie Pingree, and Jared Golden… but not from Susan. Where is she hiding? And more importantly, who is she representing if not us?

    I guess we should hand in our Gadsden “Don’t Tread on Me” flags, because We the People are getting stomped on when our supposed senator is AWOL, carrying water to Mar Largo apparently. The fact is that we don’t have a representative democracy if our “representatives” never interact with us. And to anyone who revels in the half-truth that “We are a republic, not a democracy” — just like “Democratic Republic of North Korea” — it is well to ask the important underlying question: “How representative of a democracy are we?” The oligarchs pushing statements like that are not fighting for your freedom, so why green-light their power grab with a bumper sticker? Are you happy to give up your voice so long as those in power “stick it to the libs?” Are we really selling out our freedom and the essence of our country for a few shekels of vindictive dopamine?

    Even if you love Susan Collins and you love Trump, wouldn’t you want to know that your priorities are being addressed by your representative? Or are we just going to hope she infers what we want? I for one demand more representation. Call me back Susan. Come to a town hall. It is literally your job.

  • Dear Soldier

    Dear Soldier

    After one of our recent protests, a man identifying himself as a veteran called us “Nazis” and spat that we should serve in the military before we dare to criticize this country. Excuse me? Plenty of us protesters have served in the military. Go talk to Jon Soltz of votevets.org in Boothbay and you’ll get an ear-full. Some of the harshest voices of criticism come from veterans.

    I am sincere when I say “thank you for your service”, but if military service were the only thing responsible for giving us our rights, then you’d think that China, Russian, and North Korea would have lots of “rights” due to their enormous militaries, but that is obviously not the case.

    And just a reminder for anyone who has forgotten the bloody lessons from 80 years ago: Nazism advocates for the subordination of individual rights — it’s the state über alles. Nazis reject democracy and liberalism and promote a dictatorial leadership. They hate dissent.

    So when we protesters are petitioning the Government for a redress of grievances through our freedom of speech and freedom of assembly, we are literally doing the most American thing possible. That’s as far from Nazism as you can get. Did Richard Spencer vote for Kamala? Do you think we protesters just came from harassing a performance of “The Diary of Anne Frank”? What exactly are you talking about?

    What bothered me most about the interaction was that this soldier didn’t get how dangerously hypocritical his views were. For him, I guess America should be a place where everyone falls in line behind Trump and toes his party line, no matter how damaging or self-serving it is. Did this soldier heckle protestors who were dissatisfied with President Biden? Did he tell the “Let’s Go Brandon” guys they were a “disgrace?” I sincerely doubt it.

    And what does it look like when soldiers silence dissent? Or when the leader is declared to be “above the law?” Or when a President censors the media by literally choosing who is allowed to report on his briefings? Or unflattering movies are stifled? Or when he praises dictators? If you guessed something out of the 1930s, there are a lot of frightening parallels.

    So, Dear Soldier, I ask you as a neighbor and fellow citizen: don’t forget your duty. We need your help. All US military personal had to take an oath, and you among them. You took an oath to support and defend the Constitution of the United States against all enemies, foreign and domestic. I will grant you that you also agreed to obey the orders of the President of the United States, but right now, those loyalties are conflicting. What to do when the President himself is the one attacking the Constitution? Checks and balances, the right to assemble, the freedom of speech — all of these things are under attack. I know a lot of soldiers are into the SECOND things (like the second amendment), but I would argue that the FIRST thing in your oath is more important: presidents may come and go, but the Constitution is what endures. And THAT’s what you fought for, and THAT’s what we are fighting for. So come join us. We really are on the same side.