America is going through a confluence of events unlike any before experienced
all at once, and while those still sane among us fervently wish/pray/beg times
will soon be better, in our hearts we know that won’t be the case.
On a far less cataclysmic but personal level, for the first time in
thirty-five plus years, I will not be making it to Greece this summer.
Sigh. Deeper sigh.
While casting about the Greek news for something to write about that
would bring a bit of distraction to my mood, I came across an article published
on Wednesday in Kathimerini–Greece’s
newspaper of record–written by its Executive Editor, Alexis Papachelas, titled,
“The other America hopes.”
Alexis Papachelas |
It’s far from the fun thing I was looking for, but in it I found serendipitous solace. As dark as the writer’s view of our current circumstances, our destiny is not in the hands of fate, but in our own. In other words, folks, what happens to US is up to us.
Here’s Alexis' take:
Ex-Prime Minister Konstantinos Mitsotakis |
Konstantinos Mitsotakis often said that a few determined people can make a country. It was a reference to Greece. What would the late Greek prime minister [and father of Greece’s current prime minister] have to say about developments in the US if he was alive today? Most likely that a determined man can throw a country into turmoil.
It’s horrifying that strong states with a long tradition and solid
institutions have entered a period of upheaval, irrationality and institutional
backsliding. It happened in Britain and it is now happening in the US. Sure,
developments in both countries were generated by more profound causes. However,
they would not have come about without the stubbornness and the catastrophic rage
of their leaders.
I assume that, like other leaders of his generation, Mitsotakis
would find it hard to accept the ease with which US President Donald Trump
challenges the international system which was set up after the Second
World War and which secured the lengthiest period of peace and prosperity
for the West. Mitsotakis belonged to a generation that experienced war and
understood very well the risks which arise when more profound forces of history
are combined with the destructive and/or paranoid rage of leaders.
Trump has divided American society so deeply that many pundits fear
that the lack of a clear result in November’s presidential election could spark
civil strife. He treats institutions with arrogance and vengeance, as if they
were a straitjacket confining his movement.
The sight of Trump appearing with officials of his administration
and the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, in particular, in front of a
church holding aloft a bible is shocking by American standards. His attacks
against the media makes local “Doberman” trolls seem like kittens by
comparison. There are no limits. Moving downhill.
In recent days, the pendulum appears to be swinging against what
Trump stands for. Moderate Republicans have started to openly criticize him.
The American middle class is terrified of the chaos and, despite its commitment
to the principles of law and order, feels that Trump is dangerous and
unpredictable.
Right now, it would be premature to draw conclusions. However, we
can be optimistic that the other America has not given up.
It remains to be seen if – should Trump lose the November election
– Mitsotakis’ saying will prove correct in this case. That is, if his
Democratic rival Joe Biden and his administration will manage to contain the
damage, restore equilibrium at home, and reunite American society. Winning the
election will not be easy for Biden. Nor will accomplishing any of that.
****
Happy
Fathers’ Day.
--Jeff
Citizen of The Other America here... We shall not rise again, we were never beat down. We've been here all along, standing with our faces in the hurricane. This storm, too, shall pass.
ReplyDeleteAll storms pass, EvKa, it's how one rebuilds that matters.
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