America is tragically deceptive right now.
You can go out today in your local community, and everything looks perfectly normal: the sun is shining, pickleball courts are packed, people are out on restaurant patios having lunch, and kids are playing in elementary school playgrounds.
It doesn’t look like a fascist dictatorship, it doesn’t feel like a failing democracy, which is why we’re in such trouble right now.
Too many people here are waiting for some horrific, visible marker that tells them authoritarianism is here: a declaration of Martial Law, tanks rolling down city streets, a violent display of military force against citizens.
They’re looking for some shocking or violent moment to signal to them that now it’s actually bad, that this is the time to panic. Short of these things, the perception of normalcy is sedating tens of millions of people into denial, complacency, and inaction.
Our family members, friends, neighbors, and co-workers refuse to acknowledge or even believe how much we’ve lost in the last 100 days: the dismantling of 250-year old systems of governance, the reversal of human and civil rights that took generations to secure, the erosion of safeguards and protections for people and the land, and the suffocation of agency of citizens.
Authoritarian regimes aren’t going to use military force unless they have to, and more likely, they’re only go to once they know that the hard work is already finished. A show of brutality isn’t the opening salvo of a war on Democracy, it’s the victory lap that tells the people that the war for their freedom is over.
The battle is being lost right now. It’s happening in the purposeful crashing of the Stock Market. It’s happening in mass deportations without due process. It’s happening in ignored Supreme Court rulings. It’s happening in mass layoffs at Federal agencies. It’s happening in the firing of journalists. It’s happening in the severing of ties with our allies in the global community.
And for those of us who’ve been paying attention for the past decade, who’ve alerted people to every red flag, who’ve screamed from social media rooftops at every act of lawlessness, and who have been accused of overreacting—this is the very disaster we exhausted ourselves trying to avoid.
Friends, the rise of fascism here isn’t going to look like a jittery, blurry, black and white newsreel. It won’t (at least initially) come dressed in military parades or bloodbaths in the streets, or in mass graves marking unthinkable inhumanity discovered after the fact.
It’s going to come far more quietly and carefully: made of canceled DEI programs, of exploratory mistreatment of marginalized people to test others’ resolve, of legislative attacks hidden in the minutia of bills passed in the middle of the night, and in a slow but deliberate subtraction of liberties that are easily stolen if the targets are distracted.
And this is where we are: everything does look perfectly normal, the sun is shining, pickleball courts are packed, people are out on restaurant patios having lunch, kids are playing in elementary school playgrounds—and we are simultaneously losing our Republic as far too many of us wait for sign that makes our peace impossible.
It’s time we stopped looking for some sickening, terrifying moment to confirm we are in danger, and realize that the danger is here and it is in how normal it still all feels… for now.
Are you experiencing frustration or outright anger at people’s inability to see what’s happening here in America? Why are people in such denial? Ignorance? Self-deception? Toxic positivity? Tribal loyalty? American exceptionalism? Let me know in the comments.
Why, you ask. Racism. Same reason there wasn't enough objection to the marginalizing of Jews in 1930s Germany. It is ALL about racism. Always has been and will always be. Slavery was the original sin of this nation and we are all still trying to atone for that sin centuries later. Original sin: now that is a very Catholic concept from a recovering Catholic!
You want fascism to arrive wearing jackboots and a swastika armband so you can feel heroic when you finally decide to notice. But surprise—it showed up in Lululemon pants and offered you a mimosa. Authoritarianism isn’t a Marvel villain—it’s that HOA board member who quietly rewrites the bylaws while you’re distracted arguing about gas stoves on Facebook.
The Republic isn’t falling. It’s being tidied out of existence. Alphabetized. PowerPointed. Swapped for NFTs and non-disclosure agreements. You’re waiting for tanks in the streets while entire agencies are being gutted by men who wear flag pins but wouldn’t recognize the Constitution if it subpoenaed them.
And you want to feel like it’s urgent? That’s cute. Did climate change need to feel urgent before it burned your backyard? Did Roe need to seem in danger before it disappeared? The seduction of normalcy is the fascism. Your brunch is their camouflage.
So stop asking “Are we there yet?” like this is a road trip to Auschwitz. You’re already in the vehicle. The question is: are you the driver, the passenger, or the one handing out snacks and saying “Let’s not get political”?
Blessed are the woke, for they saw the warning signs before the pamphlets got glossy.
—Virgin Monk Boy