I am a semi-retired optimist.
I used to believe that things would always be okay: that no matter how bad circumstances seemed in the world, I trusted that people would eventually do the right thing, that goodness would prevail, that the rational center would hold.
I used to believe that our system of checks and balances would protect us from overreaching parties and mentally unstable presidents and political leaders lacking a working moral compass and complete perversions of our systems of justice.
I used to believe that most people were basically decent, and that this decency would win the day because our shared humanity was something we were all equally interested in protecting.
I no longer fully believe those things.
I no longer believe that our leaders will choose country over party, because over and over, I've watched them pollute the system and disregard the rules in order to hold power, steal elections, and gain Federal judges.
I no longer believe that the truth matters to everyone, because I've witnessed too many powerful people ransom it off to the highest bidder—and too many people I know and love grow violently allergic to facts.
I no longer believe that the American Church is a source or moral leadership, because I've witnessed the Franklin Grahams and Jerry Falwells of the Evangelical Right, sink deeper and deeper into the putrid moral cesspool of their political bed-making.
And I have zero confidence in those presently leading us to do anything to defend the common good:
They are not going to protect the air we breathe or the waterways that sustain us or the diverse ecosystems that hold life together, when there's so much money to be made off them.
They are not interested in stopping gun violence or mass shootings, because they profit from both the guns that create the carnage—and the fear it generates among their voting base.
They have no intention of protecting marginalized and vulnerable communities from discrimination, when they can use those very communities as props to terrify the privileged into bans and walls and wars and rally cries of "send them back" and "America first.”
They have no interest in stewarding the full diversity of America, only leveraging and weaponizing some fairy tale nationalistic nostalgia to keep uneducated white people more focused on anthems and flags, than on the disparate humanity they're supposed to be providing refuge for.
And I know that because there is no integrity or nobility left in the people currently leading us, that things are not going to be okay as long as good people are bullied into silence and numbed into inaction and content to merely feel bad and do nothing else.
No, the only way things are going to be okay is if good people make them okay:
If Christians and Atheists and Muslims and Jews and Sikhs and Agnostics and Hindus and Buddhists and Humanists who are all committed to the common good—realize that their strength is in their combined power and their unified voice.
If political progressives, moderates, and reasonable Conservatives realize that hashtag campaigns and one day marches aren't substitutes for sustained engagement in the collective process and showing up en masse and in unison.
If moderate people of faith stop ceding the conversation about religion to the bigots, grow louder about their religious convictions, and push back hard against the supremacy and misogyny and nationalism of the Evangelical Right.
If straight, white people decide that the rights of migrant families and gay teenagers and Muslim communities are worth them pissing off their friends and neighbors and pastors and families, to defend.
These are unprecedented days in our nation and in the world.
Simply believing that our leaders will do what is right is irresponsible now.
Trusting that everything will work out simply because it always tended work out in the past, is a fool's delusion.
Having faith in the system when the system is so badly broken is willfully consenting to our demise.
No, positivity alone is not enough anymore, only positivity and moving are.
I want to come out of retirement and be fully optimistic again, but it will be a whole lot easier if a whole lot more people stop merely trusting that the arc of the moral universe will simply bend toward justice—and decide to be arc benders.
I hope the people of faith and morality and conscience all decide that they won't leave the future to chance.
No America, things will not be okay, unless we wake up and work and vote and fight—and make them okay.
I’m afraid I’m a fully-retired optimist. With 47% of the people still supporting him, it would take an economic collapse for them to maybe turn on him. And even then they’d still go for another Trump to turn things around, it would just be a Trump without tariffs. They would probably blame marginalized people and government spending even more.
Sorry to be such a downer but it’s a rainy Monday after a weekend when the administration laughed at a court order and very few seem to care.
It's going to take more than just voting.
When those in power, and who are abusing that power, see that the rest of us are REALLY pissed off AND WE'RE DOING SOMETHING ABOUT IT, in very tangible ways (like massive demonstrations of hundreds of thousands of people, as occurred in Belgrade, Serbia last week) -- those people in power may hunker down, but just like Nicolae Ceaușescu and Marshal Tito, they will eventually be overthrown.
The lessons of the 1989-1991 revolution where Eastern European dictatorships were overthrown apply to us, too.