Donald Trump was president for 1,460 days.
If asked by someone in the future to summarize in a small space, the depth and breadth of the collective injury we've sustained as a people and a nation, the
word I keep coming back to is waste.
Those 1,460 days were simply a terrible, unforgivable, unthinkable waste.
A waste of time: the countless hours so many people from every walk of life had
to spend trying to care for people and rebuild their communities and save lives
and champion justice and do good work—all while facing their own president as
a daily, formidable adversary.
A waste of financial resources: adding 8 trillion dollars to our national debt, stratospheric corporate bailouts, a widening in the gap between survival and opulence—a brazen predatory financial assault on the poor and the sick.
A waste of natural resources: a steady stream of environmental protection
rollbacks, wanton disregard for nature and planet and science, and an open contempt for the delicate web of all living things.
A waste of energy: the emotional, physical, and mental drain on so many decent people who've spent their waking days and sleepless nights trying to reckon with
a steadfast malevolence that simply defies reason and escapes comprehension.
A waste of ideas: a systematic shutting down of diverse and qualified people: doctors, economists, educators, scientists, creators, and public servants, whose qualified presence served as a threat to the eggshell ego and twitchy ignorance
of a historically insecure man-child.
A waste of relationships: the violently uncivil wars waged by people for whom
this single person has become the hill they're ready to let their closest intimacies
die on; the all-or-nothing tribalism he traffics in, the fractures in families and friendships and neighborhoods, the cost of which is incalculable.
A waste of human life: hundreds of thousands needlessly perishing in a
mismanaged pandemic, children pulled from their parents at the border, refugees stranded at airports, transgender teenagers bullied to self-harm, victims of gun violence left without protection, people without healthcare overcome by financial
and physical threat, already vulnerable communities subjected to further violence.
I try to imagine all we could have accomplished in those 1,460 days as a nation if
so many talented, compassionate, gifted, intelligent people hadn't had to spend
so much time trying to protect themselves from their own government:
the art that could have been created,
the medical advances that could have been made,
the humanitarian work that could have been done,
the habitats we could have protected,
the species that could have been saved,
the equity that might have been achieved—
and that unfathomable loss grieves me.
I try to imagine how different this place would have been if our leadership during those years had celebrated diverse humanity instead of assailing it, if they'd
have generated compassion and not had contempt for it;
if they'd have wanted
more people to be seen, not less;
if they'd have desired collaboration and not confrontation;
if they'd have trafficked in hope and not in fear;
if they'd have wanted to make America defined by goodness and not "greatness."
But since we have hopelessly squandered that season of our story with this catastrophic error in judgment, the only way to rectify it is not to repeat it in November. It would be unconscionable to make such a grievous mistake for a
second time, a doubling-down on ignorance.
The moment before us transcends politics.
It is so much more than an election, it is an invitation to unequivocally declare what our morality demands and what it will not tolerate; the kind of human beings we are at our core, the nation we aspire to build. It is a precise space and time to embody whatever it is we give a damn about.
We spent 1,460 days of 328 million people's collective lives with this cruelty and ignorance and vitriol representing and defining us: with the severed ties and fractured families and polluted water and poisoned courts and perverted religion and elevated racism it has yielded.
Those days irreparably damaged us in ways we cannot quantify.
That is a tragedy that we will never truly recover from.
The only greater shared transgression, the only more horrible sin, would be if we decided to waste a single day more.
1,460 days. That's all?! It seemed like so much longer. Maybe because I've been counting since the day he walked down that escalator. Actually we have been dealing with TFG for a total of 9 years. No wonder we are so stressed out and anxious.
But you're right John. He and the actions of his supporters have done incalculable damage to the very fabric of our society and its institutions that may take generations to repair, if ever. My own family has been torn apart as well.
All of this is why we MUST fight like hell and win in November. The thought of losing is unfathomable. Thanks, John, for reminding us again of what's at stake. #VoteBlue ❤️🇺🇸💙
This post was difficult to read. The truth is hard swallow - a reminder of 1460 and possibly more days of cruelty and pain. The man-child is still spreading his waste over all forms of the media. This is indeed nauseating. This is indeed the time to change his diaper - and send him to his room FOREVER and throw away the key. Yes Lisa and everyone who is sick and tired of the man- child and his playmates #VoteBlue in November 2024.