JAMES E. GARCIA

Opinion: Has Trumpism mortally wounded our democracy?

Feb 8, 2020, 4:35 AM | Updated: 9:24 pm

(AP Photo/Gerry Broome)...

(AP Photo/Gerry Broome)

(AP Photo/Gerry Broome)

Our democracy is a fragile thing.

If we’re not careful, it might just break.

Listening to President Donald Trump’s defenders in the U.S. Senate on Wednesday, the last day of his historic impeachment trial, I couldn’t help but wonder how much longer our country will survive.

You don’t have to be a historian to know that, time and again, our nation has found itself on the brink of falling apart.

The Civil War nearly destroyed us. Pearl Harbor. Nazism. Communism. The Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. All posed potentially mortal threats to our way of life, but American democracy, fortunately, is also resilient.

Still, let’s not delude ourselves. Defending our democracy, flaws and all, takes a clear understanding that the U.S. is based on an idea, spelled out by our founders in the Constitution.

But ideas fade, and, like the people who create them, all empires die.

Someday, our country will go the way of Athens, Rome, the Mayan civilization and all the rest. That’s not meant to be cynical. It’s a plain reading of history.

I don’t believe we’re done yet, but I worry that, unless we turn this thing around soon, we could quickly reach the point of no return.

I’ve always believed in the strength and virtue of our system of checks and balances. It’s a concept I likely bought into long before I could explain it or the proposition that Americans deserve “justice for all.”

The system is not always just, but that doesn’t nullify the belief that freedom and justice are worth achieving, defending, even dying for.

It’s because we know what justice looks like that we recognize injustice in our daily lives and our country’s story.

In the wake of Trump’s acquittal by the U.S. Senate, I believe those who defended the president’s blatantly illegal and unpatriotic behavior, even as they couldn’t bring themselves to defend his character, will live the rest of their days with a lie in their heart.

To Trump’s apologists in the Senate: The American people know that you know better. No one gets to a position like yours without having experienced injustice. You’ve either been subjected to it, witnessed it or doled it out yourself.

This week, Trump’s abettors in the Senate stared at the face of injustice and flinched. Worse yet, they set aside their better judgement and averted their gaze in the name of salvaging the coveted trappings of membership in what some have called the “world’s greatest deliberative body.”

For now, at least, that moniker no longer applies.

Has Trumpism mortally wounded our democracy? I hope not.

Our system has lasted 240 years, and I’d like to think we have a few more good centuries in us.

It’s my hope and belief that the November election will give rise to an unprecedented expression of the people’s will to protect our democracy and reject Trump’s repressive agenda. We’ve proven before that our democracy is resilient.

But I’m also deeply worried, because I know that democracy is a fragile thing and, like the people who create them, all empires die.

Editor’s note: This column was originally published on azmirror.com.

Array

James E. Garcia

(AP Photo/Gerry Broome)...

James E. Garcia

Opinion: Has Trumpism mortally wounded our democracy?

Has Trumpism mortally wounded our democracy? I hope not. Our system has lasted 240 years, and I’d like to think we have a few more good centuries in us.

5 years ago

James E. Garcia

Opinion: After Soleimani, who can’t President Trump kill?

The debate over whether Donald Trump was justified in killing Iranian Major General Qasem Soleimani has James Garcia wondering: Is there anyone the president can’t kill with impunity?

5 years ago

(AP Photo/ Evan Vucci)...

James E. Garcia

Opinion: Making propaganda great again

The truth is Americans have always had to navigate, or swallow, a certain measure of government propaganda. Growing up, I thought we were better than that. Turns out sometimes we’re not.

5 years ago

(AP Photo/ Evan Vucci)...

James E. Garcia

Opinion: The weight of history — and Congress — will judge Trump harshly

Trump deserves to be impeached by the House, convicted and expelled from office by the Senate and judged harshly by the weight of history.

5 years ago

(AP Photo/Patrick Semansky)...

JAMES E. GARCIA

Opinion: The latest Democratic debate clarified why Trump will lose

The election of any of the Democrats who participated in last week's debate would go a long way to restoring the Office of the President, James Garcia says.

5 years ago

President Donald Trump speaks to the media as he visits the El Paso Regional Communications Center ...

James E. Garcia

Opinion: ‘Tell him not to come here’

Veronica Escobar said someone wounded in El Paso took her by the arm during a hospital visit and said, referring to Donald Trump, “Tell him not to come here.”

5 years ago

Sponsored Articles

...

Collins Comfort Masters

Collins Comfort Masters: Leading the Way in HVAC and Plumbing Services in Arizona

Tempe, AZ – Since its inception in 1985, Collins Comfort Masters has been a cornerstone in the HVAC and plumbing industry in Phoenix and the surrounding Valley.

...

Sanderson Ford

3 storylines to get you revved up for the 2024 Arizona Cardinals

Arizona Cardinals training camp is just a couple weeks away starting on July 25, and Sanderson Ford is revved up and ready to go.

...

Midwestern University

Midwestern University Clinic visits boost student training & community health

Going to a Midwestern University Clinic can help make you feel good in more ways than one.

Opinion: Has Trumpism mortally wounded our democracy?