Missing Africa, and pulling for the protesters in Portland
by Rob Tiller
We’d planned to be on safari in Tanzania this week, but with the pandemic, obviously that didn’t work out. So I spent some time looking at pictures, including ones I took when we visited Kruger National Park in South Africa in 2015. I just loved those animals and Africa! We’re hoping we can get to Tanzania in 2021.
But I’m less confident than usual that I’ll still be here in three weeks. Although I seem healthy enough, the pandemic and other risks have affected my outlook. Things seem much more unstable and prone to failure. At the same time, it seems like a historic moment, with things about to change dramatically, for better or worse.
The situation in Portland has gotten dramatic. Trump has decided that the Black Lives Matter protests need to be put down, and has sent in federal storm troopers to do so. The protests have been mostly peaceful, though as in every crowd there are some idiots, like the ones who broke windows, set off recreational fireworks, and marked walls with graffiti.
Contrary to the President’s rhetoric, the protesters are not violent thugs bent on destroying the city. This lie disguises what for him is the real problem: the protesters’ messages. Their central message is that police violence and racial discrimination need to stop. For Trump and his supporters, this threat to the status quo is intolerable.
Part of the political dynamic is Trump’s declining popularity. In response, he’s rebranded his usual fear mongering as “law and order,” which seems to resonate with the Fox News demographic. The right wing media continues to play along, presenting the federal storm troopers in Portland as defenders of our traditional values.
I have to admit, for all Trump’s incompetence and stupidity, he’s got a kind of genius for pressing people’s emotional buttons so they can’t think straight. A lot of white Americans are fearful of black people, and suppressing them has been one of our traditions. Video showing storm troopers attacking protesters with tear gas and rubber bullets can be made to look like forces of order defending civilization against anarchy.
It may be that Portland is a test run for federal attacks in other cities, as Trump suggested this week. This raises the possibility of escalating storm trooper violence, new and more vicious attacks on the free press, expansion of mass incarceration for dissidents, and the suspension of free elections. The President has claimed to have unlimited powers, and it now seems possible that he’ll put that to the test.
I hope I’m wrong on all that, but seriously, I’m worried. The outcome in Portland may have far reaching consequences. So far the Portland protesters have stood firm, and their numbers are growing. It may be that they’ll succeed in shining light on the lawlessness and lies behind Trump’s storm trooper attacks, and save our democracy.
I’m hopeful that most people will see through Trump’s fraudulent “law and order” ploy, but I’m not certain. With clouds of tear gas obscuring the view, people can get confused.
Trump’s interview with Chris Wallace last week provided a rare bit of comedy in these difficult times. Wallace was surprisingly direct in calling out some of Trump’s recent shocking lies regarding the pandemic, and Trump was visibly sweating. When Trump bragged that he aced a mental competence test, Wallace noted dryly that the test was not that difficult.
When Wallace noted that the test required counting backward from 100 by 7s, I realized, it’s quite unlikely that Trump actually aced the test. In any case, his claim that the test showed his intelligence is an especially entertaining type of Trump lie: a self-refuting one. Thinking that a mental competence test is the same as an intelligence test demonstrates a clear mental deficit.
In the interview, Trump foolishly challenged Biden to a test competition, which I thought would be an excellent way to resolve our political crisis. We wouldn’t need anything as challenging as the SAT, or even a high school equivalency test. Any questioning at the fifth grade level would suffice.
It would save us a lot of money and anxiety, and provide some laughs, to have these two as single combat warriors on Are You Smarter than a Fifth Grader. The winner would be declared our new president. I would bet the house that Trump would fail hilariously.