By Scott Ritter
February 11, 2021 "Information
Clearing House" -
The
fact of the matter is that politics—at least how it
is practiced in the United States—is more about
perception than reality. The nuance associated with
lawmaking, the arcane art of manufacturing the rules
and regulations that hold society together, are
hidden and therefore unknown to the vast majority of
those who participate in the electoral processes
that are the hallmark of American democracy.
Most Americans have not
taken the time to follow a bill as it makes it way
through the legislative process. Instead, they may
hear about it at its inception, and then, if the
bill is adopted, watch as the Executive signs it
into law. They get the headline version—what the
brokers of “truth” in the media opt to say about the
legislation, and not what it really represents: an
amalgam of special interest money sprinkled with a
modicum of societal need, want or desire.
Americans get their
news like a baby bird gets its meal—waiting for a
“mother” figure to digest it and then regurgitate it
down their collective throats. They are not informed
so much as shaped, the byproduct of a system that is
built on manufactured consent derived from
half-truths, myths and outright lies.
For politics to work in
a nation as large and complex as the United States,
there must be a rock-solid foundation upon which
everyone operates. This role is served by the
Constitution, the document which provides
foundational principles that guide everything that
follows. Adherence to the Constitution is mandatory
if everything else that follows is to have a chance
at success.
But even here, the
perception of law-and-order masks a grim reality
that the rules collectively embraced as
“constitutional” are every bit as partisan as the
politics Americans pretend are removed from their
system of “blind” justice. For a rule to have
meaning, it must be widely embraced as viable and
fair.
In a system where the
final arbiter of the rules is a panel of nine
justices whose selection is predicated on the whims
of a partisan political elite, the result of many of
the most controversial decisions about the very
rules that govern society come down to a narrow 5-4
vote, which means that while five justices believe
that something is “constitutional”, there are four
who do not. If that which divides the two sides is
merely an interpretation of legal nuance, then this
disparity is irrelevant—the underlying legal
principle holds.
But when the deviation
is significant, to the point that the difference
represents a fundamental disagreement, then the law
it portends to uphold itself becomes divisive. When
something as supposedly as black and white as
constitutional law comes down to a single vote by a
highly politicized body, the reality is that the
foundation it underpins is far more fragile than
anyone realizes.
On top of this shaky
foundation of politicized principle Americans have
constructed an edifice of governance which is not
nearly as solid as they would like to believe. The
joists and beams that hold American democracy
together are not as flexible as they appear. Like
the Supreme Court, they are the byproduct of a
bi-polar reality of societal passion contained in
the vehicle of two political parties—Republican and
Democrat—which must work in harmony if the building
is to withstand the storms that periodically sweep
across the landscape.
A Unifying
Concept
America was born from a
revolution which manifested itself from the failure
of the British system of colonialism, and further
shaped by a Civil War where a divided nation had to
be reformed into a union not through an expression
of democratic will, but rather prodded along by the
tip of a bayonet. In both Revolution and Civil War,
it was the perception that the system of governance
had failed the people, rather than the reality, that
inflamed the masses.
The Pennsylvania farmer
who marched to Boston in 1775, like the Pennsylvania
farmer who marched on Richmond in 1865, was not
versed in the political complexities that defined
the side he was fighting for. These men fought for a
unifying concept, a belief constructed more from
passion than fact. For this concept to succeed,
there needed to be a fundamental core of agreement,
with the space between the differences that
naturally arise when dealing with independently
thinking humans kept as small as possible.
It is this space that
is the key to the success, and ultimately survival,
of the great American experiment in democracy. Here,
Newton’s Third Law of Physics applies in full
force—for every action, there is an equal and
opposite reaction. American democracy is not a
singular entity operating on its own, but rather
formed from millions of threads of beliefs and
passions that have come together in harmony.
These threads work if
they operate on the same—or similar—wavelength,
bending this way and that in relative unison. There
can be pushing and shoving, but the harmonic holds
so long as the resistance is minimal.
Broken Harmony
This notion fails,
however, when the threads start to collide
significantly—a strong push gets an equally strong
pushback. The harmony is broken, and the weave of
the threads unravels. So long as the American
political parties served as a buffer to the passions
and beliefs of their constituent threads, harmony
could be sustained. To do this, the parties need to
operate from the same sheet of music, directed by
the same conductor.
A unifying narrative
must be maintained to shape the perception of the
people. When competing narratives exist, they must
adhere to a similar core concept, or else risk being
torn apart by the destructive echo produced by the
space between.
The concept of a
“stolen election” is the antithesis of the model of
a free and fair election that underpins American
democracy. For the supporters of Donald Trump, the
events of Jan. 6 did not occur in a vacuum but were
rather the culmination of what they believed to be a
four-year campaign to undermine the legitimacy of
the president they voted for and, by doing so,
disenfranchising not only their vote, but by
extension their role as citizens.
The collapse of the
Russian collusion allegations is, today, historic
fact. The
recent declassification
of additional documents related to the FBI’s
counterintelligence investigation targeting the
Trump campaign only reinforce what most Trump
supporters had come to firmly believe—that the FBI,
working in concert with the Obama administration and
sympathetic Democrats and anti-Trump Republicans (John
McCain comes to mind),
sought to manufacture a narrative that could sustain
the perception of Trump-Russian collusion in an
effort to prevent Trump from prevailing in November
2016 or, failing that, serve as the basis of
undermining his presidency going forward.
The
persecution of Carter Paige,
the
politicization of the Steele Dossier,
and
the failure of the Mueller investigation
have all been well documented, while the issue of
legal culpability regarding the various
Constitutional abuses associated with these, and
other, activities may never be finalized.
In the end, the lack of
legal finality misses the point. In the minds of
Trump’s many supporters, there was clear and
incontrovertible proof that the establishment was
conspiring to suborn the victory they had achieved
at the polls. The drawn out political drama that was
the Democrats’ first effort to remove Trump from
office through the vehicle of impeachment only
reinforced this conclusion.
Justice or
Revenge?
The events of Jan. 6
represent the culminating moment where the
disharmony of American politics brought on by the
unbridgeable gap between those citizens whom Trump
said he had empowered as the guardians of American
democracy in his January 2017 inaugural address, and
those citizens who had, since 2017, been struggling
to undermine Trump, created a harmonic whose echo
tore down the edifice of American democracy.
As fervently as the
Democrats and their “never Trump” allies in the
Republican Party believe that Trump and his
supporters represent a clear and present danger to
American democracy, so, too, do the supporters of
Trump view those who conspired to undo the will of
the people as expressed in a free and fair election
as enemies of the state.
These perceptions
remain valid in the minds of tens of millions of
Americans as they watch the second impeachment trial
of Trump get underway. Some view the proceedings as
necessary justice; others as an act of political
revenge. There is no common ground, and no
outcome—either conviction or acquittal—will change
that.
Joe Biden supporters
will have four years to try and repair the
institution of American democracy, but for all the
rhetoric of unity, the impending second impeachment
trial of Trump provides living proof that there
remains a deep and dark divide between those who
support the 46th president, and those who
continue to support his predecessor—and never the
two shall meet.
Scott Ritter is a former Marine Corps intelligence
officer who served in the former Soviet Union
implementing arms control treaties, in the Persian
Gulf during Operation Desert Storm, and in Iraq
overseeing the disarmament of WMD.
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