Old Canadian Joke:
Question: “What’s it like to live next door to America?”
Answer: “It’s like having a really nice apartment except that there’s a meth lab downstairs.” (source unknown)
I just returned from a twelve day vacation in New York and environs. Aside from the nightmare of getting there (with airline postponements and cancellations it took two days), I landed in a country in shock. And if that wasn’t bad enough, it became much, much worse as, in the succeeding days, a rogue Supreme Court rendered profoundly unpopular decisions on several issues affecting the most personal lives and safety of Americans, with signals it was just getting started.
Now, of course New York isn’t America writ whole and is in many respects the liberal antithesis of some of the more odious and retrograde impulses currently washing back and forth across America but, in its own unique way, is a good representative of the shock and dismay a majority of Americans feel about the direction of their country.
The fallout from the pandemic was evident everywhere with closed businesses and homeless people trying to camp in doorways or passed out on subway platforms. Like most other major western cities, New York has always had a homeless problem but this time there was a palpable fear of homeless people that I presume arises from the reports of random attacks by some of them on strangers, not unlike what is happening in Vancouver by the way. At one point a porter at my hotel grabbed my arm as I was about to step out onto the street and pulled me back into the entrance, saying “there’s a homeless person heading towards us” and, indeed there was, a black emaciated man wandering in a daze down the street, utterly lost in the richest city in the richest country in the world, forgotten, invisible except when he might pose a threat to the rest of us.
And although the pandemic isn’t over the signals are getting more and more confusing. Many people, although probably not a majority, still wearing masks with theatres and some commercial establishments requiring them and the subways, buses and taxi’s requesting them. Speaking of the subway, many long time New Yorkers are afraid to return to it because of a combination of fear of COVID and the violent crimes that have occurred recently on it. I rode it several times and felt as safe as I ever have on it but, then, that may just be my naivete at play.
And into this already stressed environment, the Supreme Court had just tossed a grenade, striking down New York’s 108 year old law that strictly limited a person’s right to carry concealed firearms in public. Another example of a conservative minority imposing its will on the citizens of a state that overwhelmingly supported the pre-existing limits. At about the same time Congress finally managed to pass some legislation that imposed minimal new restrictions on access to firearms and yet it was hailed as a major breakthrough after years of failing to adopt any new restrictions despite serial horrific mass shootings that continue apace to this day.
But the best was yet to come. On Friday, June 24th, the conservative majority on the Supreme Court struck down Roe vs. Wade that had, for nearly fifty years protected a woman’s right to have an abortion. The decision wasn’t a surprise, particularly in light of the leaked draft opinion earlier, but the shock was still profound and the shock waves continue to roil the country. Theoretically, the decision simply puts the issue back in the hands of state legislators but, effectively for much of the country, it leads very quickly to complete or almost complete bans on abortion, including in some states where the pregnancy is the result of rape or incest, or where the fetus is mentally or physically compromised. In one fell swoop, five conservative justices, three of whom were appointed under a cloud by Donald Trump, removed one of the core foundations that allowed women to participate in American society as full and equal partners. That women will certainly die because of this decision and that its impact will fall disproportionately on poor women and women of colour seems to have had no impact on the three avowedly Christian men and one woman (actually four men if you count Chief Justice Roberts who voted with the majority although dissented from the scope of the decision) in their decision.
And just in case people not directly affected by the decision felt it didn’t concern them, Justice Clarence Thomas helpfully wrote in his opinion the Court should now move to dismantle the rights to marriage equality, private sexual relations between consenting adults and womens’ access to contraceptives. Notably, he didn’t include the right to inter-racial marriage which was decided by an earlier court using similar reasoning as that applied in Roe vs. Wade and the decisions on private sexual relations and marriage equality. Perhaps the omission is because he, a black man, is married to a white woman who, by the way, was up to her elbows in the effort to overthrow the free and fair election of President Biden. But then after all, this is Clarence Thomas of Anita Hill fame. Americans were warned about him a long time ago and chose to ignore it.
And if heads weren’t already spinning, the committee inquiring into the January 6 insurrection began its public hearings and, bit by bit, painted a picture of political and legal malfeasance by the Trump administration that made Watergate look like a tea party (and, no that is not some oblique reference to the Boston tea party of two hundred plus years ago). What to say about these disclosures? Just when you felt nothing would shock, it does. The stain on Monica Lewinsky’s dress is now surpassed by ketchup sprayed across the wall of the private Presidential dining room in the White House as an enraged Donald Trump vented his infantile fury at being blocked from staging a coup by those from whom he expected complete obeisance. What an utterly appropriate epitaph (I hope) for this monstrous, egotistical, sociopath. And don’t even get me started on his attempt to seize control of the Presidential limousine and joining “his people” in their armed assault on the seat of democratic American government.
Those of you who read my blogs know that I have a great deal of affection for America and that I wish it well, if only because the well being of the democratic world depends upon it. And I’d like to be able to say I remain confident it will pull through this current litany of disasters but the truth is I’m not sure it will. The disconnect between the majority of its citizens and significant parts of its government, particularly the courts, is something that cannot continue indefinitely. Eventually, a majority will say “enough” and demand fundamental change. That’s the point at which the bonds that bind a nation will be tested as they have rarely been in the past. On the other hand, I do remember America has survived similarly challenging times previously and, with couragious and uplifting leaders, has met and overcome them. I profoundly hope it does again.
Oh, and my return trip to Vancouver was just fine.
Just sayin
G.
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