By Steve Otto
As I watch the impeachment trial, over
former president Donald Trump’s spectacle in Congress, back on January 6, a few
things go through my mind. A lot of liberal Democrats are chomping at the bit
to find Trump guilty. It is easy to jump on the anti-Trump bandwagon. But the
problem is that I’m not really a liberal. I’m a democratic socialist and maybe
even closer to a Marxist.
I was a high school kid in the late 1960s and early 1970s. Those
were remarkable years. A cultural renaissance took place. Then there was a new
left Marxist movement rising from one campus to the next. There were peaceful
protests. There were also two Marxist leaning movements that took up guerrilla
war fare, the Weather
Underground and the Symbionese
Liberation Army. Between outright
insurrection and peaceful protests were those in the middle, such as the Yippies.
The Yippies and similar groups tried to cross both the hippy cultural movement
and the new left. In the long run, they were not treated much different from
the insurrectionists. There have been examples of the US government
trying to send a message to those who would use any kind of violence, even
vandalism, that such activity will be met with the most extreme punishment.
Rebellion from the left would NOT be tolerated AT ALL!
But now, in Congress, we are seeing our government dishing out the
same message to people on the right—some of them on the far-right, so the
rightwing insurrection will not be tolerated AT ALL. These rebellious factions
are on the right and far-right—so far to the right, we are just about dealing
with fascism that is not all that different from the movements we saw in Spain and Italy before World
War II. As with Europe, our US
fascists have a charismatic leader, Donald Trump.
So while it is tempting to jump on the
anti-Trump bandwagon, I can’t help fearing that doing so will some day come
back to haunt some of us who have not always followed the pro-government rules.
There were about 5 people killed. But considering the size of the insurrection,
with a few thousand Trump supporters, most of the damage was just petty
vandalism. They did hit some people and they broke some windows, but does the
government really need to arrest EVERYONE who went into the Congress that day? We need to really think about what we are doing when the calls come out to round up the small time people—especially the misguided.
Steve
Otto, War on Drugs/ War on People, (Ide House, Los Colinas,
1995), p. 105-109.
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