It’s been said before but it must be said again — that 2016 has been a horrible year. The war in Syria rages on. Haiti’s long state of misery and suffering from causes both natural and man-made continues. Brexit confirmed the power of a dangerous right-wing movement sweeping Europe and beyond.
Scientists have (again) sounded a cataclysmic warning about the dangers of global warming. We lost David Bowie, Prince, Muhammad Ali and Leonard Cohen. And 2016 gave us the election of Donald Trump to the presidency of the United States. Could it get any worse? I shudder at the thought.
In the United States, Thanksgiving is a national holiday where, between acts of unrestrained gluttony and football viewing, Americans are supposed to reflect on what they are thankful for in this life. Although this is merely a show for most people, it still has the potential to encourage some small acts of critical self-reflection. In that spirit, I will publicly share mine.
I am thankful for the love of my family and friends. I am thankful for my health. I am also very thankful for the many people whom I have been fortunate to speak with and learn from because of my writing and other work.
And yes, I am “thankful” for Donald Trump.
Let me explain.
I believe that the election of Donald Trump represents an existential threat to American democracy. By his actions, words and deeds Trump has shown that he is a racist, a bigot, a misogynist, a nativist and a fascist. His presidential administration will bring great harm to many millions of my fellow Americans — and likely many more millions of people around the world. In all, I find him to be contemptible and a national embarrassment. The voters who elected him share many of those traits.
But out of crisis there can be born opportunities.
Writing in Black Agenda Report, Glen Ford explains this moment of crisis and the potential that it could possess:
From Jimmy Carter to Barack Obama, the Democratic Party has failed to deliver even small net increments of social justice to its base constituencies, always giving away more than it gained, and at times taking the lead in savaging the people. There is no historical basis in the neoliberal era for the claim that the Democratic Party provides net incremental benefits to Black and working people, or that the party can be seized from its corporate masters and transformed into a machine that fights for the people. It fights for Capital — tooth and nail, as Bernie Sanders’ followers discovered.Hillary Clinton seized the opportunity presented by the Trump-generated split in the GOP to create a ruling class consensus and headquarters in her own campaign tent. It was the ultimate betrayal, the incubator of a thoroughly corporatized Democratic Party — an undertaker of social democracy. Instead, the White Deplorables derailed her, as they had earlier derailed the Republican corporate establishment.The Trump regime has no fix for the ills of late stage capitalism that have immiserated both the triumphant Deplorables and the darker folks they scapegoat, and whom they can be counted on to harass, repress and deport. Neither does the Democratic Party, whose next administration, had it not been still-born, would have served the interests of the One Percent even more dependably than did Obama.Leave Hillary’s nasty tent in the dirt, where it lies. The people need vibrant social movements that will produce new leadership in struggle and shape the parties of the future.
The prolific author and activist Ishmael Reed has also urged us to think past this moment of crisis and to realize how Trump’s victory — however counterintuitive it may seem right now — is proof that white nationalism is in its death throes. Those of us who have been targeted by Trump and his followers will survive and flourish:
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