By Joe Moresky
While it may not seem like it at times, Americans tend to share some base level of understanding in how life in our nation should be experienced. We believe in the hopeful promise of the future, an intimate respect for our home communities and the opportunity to flourish as human beings. We feel that those most in need ought to be helped, and we hold the conviction that everyone should have a chance to earn their own version of the elusive American Dream.
However, those ideals seem as if they are fading from the popular conscience amid historic degrees of political polarization, as well as a largely asymmetric economic recovery following the financial crises of 2008.
Average Americans feel dissected, disillusioned, frustrated and forgotten. Moreover, popular faith in the ability to create a better life has fallen and a general feeling of pessimism seems to be the tone of the day. Confidence in our national institutions has all but collapsed, which isn’t surprising when we can still look around at good people striving in honest work and struggling to get ahead.
This election has undoubtedly been one of the most atrocious displays of “public decorum” in modern political history, with rampant personal attacks and new rhetorical lows encountered almost daily. But perhaps the most heinous of these affronts has been the exploitation of American disillusionment for personal political gain by Donald Trump. In recent weeks, the Republican nominee, confronted with flailing national poll numbers after the revelation of a 2005 tape in which he bragged about his ability to sexually assault women with impunity, has taken to questioning the legitimacy of the American electoral system.
Instead of addressing the lack of institutional confidence experienced by so many in our nation and fighting to restore this confidence, Mr. Trump has attempted to bring American democracy itself into question. Tweets and speeches routinely feature claims that the election is “rigged.” From unfounded accusations of conspiracy between his opponent and national media outlets, to calling on his supporters to monitor polling stations, the boiling rhetoric of a nefariously pre-determined election is as dangerously corrosive as it is unprecedented.
Irresponsibly creating doubt about the fairness of a presidential election in order to excuse self-inflicted campaign failures is a disservice to the American people, one that encourages a warped understanding of political reality. It is the ultimate transgression from a campaign that has spectacularly failed to meet the demands of a beleaguered and deserving public.
And that is tragic.
It is tragic because the backward slide towards attacking electoral legitimacy, while demonizing one’s opponent creeps dangerously close to mob-rule mentality. It is tragic because the problems facing average people are not being met with serious solutions. It is tragic because when the American people cried out for a restoration of hope, they did not get it.
Instead they got Donald J. Trump.
Ben Arisen (@BrightLeaf88) • Oct 20, 2016 at 3:13 am
“…unfounded accusations of conspiracy between his opponent and national media outlets…”
So, leaked emails detailing clandestine meetings between Clinton, her top staffers and heads of major media outlets does not constitute a basis for these accusations? Over 40 reporters dined at top Clinton staffers’ homes days before Hillary’s campaign launch. https://www.wikileaks.org/podesta-emails/emailid/5953 I suggest people read this. What about the many emails in which the Clinton campaign and the DNC correspond with reporters to discuss which news stories are acceptable to play? Here’s just one of many examples, in which a senior Politico reporter was caught offering the Clinton camp a chance to edit a story before it was run: http://www.lifezette.com/polizette/wikileaks-politico-reporter-asked-podesta-edit-story/
“…calling on his supporters to monitor polling stations…”
Yes, this is certainly uncalled-for. It’s not like the Democratic election commissioner of New York was caught on camera talking about how they bus people from polling place to polling place to vote multiple times. Or that Clinton staffers and advisors were caught discussing strategies to institute a large-scale project to transport voters from one state to another to vote illegally, with an admission that they had done it “for fifty years.” Additionally there are millions of illegal voters registered, from undocumented immigrants to dead people. And even if everything went smoothly on election day it still would not be completely unfair to call the election “rigged” when the Clinton campaign has, for example, paid people to start violence at Trump rallies so they could blame it on his supporters. It has been exposed that the Chicago riots that happened earlier this year were literally engineered by the Clinton campaign.
And you, Fordham Ram, are part of the problem. You release dozens of articles bashing Trump and Trump supporters and none that question Hillary. Everything is biased. I know college students don’t like to lend Trump much public support but is it too much to ask for even some devil’s advocate? There are plenty of us out here and we’re tired of all of it. When you finally get around to officially endorsing Hillary I will be disappointed, but not surprised.