81 online
 
Most Popular Choices
Share on Facebook 75 Printer Friendly Page More Sharing Summarizing
OpEdNews Op Eds    H3'ed 12/28/20

The Threat of Authoritarianism in the U.S. is Very Real, and Has Nothing To Do With Trump

By       (Page 1 of 2 pages)   24 comments

Glenn Greenwald
Message Glenn Greenwald
Become a Fan
  (149 fans)

From Substack


Facebook's Mark Zuckerberg, Amazon's Jeff Bezos, Sundar Pichai of Google and Tim Cook of Apple
(Image by YouTube, Channel: ABC7 News Bay Area)
  Details   DMCA

Asserting that Donald Trump is a fascist-like dictator threatening the previously sturdy foundations of U.S. democracy has been a virtual requirement over the last four years to obtain entrance to cable news Green Rooms, sinecures as mainstream newspaper columnists, and popularity in faculty lounges. Yet it has proven to be a preposterous farce.

In 2020 alone, Trump had two perfectly crafted opportunities to seize authoritarian power -- a global health pandemic and sprawling protests and sustained riots throughout American cities and yet did virtually nothing to exploit those opportunities. Actual would-be despots such as Hungary's Viktor Orba'n quickly seized on the virus to declare martial law, while even prior U.S. presidents, to say nothing of foreign tyrants, have used the pretext of much less civil unrest than what we saw this summer to deploy the military in the streets to pacify their own citizenry.

But early in the pandemic, Trump was criticized, especially by Democrats, for failing to assert the draconian powers he had, such as commandeering the means of industrial production under the Defense Production Act of 1950, invoked by Truman to force industry to produce materials needed for the Korean War. In March, The Washington Post reported that "Governors, Democrats in Congress and some Senate Republicans have been urging Trump for at least a week to invoke the act, and his potential 2020 opponent, Joe Biden, came out in favor of it, too," yet "Trump [gave] a variety of reasons for not doing so." Rejecting demands to exploit a public health pandemic to assert extraordinary powers is not exactly what one expects from a striving dictator.

A similar dynamic prevailed during the sustained protests and riots that erupted after the killing of George Floyd. While conservatives such as Sen. Tom Cotton (R-AK), in his controversial New York Times op-ed, urged the mass deployment of the military to quell the protesters, and while Trump threatened to deploy them if governors failed to pacify the riots, Trump failed to order anything more than a few isolated, symbolic gestures such as having troops use tear gas to clear out protesters from Lafayette Park for his now-notorious walk to a church, provoking harsh criticism from the right, including Fox News, for failing to use more aggressive force to restore order.

Click Here to Read Whole Article