The dangers of another Trump term: If you don’t believe me, believe Bernie!

A campaign solicitation email from Bernie Sanders is too important not to share

Several of my recent posts concluded with my thoughts about the dangers of another Trump presidency. I did my best to warn readers, hoping those who agree with me will at the very least, vote, and perhaps even engage in conversations with their Trump-supporting friends and neighbors in a frank and conflict-free dialogue about those dangers.

Despite my best efforts, my resources are limited; I have no staff to research each and every reason not to vote for Trump. But Bernie Sanders not only has the resources and the staff to compile a complete list, he’s sent that list out.

To be completely transparent, I don’t always agree with Bernie and some of his more extreme progressive positions. And I’m not in the habit of forwarding the dozens (hundreds?) of campaign donation solicitations I receive daily. But I do agree with his reasons to stop Trump, so much so that I felt it was too important not to share.

Theodore

If you believe in democracy, if you believe in science, if you believe in justice and workers’ rights, let me be very clear: The next several months will be the most important in modern American history.

Yes, Donald Trump is a racist, a sexist, a xenophobe, a homophobe, and a religious bigot.

Yes, Donald Trump denied his election defeat, peddled conspiracy theories, and converted the Republican Party into a cult of the individual.

Yes, Donald Trump has contempt for a free media and criticism. He has encouraged violence and the never-before-seen use of the military and federal agents against U.S. citizens.

But if you believe Donald Trump’s first term was dangerous, I want you to think for a moment about what a second term would look like in terms of policy if a majority of Americans vote to support him and give him a mandate for another four years in the White House.

If Donald Trump is elected this November, the fight against climate change is over. Period. Not only does Trump believe climate change is a “hoax,” but he has and will once again appoint agency leaders and judges who undermine our ability to move toward sustainable energy and protect the environment. If the U.S. retreats from the fight against climate change, countries like China, India, and the rest of the world will follow. That would have irreversible implications for the future habitability of our planet for future generations.

If Donald Trump is elected in November, the already obscene levels of income and wealth inequality in this country will only get worse. In his first administration, Trump signed tax cuts into law where 83 percent of the benefits went to the top 1 percent while raising taxes for middle class families. The cuts added almost $2 trillion to the deficit, yet Republicans wasted no time finding religion on the issue of the debt when it came to paid family leave, universal pre-K, expanded home care, and more. During this current campaign, Trump has promised to extend those tax cuts for the rich and lower the corporate tax rate even further. We should believe him.

If Donald Trump is elected again in November, we can expect him and the Republican Party to escalate the attacks on women’s reproductive health in this country. No, it was not enough for the Trump to brag about appointing justices who overturned Roe v. Wade in this country, he and other Republicans have backed a federal abortion ban if he is elected for another term. 

If Donald Trump is elected again, I happen to believe that the almost 250-year experiment of American democracy is all but over. It goes without saying that Trump tried to overturn the results of the last presidential election, but his attack on democracy goes far deeper than the violence of January 6, 2021. If Trump wins, you can expect more extreme gerrymandering, more election workers being harassed and threatened, and as a result of his policies and lies, more and more people increasingly believing democracy itself, and our government, does not work for them.

It does not end there.

If Donald Trump is elected, he will once again attempt to overturn the Affordable Care Act and throw millions of people off of their health care.

If Trump is elected, we will take gigantic leaps backward on issues of education, gun control, criminal justice reform, and immigration.

And if Donald Trump is elected again, it would strengthen the hand of authoritarian leaders he openly respects and admires around the world like Orban in Hungary, Putin in Russia, Xi in China, and many other countries like Saudi Arabia, the Philippines, and elsewhere.

So those are the stakes. Now what do we do about it?

Of course, it goes without saying that we must do everything we can to defeat Donald Trump and elect Joe Biden. No excuses!

But let me also add that while President Biden and those of us who have worked with him have every right to be proud of what we have accomplished – especially given the fact that the work was done in a very divided and contentious Congress – I personally agree there are a number of areas where the administration’s response to issues has been inadequate or dead wrong. 

So while it is critically important we do everything we can to defeat Donald Trump, it is just as important we work to elect progressives this November and push President Biden to enact a progressive agenda in his second term. 

That is going to be a major focus for me throughout the rest of this year, and I can use your help in getting it done.

Published by Ted Block

Ted Block is a veteran “Mad Man,” having spent 45+ years in the advertising industry. During his career, he was media director of several advertising agencies, including Benton & Bowles in New York and Foote, Cone and Belding in San Francisco; account management director on clients as varied as Clorox, Levi’s and the California Raisin Advisory Board (yes, Ted was responsible for the California Dancing Raisins campaign); and regional director for Asia based in Tokyo for Foote, Cone where he was also the founding president of FCB’s Japanese operations. Ted holds a Bachelor’s degree in communications from Queens College and, before starting in advertising, served on active duty as an officer on USS McCloy (DE-1038) in the U.S. Navy. Besides writing Around the Block, Ted is also a guest columnist for the Palm Beach Post.

6 thoughts on “The dangers of another Trump term: If you don’t believe me, believe Bernie!

  1. Hope we can still have our democracy 

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    1. Susan (above) wrote: “Hope we can still have our democracy.”

      This is where the rubber hits the road. Democracy is messy. It requires people (particularly governing people) to compromise, to come to agreement, not on what they believe, rather on how to effectively govern a country of 350M people … people, BTW, of all colors, nationalities and stripes. We’re the only large (democratic) country / political entity in history, with a multi-cultural, multi-racial population (we marginalized the original Americans years ago). It’s who we are! … and that will not change … it’ll only get more diverse.

      I recall an old Tom Friedman column, when Obama was running for President (’08). He was in China meeting with some important people. One, as I recall a female journalist, asked him about Obama, a black man, running for President.

      Tom said that “he could easily win the election.”

      “Really?” she responded. “What a remarkable country.”

      WTF has happened to us? … or is it just MLK’s ‘arc of history’, bending downward, at least for the moment. And it wouldn’t be the first time that some significant society / nation has failed. When evaluating The USofA in an historical perspective, I often think about Rome, the greatest society the world had ever known (hey, they separated the dirty water from the clean … reduced illness by more than half [or something significant like that]), among many other great things.

      For an excellent perspective on what went right … and wrong, have a look at ‘The Dream of Rome’, by Boris Johnson (yes, that BoJo … remember he was quite a good journalist before his stint as a Mayor, MP and PM). I originally read that book on the beach on Isola d’Elba in 2007. During the 2016 Presidential campaign, many of the things I heard / read about and from trump, prompted me to pick it up again. Many of the words, ideas, concepts relative to the fall of Rome, were being said and written by the trump campaign, pretty much verbatim. Simplistically, the Senators decided that they were doing much of the work, so they should get the preponderance of the spoils.

      Sounds familiar.

      Vote … and talk! Our freedom and democratic way of life is in jeopardy … uh, but of course, I’m in Sicilia, and can ignore all that if I choose to do so. But hey, I grew up in NYC, reading The Times and The Post (at the time a liberal rag, with a great sports section). Keeping up is in my DNA.

      Keep on keepin’ on Teddy …

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      1. … “Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it”

        Santayana was right … and as Somerset Maugham wrote, “The great truths are too important to be new.”

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