| Memorial to Robert Gould Shaw and the Massachusetts Fifty-Fourth Regiment, by Augustus Saint-Gaudens (National Gallery of Art) |
It isn't as if nobody saw it coming.
Just the opposite. You could see it a mile away. On Jan. 5, 2021, I jotted in my journal: "We're quite worried about tomorrow. Yes, Trump will probably fail. But there's always that chance. History has its thumb on the scale for tyrants."
Just the opposite. You could see it a mile away. On Jan. 5, 2021, I jotted in my journal: "We're quite worried about tomorrow. Yes, Trump will probably fail. But there's always that chance. History has its thumb on the scale for tyrants."
Does it ever.
The boys were home —schools closed for COVID — watching the Congressional hearings on television. I joined them. Mitch McConnell gave a laudable speech, backing the orderly transition of democracy. At first. Then he slid into the partisanship ditch, as if by force of habit. Ted Cruz stood up and tried to use the suspicion he sowed as a reason to delay the outcome.
Then the mob that Trump had egged on stormed the Capitol.
My column in that day's Sun-Times, Jan. 6, 2021, ran under the headline, "The South shall fall again. And again. And again." It groped back to the previous enormous division in our country, the Confederacy, and how it was doomed to lose. Why is the Civil War relevant now? Because...
Then the mob that Trump had egged on stormed the Capitol.
My column in that day's Sun-Times, Jan. 6, 2021, ran under the headline, "The South shall fall again. And again. And again." It groped back to the previous enormous division in our country, the Confederacy, and how it was doomed to lose. Why is the Civil War relevant now? Because...
"It’s still unfolding. The Confederacy lost the war, but never gave up the fight — its baked-in bigotry, the proud ignorance required to consider another human being your property, marches on, from then to now. Manifesting itself plainly in the Trump era, his entire political philosophy being the slaveholder mentality decked out in new clothes, trying to pass in the 21st century. They even wave the same rebel flag. Kind of a giveaway, really.
"The Lost Cause marches on, as we will see Wednesday, when Congress faces another ego-stoked rebellion: Donald Trump’s insistence that his clearly losing the 2020 presidential election in the chill world of fact can be set aside, since he won the race in the steamy delta swampland between his ears."
I had no idea just how big that rebellion would be. A shocking moment of chaos and violence and absent leadership. Trump watched the disaster unfold, and smiled.
Nor could I have imagined its eventual success. How 1,600 wrongdoers would be pardoned without repercussions of any kind. The event itself vanishing in a swirl of lies and forgetfulness. Historians will pick over until the end of time is how, caught in such obvious sedition, Donald Trump could possibly be re-elected. How Americans could care so little for their country, its institutions and traditions, that they would blindly follow a liar, bully, fraud and traitor.
Yet they did. He won the 2024 election, fair and square. That's why I can never hate him — he didn't put himself in office. Half the country did. Or as I sometimes explain it, "If we elected a dog as president, would you hate the dog?"
The structural damage done to our nation in Trump's second term will take years to grasp, never mind reverse. Harm to the rule of law. To the federal bureaucracy that millions of American depend upon. To our health care system. To our standing in the world. To the future of science.
The structural damage done to our nation in Trump's second term will take years to grasp, never mind reverse. Harm to the rule of law. To the federal bureaucracy that millions of American depend upon. To our health care system. To our standing in the world. To the future of science.
Not that it can be reversed. We can't go back to what we were before. Honestly, given where it took us, I don't think we'd want to. The question now is: what new thing are we going to end up? Something better? That seems a long shot, particularly now, as we daily decay into something worse. As awful as 2025 was, I'm certain of this: we have not had the bad part yet. That's coming.
In my Jan. 6, 2021 column I ended, as I often try to do, on an optimistic note:
"The fight continues. In the spring of 1861, the Tribune called the Southern secession 'the most senseless and causeless rebellion of all history.' Until now. We may have surpassed it with Trump’s frantic tearing at our democracy, supported by a cast of cowards and traitors, hailed by the eternally duped. And for what? Lower taxes? A wall? Their fetus friends? An embassy in Jerusalem? I will never understand it.
"No matter. They’re losers. They lost in 1865, lost in 2020. Evil always loses, eventually. Since they continue to fight, desperate to go back to the plantations of their dreams, they’ll continue to lose. Not every battle. But their war against the future is futile, doomed. Drowned out by the swelling ranks of diverse, accepting Americans, facing actual problems with courage and candor, dedicated to helping our nation become what she is destined to be."
Do I still believe that? Yes, I do. For one, as bad as our current situation is, it could be — and might yet be — far worse. Plus there is much to be positive about. Ordinary Americans stood up to the masked thugs of ICE. The courts beat back attempts to put the military in our streets as a dry run. Some of Trump's most devoted acolytes have bolted from him. It can be done.
The second Trump term is worse than the first, and we have not yet reached the bottom. But we will. We will hit bottom, eventually. And then bounce back up, rise again. Until then, the only option is to watch, speak out, resist, hope, and wait.
The second Trump term is worse than the first, and we have not yet reached the bottom. But we will. We will hit bottom, eventually. And then bounce back up, rise again. Until then, the only option is to watch, speak out, resist, hope, and wait.









