I've led a fortunate life, much to be thankful for. I've been to 80 countries. Wherever I went I was thankful I lived in the U.S. where evils like autocracies & theocracies were impossible. Since 2017, we've discovered that's not so. Today's SCOTUS decision underscores that.
If there is anything to be thankful for in it, it is the hope it will serve as a wake-up call to those who do not realize the threats that lie ahead. Recent elections have reminded us how important it is to wrest democracy out of the hands of the donor class that's seized it.
Our recent experiences have also made it painfully clear that our system contains deep imperfections that assure that a minority will have disproportionate power in our Senate, our electoral college and, thanks to the Senate, our courts.
Either we, the majority that elected our next president, will continue our activism & engagement & work to fix what's broken in that system or we will drift further toward the kind of dysfunctionality that has led to so much suffering around the planet.
Our work, in short, has just begun. Removing Trump was an essential step toward preserving our democracy. But it was just one of several such steps. Winning back the Senate, rebalancing the courts, changing our campaign finance and election laws, are all essential.
Take a breather. Count your blessings. Be thankful Trump will soon be gone and be thankful for each and every American who voted to remove him. Eat up. But then begin again, recognize this is a marathon not a sprint. And remember the stakes.
The greatest danger we face from within our own ranks is complacency, celebrating victory and drifting to the deceptively comfortable middle ground of compromise. Compromise with extremists and those who would destroy our system only moves us closer to their goals.
No, let us hope that we can on future Thanksgivings be grateful for the resolute, clear-eyed US majority that would not give up on our aspirations for our country and our system and who would not give in to the lure of false pragmatism, the kind that invites long-term disaster.
And on that note...Happy Thanksgiving, everybody. It has been a tough year, but there are signs we are making progress...and gaining clarity about where we must go from here.

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More from @djrothkopf

25 Nov
I'm under no illusions. @JoeBiden and his team will make mistakes. But they will try to do right. And here's what they won't do:
--Betray the country to a sworn enemy
--Try to undermine the international system
--Put children in cages
--Promote white supremacists & racism
--Seek to undermine our democracy
--Work to undermine the rule of law
--Be corrupt
--Commit crimes
--Obstruct justice
--Destroy our environment
--Use force against peaceful protestors
--Embrace dictators and kleptocrats worldwide
--Promote misogyny (and commit rape and sexual abuse)
--Attack or seek to blackmail our allies
--Lie...and lie constantly...lie more than 20,000 times
Read 8 tweets
24 Nov
The secret to reimagining US foreign policy going forward is that we abandon the false and failed constructs of American exceptionalism or even being a superpower or the leader of the free of world.
Instead we must view ourselves as a leader among the world's leading nations, a member of the global community advocating for the values in the governance of that community that are in our common interest.
Naturally, advancing and protecting our national interests comes first. But we must start to better and more fully embrace the idea of the interdependence of nations and to find our role within that context.
Read 11 tweets
19 Nov
Some hard truths for everybody here:
--Joe Biden won the election
--He won by a substantial popular margin
--However his six million vote margin does not make it into the top 15 in US presidential elections
--His electoral margin was solid
--But the votes by which he won the electoral college were close in key states
--The more than 79 million who voted for Biden were the most ever for a presidential candidate
--The more than 73 million who voted for Trump were the second most ever for a presidential candidate
--The GOP did well in the Senate, in the House, and in state races
--We are a deeply divided country and those divisions show no sign of healing
--The GOP voters supported a corrupt, unfit president who repeatedly has betrayed the country
Read 9 tweets
17 Nov
Hope this is not true. Fear that it is. Biden said he would let his DoJ do its job. Sending a message that he is reluctant to investigate is not doing that. Further, not investigating and prosecuting where appropriate sends clear message: President and his men are above the law.
It sets as precedent...or rather continues the terrible precedents of letting Nixon, the Iran-Contra guys, and Bush era torturers off the hook. I want Biden to succeed, but if he is complicit in ensuring Trump's pattern of law breaking and obstruction worked...
...then he deserves to be actively opposed. He needs to understand that the Trump abuses were threats to our democracy, involved active betrayal of the country, undermined the rule of law, and that if there are no penalties for that behavior, it will return and soon.
Read 4 tweets
16 Nov
I have no special knowledge of where things are going, but some of the names I am hearing for the Biden cabinet & team (starting w/@RonaldKlain but including @micheleflournoy Janet Yellen, Bill Burns, @ABlinken, etc.)suggest a team of consummate professionals, the un-Trumpists.
Because of the massive damage Trump & Co. have done & are doing to each of the agencies of the USG, often destroying & demoralizing them from within, what is needed are experienced pros, people who know their "buildings," people who bring institutional knowledge to the game.
After four corrosive years, we need the A Team. So less emphasis on playing politics and more on hiring the best folks for the job is warranted. (That said, that approach will can and should produce a diverse group that can include proven next generation leaders.)
Read 4 tweets
15 Nov
Imagine if 250,000 people had died in a war over the past 7 months & there were predictions another 200,000 would die in the next four months. And the Commander-in-Chief had abandoned his post, just walked away. (After greatly contributing to the losses we'd already incurred.)
Hard to fathom, right? In part that's because we have never lost that many people in a war. (We've already lost more people than the 218K total combat deaths in the Civil War, we'll pass the 291K lost in four years of World War II in a month or two.)
In part, it's hard to fathom because we have never had a leader so craven, so incompetent, so uncaring about the America people, so irresponsible in his dereliction of duty, as Donald Trump.
Read 4 tweets

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