1/ Reconciliation and a just lasting peace, whether between nations or a divided country, requires both grace and toughness. Perhaps no leader understood this better than Abraham Lincoln. In 1865, Lincoln ended his 2nd inaugural with famous words (Cont) #ResistanceRoots #ONEV1
2/ words:
that included, "With malice towards none; with charity for all; with firmness in the right, as God gives us to see the right, let us strive on to finish the work we are in; to bind up all the nation's wounds ..."
Lincoln was also tough and ready to hold traitors (Cont)
3/ accountable. But he also knew that unless our wounds were bound, both black and white would be worse off. Blacks, of course, would be victims of white supremacist violence and institutional racism. And many whites would suffer as the wealthy exploited racism as a means (Cont)
4/ of waging class warfare against them. Alas Lincoln was assassinated, and his vision of Reconstruction was screwed up by his awful successor, Andrew Johnson. An inspiring example of grace and toughness is, of course, South Africa's Nelson Mandela, who made peace with his (Cont)
5/ jailers to secure majority black rule. Today, Joe Biden is valiantly working to thread the needle between grace and toughness to heal and save America. It's a thankless job much of the time. Millions of MAGA cultists are beyond redemption, and many like me are often too (Cont)
6/ angry or afraid to make any effort at identifying and engaging those who might be persuadable. Hence, we often lose patience with Biden when he tries to find common ground. But he's right to try. That does NOT mean he should EVER consider pardoning Trump and his (Cont)
7/ minions. To do so would not be grace. It would be weakness. We, however, should understand that this can't all be on Biden's shoulders. Each of us has a role to play in healing and saving our country. That means engaging and persuading family, friends, and (Cont)
8/ neighbors that have gone to the dark side. It's a tall order, I know. It requires courage, grace, and toughness. It's risky. And these efforts will often fail. But many can also succeed. It's the patriotic thing to do. And it's the only way our divided house can endure (Cont)
8/ and continue on its journey to becoming a more perfect union.
• • •
Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to
force a refresh
1/4🧵The Trump family's linkage w/an Iranian Revolutionary Guard via an oligarch is old news. I was employed with a corp due diligence firm in NYC at the time and a case we were working overlapped with Trump's scheme.
#ResistanceUnited
#ONEV1
#VetsResist motherjones.com/politics/2022/…
2/4 Bottom line is Trump has financial entanglements with despotic regimes in Russia and Iran. Iran has provided Russia with military parts and logistical support against Ukraine.
3/4 Russia passed on the intel to Iran and they shared it with their Hamas and Hezbollah proxies. Meanwhile, Netanyahu was paying money to Hamas to avoid a two state solution with the Palestinians.
Yes, folks all countries and societies absolutely have "enemies within."
🧵Content below is my opinion and is my last essay thread before 11/5 as I am strategically prioritizing real activism.
1/ I plea with my fellow citizens to not let their kids become like Germany's "Silent Generation."
#ProudBlueEditorials
#ResistanceRoots
#ONEV1
#VetsResist
2/ Silent Generation was born between 1928-1945.
In America, for many GenXers like me, these were our parents who were young children during the Great Depression and WWII. They were too young to be the "Greatest Generation" nor were they the attention seeking Baby Boomers.
3/ Silent Generation Americans fought in Korea. They didn't return home to parades like the Greatest Generation WWII vets nor was there rampant social strife as occurred with Boomers during Vietnam.
In Germany, Silent Generation counterparts had a very different experience.
2/ Truth is I needed a spiritual break from politics. I hadn't attended synagogue in weeks. My Financial Crimes Compliance job has been intense and I've prioritized activism over Shabbat.
But even activists with Vulcan avatars posting on toxic social media platforms are human.
3/ The one year anniversary of 10/7 is coming. It's also the season of Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur.
It is a season of both aspirational renewal as we celebrate a new year as well as self-reflection and atonement about how to become a better person.
1/ We now live in a world in which our mobile communication devices can be instruments of assassination. Meanwhile, SCOTUS ruled presidents have criminal immunity.
1/ United States of America collectively is suffering from generations of PTSD. As a nation we are simultaneously the cause as well as victims of self-inflicted terror.
2/ Within individuals, PTSD may stem from a continuing family history of alcoholism or spousal/parental/child abuse over generations.
If not family related, other causes such as sex predators, horrorific experiences from military combat or surviving a random catastrophic event.
3/ Those with PTSD are often not aware how it impacts their lives, social interactions or choices they make. Victims may be regulated by constant fear or violently triggered from sights, sounds, odors or even sitting in a dentist chair.
1/ I was 13 when I became an activist in the early 1980s. Sadly, as a kid, I quickly learned to fear houses hanging American flags.
Invariably, they were hostile to any issue I cared about.
#ProudBlueEditorials
#ResistanceRoots
#ONEV1
#VetsResist
2/ This confused me as it was Democrat and liberal, John F. Kennedy that challenged us to, "Ask not what your country can do for you. Ask what you can do for your country."
What's forgotten about that iconic line is how JFK linked patriotism to freedom.
3/ Twenty years prior to JFK's inaugural, Democrat and liberal, Franklin Roosevelt defined his vision of American patriotic values in his "Four Freedoms" speech (see below).
He delivered that speech eleven months prior to Japan's attack on Pearl Harbor.