The fast pace of devastation continues. In the past forty-eight hours King Chaos and his cabinet courtiers have dealt mortal blows to the American health system and the American economy. These in particular are the equivalent of clear-cutting forests in this fatal way: it doesn't take long to cut it down, but it takes a whole lot longer to grow it back, and in many cases that becomes virtually impossible.
But you don't need me to tell you what the Chaotic tariffs are likely to do to inflation, recession/depression worldwide, and almost immediately, to your lives. Lots of others are describing it in detail.
And you don't need me to tell you what the latest barely announced but huge number of firings and funding cuts in federal health infrastructure will mean in the long run, as well as in the next health crisis, which might be one of those ongoing problems like measles and bird flu, whose leading experts and researchers were among those fired. Listen to Dr. David Kessler on Rachel Maddow on Wednesday.
Kessler (a usually quiet but determined former chair of FDA who I met once and found very impressive) lays it out: among those fired yesterday were the two medical doctors and officials who essentially saved the country from an even worse COVID pandemic, and the very doctor who authorized the treatment that saved the life of a very sick COVID patient who I used to call Homegrown Hitler. And it's much bigger than that. Kessler says we have maybe a week to save the health infrastructure it took nearly a century to build, and will take nearly a century to rebuild.
All I can really add to the conversation attempting to grapple with the ongoing reign of Chaos is a perspective, maybe even an occasional insight, that results from my own long life and my own modest experiences.
Explosions are happening so fast in so many places that the ones set off the day before yesterday are already forgotten. But I will for a moment return to one that in itself is an historic retrenchment, throwing this country back into the darkness that has always been its fatal flaw. For now as the first quarter of the 21st century ends, the American constitutional government is openly and officially racist, and is leading the rest of sheepish society in that same direction.
For all of this began with the attack on something called Diversity, Inclusion and Equity, which have been the moral as well as quite practical arc of history of the past 75 years or so, with roots in the Civil War, bringing American practice in line with American ideals. But dismantling and essentially demonizing DEI programs in a McCarthyism/Blacklist campaign was not enough. King Chaos has gone after non-white races as a whole, from top military officials to historic figures, and anybody of any non-white race who might be foreign-born.
How underreported was this? That nearly every top military leader who was black or female was fired and replaced by a white man? The Secretary of Defense, a drunken abuser of limited intelligence and no experience, is also a practicing racist. In advance of his visit to the US Naval Academy in Annapolis, a place I revered as a boy and still respect, he demanded that its library be stripped of DEI books, which is apparently code for anything to do with nonwhite people (some white people also may not make the cut if they are disabled or not hetero and of course, not men.) One of the books being considered for the book-burning pile was said to be a biography of Jackie Robinson.
I thought immediately of the biography of Jackie Robinson I took out of the Greensburg Public Library when I was 12. It's probably not the same one because I got that one from the children's room, where most of the sports books were kept--like the John R. Tunis and Joe Archibald novels. (As well as, in fact, the Robb White books on Midshipman Lee of the Naval Academy.)
Very early in that book was a scene I haven't forgotten: frustrated with racial barriers like those that kept superior black players out of the major league system for more than 60 years, young Jackie Robinson physically clawing at his arm, trying to tear off his black skin.
But eventually a one man DEI affirmative action program came along named Branch Rickey, general manager of the Brooklyn Dodgers. He selected Robinson from the Negro League not only for his excellence as a player but for the strength of his character, because together they were going to break the color line in Major League baseball, and a lot of people weren't going to like it.
Given the chance, Jackie Robinson played one year in Minor League baseball, breaking the color line there over substantial opposition including on the field. Nevertheless he was named the league's Most Valuable Player. He was called up to become the first black player in the Major Leagues in April 1947, with the same difficulties. At the end of the season he was named Rookie of the Year.
He was named the National League Most Valuable Player in 1949. He was an All-Star for six straight seasons. He played in six World Series and helped the Dodgers win it in 1955. He had a long career and remains one of the most beloved baseball stars of all time. Because someone saw that a little DEI was good for the game and good for America, as well as good for Jackie Robinson and all the black players who followed him.
That may not mean much to King Chaos, whose father was a Ku Klux Klansman. Or to His Lord High Executioner Musk, whose father supported apartheid in South Africa. And just to emphasize the reversal of history, the King's pick as American Ambassador to South Africa, no doubt approved by if not named by Musk, actively opposed the ending of apartheid there.
The other side of this exercise in Hitlerian racism is to reveal how ingrained the fruits of diversity have become in American society, and how much a source of common pride they are. But how deeply ingrained is another question, still to be answered.