We all want America to be great – great again, continuing to
be great, or greater than ever. Of course we do. It’s a catchy slogan, but it’s
also a given.
And it's ironic. Everything great about America is
the antithesis of the man and his slogan. There is nothing great about Donald
Trump. Nothing. And if the man isn’t great, how would he know how to make
America great?
He doesn’t.
I’ve read news article after opinion piece after blog post
about Donald Trump. I’ve seen frightening clips of Donald Trump almost unintelligibly
shouting to frenzied crowds. I’ve read about supporters surrounding hecklers
while chanting “Trump, Trump, Trump,” until “security” arrives to remove the dissenters.
I’ve heard him call immigrants rapists
and murders. I’ve heard him talk about dipping bullets in pig blood to kill
Muslims. I have seen him mock a reporter with a disability. I have heard him
mock American prisoners of war. I have heard him unwilling to respond to an endorsement from a former KKK grand wizard.
And yet, the pundits believe a person like that is unstoppable, inevitable, and on
the fast track to the nomination. They look at the rest of the Republican field
and say no one can stop Donald Trump. Too little, too late. Not resonating with voters. Time to step aside.
I find that offensive. There is absolutely someone who can
stop Donald Trump. You.
Me. Us. We can stop Donald Trump. He is not inevitable. He
is not unstoppable. He is not what is great about America.
We are.
The voters are what’s great about America. We hold more
power than Donald Trump. A billion dollars cannot buy the presidency. But the
voters can.
The same pundits who say Trump is inevitable also postulate
theories and strategies about how he might be defeated. The other candidates
could start playing Trump’s game of insults and arrogance, and some have.
The other candidates could drop out and rally around one alternative. The other candidates could hang in there long enough to have a
brokered convention and then vote Paul Ryan to be the nominee.
But there is a way to stop Donald Trump dead in his tracks
pundits fail to mention: don’t vote for him. Vote for someone else.
Despite several years of declining civil dialogue, the
uselessness of Washington, strained race relations, and disgruntled Millennials,
there are still more good people in this country than there are bad. As
surprising as Trump’s rise in the presidential race has been – feeding on the
basest elements of the human psyche -- there are still more level heads that hot
heads in this country. There are still more people in this country who want the
dialogue to improve, who want Washington to work again, who want all races to
rise together rather than tear each other down, who want Millennials (and beyond) to feel
hope for their future. There are more people in this country who abhor the
mocking of the disabled, who are horrified by mobs surrounding dissenters, who
are stunned at the descriptions of Mexican immigrants and killing Muslims. Donald
Trump, despite his success so far, does not represent the hearts
and minds of the majority of Americans. He did not even represent the majority of Americans in the states he has already won. Consider that.
There are more people in this country who understand that collective greatness is achieved through working together with common hope rather than collective bullying. There are more of us who understand you attract more flies with honey than vinegar, that the only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing, that we must be the change we wish to see in the world.
There are more people in this country who understand that collective greatness is achieved through working together with common hope rather than collective bullying. There are more of us who understand you attract more flies with honey than vinegar, that the only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing, that we must be the change we wish to see in the world.
Pick your cliché.
The premise is the same. We, the people,
are still good at our cores, and we, the people, still have the power to stop a
man who tweets Mussolini quotes, whose rallies evoke The Lord of the Flies,
and who needs to research the KKK. We, the people, can still vote. And we, the people, must vote.
Don't let the pundits, the media, or Donald Trump decide this election is over. Do not give them that power. We still hold the power. We can still cast our vote.
Don't let the pundits, the media, or Donald Trump decide this election is over. Do not give them that power. We still hold the power. We can still cast our vote.
America is great, can be great, will always be great as long
as it clings to its fundamental, deeply rooted values. There are values,
principles, precepts – call them what you will – at the core, center, heart of
our nation. These are not Republican or Democrat or Tea Party or Progressive
values. These are human values. These are values that no matter who you are, no
matter what your personal political affiliation, no matter what your personal
vision is for our country, are fundamental to our way of life in America. These values are what make America great.
We have our problems, our very serious problems, as a
nation. We have much to figure out, to improve, to change. And yes, we have
desperately sharp disagreements about how to figure them out, how to improve them,
and how to change them.
But it shouldn’t be hard to figure out that those problems are
not solved by Donald Trump. Voting from a place of anger, hatred, and
retribution is dangerous indeed.
So I beg my fellow voters to use the power that only you have: your power to vote. Please vote. You must vote. But please do not vote for Donald Trump.
I understand the theories and the mathematics of the split
vote with the rest of the Republican field. I understand the concerns that as
long as there are four other people to vote for, Trump still wins as votes are
split between four alternatives. I get that.
But I also get something else: if you vote for someone else,
that is one less vote for Trump. The more people who vote for someone else,
anyone else, the fewer people who vote for Trump. That’s also mathematical.
There are options. There is a black kid from the ghetto who
grew up to be a pediatric neurosurgeon. There is the son of Cuban immigrants
whose parents believed that America is the greatest nation on earth. There is a
career-long public servant who, as boring as it sounds, actually balanced the
national budget – a feat for the history books. And there is a senator who has
put his career on the line to fight for what he believes.
We do have choices. Is vulgarity, rudeness, racism,
arrogance, and bullying the inevitable choice? Is that the way to make America
great again? Oh my goodness no.
The most important choice Americans have – a choice no one
can take from us – is the choice to vote. Show the pundits, the
media, the Twitter and Facebook feeds of every American, and especially Donald
Trump that the power still rests with us, and we vote not to have Donald Trump as the Republican nominee or as our president.
Please use your
power to make America great again – by voting for anyone other than Donald
Trump. He has not yet won the Republican nomination. And he won't if we don't vote for him. But we have to vote for someone.
So there is someone who can stop Donald Trump. You can. Please vote.