Saturday, December 15, 2018
Eight + Eight States
We live in a nation where all
treaties and presidential appointments subject to Congressional confirmation
are handled by one house of Congress, the Senate. Our form of representational
democracies is based on the “New Jersey Compromise,” whereby our Forefathers
relegated the House of Representatives, where all appropriations bills must
originate, as the population-based federal legislative body, and the Senate as
the land-based legislative body (two Senators per state regardless of size).
Our forefathers were mostly farmers and very suspicious of city folk. Slaves
were not citizens, and virtually 100% of our citizens were white.
Today, 85% of our population is
urban. By 2040, based on some pretty simple projections, the majority of our
population will be non-white and most of the United States population will be
in 16 states. By 2040, 34 states – with about 40% of the population – will
control 68 seats in the Senate, and 60% of the United States will control 32
Senate seats. Think about it. Most of all that red above is wide open space
with sparse populations!
“The Weldon Cooper Center for Public
Service of the University of Virginia analyzed Census Bureau population projections to estimate
each state’s likely population in 2040, including the expected breakdown of the
population by age and gender. Although that data was released in 2016, before
the bureau revised its estimates for the coming decades, we see
that, in fact, the population will be heavily centered in a few states.
“Eight states will have just under
half of the total population of the country, 49.5 percent, according to the
Weldon Cooper Center’s estimate. The next eight most populous states will
account for an additional fifth of the population, up to 69.2 percent — meaning
that the 16 most populous states will be home to about 70 percent of Americans.”
Washington Post, July 12th.
The Big Eight: California, Texas,
Florida, New York, Illinois, Pennsylvania, North Carolina and Georgia. The Next
Eight: Ohio, New Jersey, Michigan, Arizona, Virginia, Washington, Massachusetts
and Colorado.
It is pretty clear, without much in
the way of deep diving into the facts, that the United States is rapidly
becoming a nation where a white minority, through the most basic governmental
structures built into our legal system, will dominate a much, much larger non-white
majority… unless something big happens in the next few years. And we all know
that when a government is so completely unrepresentative, history has
repeatedly illustrated how such political systems collapse. We also know that American
political incumbents have become the masters of marginalizing voters who
disagree with them.
Voter ID laws are back as
the 2013 Supreme Court (Shelby County vs
Holder) released states with voting discriminatory practices from federal
supervision. Voting rights for minorities can be complicated by moving polling
stations, purging them from voter rolls for technical violations or just plain
stopping them from voting at all. Rich people and organizations can push
political agendas with well-funded and uncapped political campaigns (per the
2010 Supreme Court ruling in Citizens
United vs. F.E.C.). Gerrymandering has never been so pervasive, openly
flaunted as the right of the incumbent political victors, and slip-sliding
through the courts with no clear end in sight. North Carolina is reeling from
seemingly massive election fraud in two neighboring counties. The lame duck GOP
governors in two GOP-legislatively-dominated states, North Carolina and
Wisconsin, signed into law statutes to disempower the incoming newly-elected
Democrat governors. Michigan about to follow-suit! In 2016, a president was
once against been elected against an opposing candidate who generated a larger
popular vote. The minority party, in terms of members, controls the majority of
state legislatures, governorships, the presidency and until this past election,
both houses of Congress. Sounds really bad when you say it all at once. But it
is bad!
Former FBI Director and Trump-foe, James Comey
may not like the President, he may believe that Trump should never get a second
term, but: “‘I hope that Donald
Trump is not removed from office by impeachment because it would let the
country off the hook, Comey told MSNBC's Nicolle Wallace, who was moderating
the event. ‘And it would drive into the fabric of our nation a third of the
people believing there was a coup. And we need a moment of inflection, where we
all get off the couch and say, 'That is not who we are,' and in a landslide rid
ourselves of this attack on our values.’ The former FBI director suggested that
impeachment might ‘short-circuit’ the political process, and ‘we wouldn't have
the moment of clarity we need in this country.’" CBSNews.com,
December 10th.
The NRA tells
us that there are over 15 million AR-15 semi-automatic assault rifles out there
and well over 300 million guns… and I suspect we can guess who owns most of
those. If Trump were impeached, exactly what could happen from a reaction from
his very-well armed “base”?
Never shy about
dismissing millions of voters by unprovable claims of “voter fraud,” Donald
Trump seems capable of twisting laws meant to protect our democracy into
empowerment for his own autocratic ambitions. Every wonder about what would
happen if Donald Trump felt sufficiently threatened to declare a national
emergency? Huh? He can, you know… almost at the drop of a hat.
Writing for the
January/February 2019 edition of The
Atlantic, Elizabeth Giotein, co-director of the Brennan Center for Justice (at the New York
University School of Law) explains: “The premise underlying
[the President’s] emergency powers is simple: The government’s ordinary powers
might be insufficient in a crisis, and amending the law to provide greater ones
might be too slow and cumbersome. Emergency powers are meant to give the
government a temporary boost until the emergency passes or there is time to
change the law through normal legislative processes… Unlike
the modern constitutions of many other countries, which specify when and how a
state of emergency may be declared and which rights may be suspended, the U.S.
Constitution itself includes no comprehensive separate regime for emergencies…
“The Supreme
Court has often upheld such actions or found ways to avoid reviewing them, at
least while the crisis was in progress. Rulings such as Youngstown
Sheet & Tube Company v. Sawyer, in which the Court invalidated
President Harry Truman’s bid to take over steel mills during the Korean War,
have been the exception. And while those exceptions have outlined important
limiting principles, the outer boundary of the president’s constitutional
authority during emergencies remains poorly defined…
“Unknown to most Americans, a
parallel legal regime allows the president to sidestep many of the constraints
that normally apply. The moment the president declares a ‘national emergency’—a
decision that is entirely within his discretion—more than 100 special
provisions become available to him. While many of these tee up reasonable
responses to genuine emergencies, some appear dangerously suited to a leader
bent on amassing or retaining power. For instance, the president can, with the
flick of his pen, activate laws allowing him to shut down many kinds of
electronic communications inside the United States or freeze Americans’ bank
accounts. Other powers are available even without a declaration of emergency,
including laws that allow the president to deploy troops inside the country to
subdue domestic unrest.
“This edifice of extraordinary
powers has historically rested on the assumption that the president will act in
the country’s best interest when using them. With a handful of noteworthy
exceptions, this assumption has held up. But what if a president, backed into a
corner and facing electoral defeat or impeachment, were to declare an emergency
for the sake of holding on to power? In that scenario, our laws and
institutions might not save us from a presidential power grab. They might be
what takes us down.” In other words, ever wonder what an autocratic president might
do who does not believe he does not have universal support from the people with
a right-wing, well-armed radical base behind him if he wanted to avoid an
election or simply wished to invalidate one if he loses? And exactly what would
this could become?
I’m Peter Dekom, and I suspect most of us
just don’t take our fears out far enough to contemplate “what’s the worst that
can happen?”… kind of like Americans just before the Civil War, huh?
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