sholio: sun on winter trees (Default)
Sholio ([personal profile] sholio) wrote2017-01-28 11:35 pm

Welcome to America 2017

Well, today sure has been a day that happened.

Politics talk under the cut - long.

There has been a whole stream of stupid, ill-advised, and worrisome things the government's done in the last week, but the refugee/immigration ban is ... it's been a long time since a single government act made me this white-hot furious. It's the sheer petty cruelty of it, the stupidity, the fact that thousands and thousands of people's lives are going to be brutally disrupted, are already being brutally disrupted (legal green-card-holding residents with U.S. families and jobs detained or stranded in foreign countries; people who have lost everything they ever had, lived in danger of their lives, and have worked for years to get into the U.S. being turned around to go back to countries where they have no future; thousands upon thousands of law-abiding legal immigrants with green cards who are now unable to travel for work, unable to visit their ailing parents, unable to carry on their lives) -- and all for NOTHING, for literally nothing, nothing more than political pandering to bigots.

The fact that it was literally signed on Holocaust Remembrance Day is the keystone on this tilting ziggurat of petty cruelties. If I wrote a villain doing something like this, it'd be too OTT to believe.

Everyone affected by this ban are either refugees who have already been through a draconian years-long vetting process that has a proven track record of eliminating nearly all applicants with terrorist ties or sympathies (not to mention suffering through absolute hell prior to that; people don't become refugees for fun), or green-card-holding residents who have jobs, homes, and families here, who pay taxes, who are effectively citizens in all but name.

It breaks my heart and it makes me so very angry. It would make me furious even if it hadn't been implemented in the stupidest and most ruinous way possible, but NO, it was rammed through without the consultation or approval of the state dept. and immigration, and therefore it instantly became a clusterfuck in which no one in authority knew what they were supposed to be doing and blindsided travelers had no opportunity to make alternate plans. (I mean, imagine flying out of the country to visit your parents and coming back a week later with no clue nothing's wrong until you aren't allowed on the plane, and are told you may be allowed back to your home, job, friends and family in 90 days or possibly never. That's LITERALLY AND ACTUALLY what is happening to people RIGHT NOW.)

Aside from having been smacked in the face with just exactly how heartless and ruthless the people currently commanding the top seats in the government hierarchy are, I think the thing that makes me the most terrified about all of this is that no one, all up and down the official chain of command, ever said "Hey wait, this is stupid, this is wrong, we need to stop." I am heartened and thrilled that thousands of people turned out spontaneously to protest. That's utterly wonderful and I'm so glad. But I haven't heard a single story of an airport security person refusing to execute their orders, even when their orders changed literally overnight, made no goddamn sense, and meant pulling families and old people out of line and shoving them into rooms to wait -- wait for WHAT, even most TSA/immigration people couldn't have known, since their orders were so contradictory and unclear. Here is a twitter thread that talks about what that experience is like, from the point of view of a white American guy who got singled out awhile back due to a passport mixup. It was scary and miserable even for him -- now imagine going through that as a non-citizen, especially if you don't speak the language well, especially if you originally come from a country where governments detain and disappear citizens all the time. WHAT THE FUCKING FUCK, AMERICA.

So the fact that no one seems to have said "no" when brand new, contradictory, possibly illegal orders came down scares the absolute shit out of me. The fact that Congress has now had a full day to respond and is doing nothing at all scares the shit out of me too.

If this was a test run for what we'd actually do if the government said "Line those people up against the wall and shoot them," you know what? We, as a nation, failed. SOME of us passed with flying colors -- the thousands of protesters who showed up at airports, the legal teams who donated time and expertise to advocate for people, the ACLU and judges who are taking the first steps toward blocking it.

But the people who really had the power to act to change it at its source (the people tasked with implementing it, and the people in charge of the branch of the government that theoretically makes the laws -- even the Vice-President, who may be a first-order asshole with theocratic tendencies but at least isn't one of the POTUS's hand-picked bunch of yes-men) did absolutely nothing. Sat by and watched it happen, or were actively complicit in it.

And you know what? If our country is currently (and I believe it is) in the hands of a power-mad kleptocrat who is filling up his cabinet and closest cadre of advisors with wealthy cronies and actual Neo-Nazis, then the fact that the people who could have stopped this are doing nothing is a warning sign so potent that it leaves me breathless.

Watching the protests lifted my heart because so many people are willing to speak out against this, but it was also a kick in the gut because literally the only thing a protest does, the only power it has, is to make the people in power listen. And if they still won't listen, you are powerless. Thousands of people are a mere raindrop compared to 318 million. Millions turned out for the women's march and it's STILL just a raindrop compared to the whole. Even the courts have only as much power as the government and its official apparatus are willing to give them. Americans like to remind ourselves that hey, we've always got armed revolution! ... but if you get to that point, your country is in total failure mode and you are probably going to die. And since most people don't want to die and have a vested psychological and practical interest in hanging onto the shredded vestiges of their country as long as there is still something recognizable of what it used to be, you probably won't ever get to that point.

So basically, that we turned up by the thousands in mere hours to protest the detention and targeting of people who, for the most part, are not in the demographic of the protesters gives me hope. (As per my favorite sign from the protests: First they came for the Muslims and we said not today, motherfucker!) But the fact that none of the people who were actually given enough power to stop this, from the majority leader of Congress to the most lowly TSA agent, did anything except go along with it leaves me so scared and disheartened I could cry.
xparrot: Chopper reading (Default)

[personal profile] xparrot 2017-01-29 09:50 am (UTC)(link)
Well, as far as I understand it, the airport security people weren't really doing anything that they don't do every day anyway, pulling out people and denying them entrance...I'm not saying don't blame them, it's more, the orders for those employees didn't change. The reasons for the names being on the list changed, but the actual lists are nothing new. So it's not quite the same as a spontaneous firing squad. Not that it's not scary as fuck.

The assholes up the foodchain who should know better, who let this go unchallenged -- Paul Ryan giving tacit support, what the fuck -- that's truly frightening, and we have to face the fact that the Republicans have no line, or at least that their line is set so far across the edge of decency that by the time it gets crossed it's probably too late to hit the brakes.

But people are standing up. It was encouraging to see the crowds at SeaTac tonight (we were only in the protests for an hour or so, as we heard about them late and left when we were warned that arrests had started and there could be violence. I was surprised by how organized it was for a spontaneous event, there were lawyers and people from the ACLU and NAACP coordinating and others, giving advice and explaining what was going on. The attempt was to shut down the airport, which I'm not sure about as a tactic; the eternal debate between getting attention and pissing people off so much they turn on your cause. But a lot of the people at the airport who weren't in the protest crowds were still cheering us on, which was heartening to see.)

And the courts are in our favor for now. And a lot of the media is on our side. And...we'll see where this goes, I guess.

(There's a part of me that's...it goes too far to say this is what we needed, no one needed this. But Trump is such a dumb fucker he's doing this all openly, aggressively, obviously, and we're pushing back. While as there has been so much stuff like this that has happened before without this kind of push-back, because it was smaller scale, because it went through the proper channels, more disguised as normal politics. The registration apparatus that Obama closed shortly before leaving office, I hadn't even heard of that before. So there's a part of me hoping that if we can get through this...and I hope 'this' is less than two years, that he's impeached before the next Congressional election cycle...we might come out with a more primed, energized, aware Left than we've had before...)

(err, please excuse the possibly unwarranted hope, and also the expletives...it's late and it's been a long day.)
Edited (I forgot a closed parantheses, and to adjust wording.) 2017-01-29 09:52 (UTC)
ratcreature: hiding under my blanket (hiding under my blanket)

[personal profile] ratcreature 2017-01-29 10:25 am (UTC)(link)
Yeah. I find it really scary that the Trump government apparently didn't even think through its own orders in favor of making a it 1:1 copy of their bigoted campaign slogan and fast. Who does that with a terrifying and complex machinery like the US executive?

They aren't just indifferent to morals but also to cold-hearted interests in their politics. I mean, nobody in their right mind would think it in the US best interest to not let a Harvard heart disease researcher who was set to arrive in, or like, I've read an interview with a member of the German national parliament who is on some parliamentary subgroup for cooperation with the US, and there all the time on delegations, only now he can't visit anymore because he is Iranian-German and of course Iran doesn't let people out of their citizenship. I've read officials from UK and Canada, and I imagine many others, have the same problem. So this blanket ban is not just offending and harassing those countries, whom maybe Trump thinks aren't important. (Unlike Saudi-Arabia and Pakistan and such, but I guess he has hotels there or something.)

I'm not surprised though that the parts of the aparatus from low to high won't do anything to oppose horrible orders. They never do, actually it is worse in that they will probably try to anticipate what is meant by the chaotic directions, and interpret them in the worst way rather than looking for loopholes to exploit for good. The few exceptions to that rule will be the rare people, like that Japanese diplomat in Lithuania who wrote thousands of visas for jews to save them and such.
kore: (Default)

[personal profile] kore 2017-01-29 08:25 pm (UTC)(link)
Thi is so well put, yeah. All of this.
arianna: (Default)

[personal profile] arianna 2017-01-30 12:28 am (UTC)(link)
It is frightening and horrifying, especially as the Republican Congress is standing by mute. And now he's removing the General representing the Joint Chief of Staff from his Security Council, in favour of appointing Steve Bannon, the guy writing all these draconian presidential orders that, apparently, your president isn't even reading before he signs. Also, a whole bunch of senior public servants in the State Dept resigned en masse rather than work for this regime, so now there are no Ambassadors in the field and pretty much nobody who knows how to support the staff who are there. Next step? Probably closing them except in Russia. China is saying they can actually envision going to war with the US, something that hadn't even occurred to them before now. It's up to the Republicans to pressure their reps and senators to stand up, speak out, refuse to comply and impeach = alas, these are the characters who liked the idea of a wall and a ban on immigrants and ... all the rest of this horror story. I'm Canadian, sitting far too close for comfort and unable to do anything but watch, inform, encourage and be glad our PM is standing for diversity. Alas, we're small population and wealth-wise, and we have a lot of oil and a third of the world's fresh water, so some of us are worrying if Russia and the US administration plan to divide our wealth between them.
Edited 2017-01-30 00:29 (UTC)
yalumesse: (critics)

[personal profile] yalumesse 2017-01-30 05:34 am (UTC)(link)
Fury doesn't begin to cover it. I'm scared for you, and for my half of the world, and the most useful thing I can do right now is *hug*