Alongside the wars against
the coronavirus and the Trump virus in 2020, another war has been raging in American
political culture: accountability vs. impunity. It is too early to declare a
victor, but accountability has made some progress this past year.
There is nothing new about
the effort to hold people accountable for crimes against others, nor about the
impunity that some criminals have felt to commit their crimes over and over.
The lives of Harvey Weinstein and Bill Cosby were defined by their feelings of
impunity as they made assaults against women into a lifestyle. Like countless
other men who have been exposed over the past few years as sexual criminals,
their celebrity and power made holding them accountable nearly impossible.
Crucial to their sense of impunity was the acquiescence of others, mostly also
powerful men, to their crimes, maintaining silence, buying silence, enforcing
silence. Since the MeToo movement broke that silence, accountability began to
replace impunity for them. But those cases reveal also the limits of
accountability: those countless co-conspirators who surrounded them with silence
have escaped any consequences, preserving their impunity to protect themselves
and others.
That pattern fits the mostly
failed effort to hold the biggest criminal accountable, the impeachment of
President Trump. His whole life defines impunity, from illegally avoiding the
Vietnam War draft and getting someone smart to take his SAT’s in his youth, to
a career founded on fraud and cheating stretching over decades. The Mueller
report and the impeachment trial in Congress displayed to the world the treasonous
purpose of Trump’s “perfect call”. But he survived because of the continuing
impunity of those powerful men in Congress who supported him by denying facts,
by attacking those who told the truth, and by putting partisanship over duty.
Men like Rep. Jim Jordan and
Sen. Lindsey Graham believed they could say the most outrageous things in front
of the whole nation and not suffer any consequences. They were both reelected
in November, so it appears they were correct. While defenders of rape are few,
defenders of treason still hold sufficient power to hold back political
accountability.
Black Lives Matter came about
to demand an end to unjustified police violence against African Americans and
more accountability for such incidents, in the belief that the latter would
promote the former. Only a firm belief in his impunity from consequence could
explain Derek Chauvin’s murder of a
defenseless George Floyd while being filmed, or the countless other cases
of cops assaulting blacks on camera, going back to Rodney King in 1991.
Accountability is not always
a simple matter. A high school senior recently had to withdraw from a college
acceptance when a brief video from 2016 in which she used a racial slur became
public. Sometimes demands for accountability conflict with forgiveness.
Accountability depends on the
revelation of truth, just as impunity depends on hiding it. But 2020 proved
again that revelation is not enough. Impunity can also triumph by controlling
belief. The impeachment process from beginning to end had no impact on Trump’s
popular approval. From the release of the Mueller report in the spring of 2019
through the House hearings leading to impeachment to the Senate trial ending in
February 2020, Trump’s popular approval rating actually
rose slightly. Since Trump began his all-out attack on the American
constitutional system after his defeat at the polls, his approval rating has
inched down only a couple of points.
The differing power of sexual
and political accusations is demonstrated in the contrasting fates of the FOX
News stars Bill O’Reilly and Sean Hannity. O’Reilly
was fired by FOX in 2017 after the New York Times reported that he and FOX
had paid $13 million to five women who had reported his sexual harassment, and
then two others came forward with similar charges. The year before, FOX News’s
founding CEO Roger Ailes had resigned
in disgrace, as dozens of women reported sexual harassment. Sean
Hannity tells political lies on a daily basis, but retains his prime FOX
slot.
Although it appears that
Trump violated Georgia election laws, and possibly federal laws, in his amazing
telephone request that the vote in Georgia be “recalculated” so he could win,
his claims to be a genius might be the only thing that suffers. At this moment
at the very end of Trump’s tenure in office, there appears to be no
accountability in sight for his attempt to overthrow the newly elected
administration and the whole electoral process behind Biden’s victory. The
majority of House Republicans and the growing number of Republican Senators who
have jumped on that circus bandwagon believe they will suffer no accountability
for violating their constitutional oaths.
Perhaps today’s vote in
Georgia will tell us more about the contest between accountability and
impunity.
I wish for an end to the
impunity of racists, liars, and politicians. I would like to see Sen. James
Inhofe take some responsibility for decades of denying global warming by
admitting he was wrong. I would like my own Congressman, Darin LaHood, and all
the other Republicans who have pretended that the November 3 election was
rigged, to say publicly that they were wrong all along. I would like the liars
at FOX News to admit once or twice that what they said yesterday was not true.
I would like the American voting public to hold politicians and media
personalities accountable for what they do and say.
I would also like Kris
Kringle to be definitively proven to be Santa Claus. That will probably happen
first.
Steve Hochstadt
Springbrook, WI
January 5, 2021
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