Texas v. Pennsylvania et al. did not deny setting rules for the 2020 election contrary to the Constitution. On December 10, 2020, the Supreme Court discounted that.
By refusing to interfere as America’s ruling oligarchy serves itself,
the court archived what remained of the American republic’s system of
equal justice. That much is clear.
In 2021, the laws, customs, and
habits of the heart that had defined the American republic since the
18th century are things of the past. Americans’ movements and
interactions are under strictures for which no one ever voted.
Government disarticulated society by penalizing ordinary social
intercourse and precluding the rise of spontaneous opinion therefrom.
Together with corporate America, it smothers minds through the mass and
social media with relentless, pervasive, identical, and ever-evolving
directives. In that way, these oligarchs have proclaimed themselves the
arbiters of truth, entitled and obliged to censor whoever disagrees with
them as systemically racist, adepts of conspiracy theories.
Corporations, and the government
itself, require employees to attend meetings personally to acknowledge
their guilt. They solicit mutual accusations. While violent felons are
released from prison, anyone may be fired or otherwise have his life
wrecked for questioning government/corporate sentiment. Today’s rulers
don’t try to convince. They demand obedience, and they punish.
Russians and East Germans under
Communists Leonid Brezhnev and Erich Honecker in the 1970s lived under
less ruling class pressure than do today’s Americans. And their rulers
were smart enough not to insult them, their country, or their race.
In 2015, Americans could still
believe they lived in a republic, in which life’s rules flow from the
people through their representatives. In 2021, a class of rulers draws
their right to rule from self-declared experts’ claims of infallibility
that dwarf baroque kings’ pretensions.
In that self-referential sense, the United States of America is now a classic oligarchy.
The following explains how this change happened. The clarity that it has brought to our predicament is its only virtue.
Oligarchy had long been growing
within America’s republican forms. The 2016 election posed the choice of
whether its rise should consolidate, or not. Consolidation was very
much “in the cards.” But how that election and its aftermath led to the
fast, thorough, revolution of American life depended on how Donald Trump
acted as the catalyst who clarified, energized, and empowered our
burgeoning oligarchy’s peculiarities. These, along with the manner in
which the oligarchy seized power between November 2016 and November
2020, ensure that its reign will be ruinous and likely short. The
prospect that the republic’s way of life may thrive among those who wish
it to depends on the manner in which they manage the civil conflict
that is now inevitable.