In Cleveland on July 6, President Joe Biden repeated something he has often said before—or, rather, he attempted to repeat it before. As seems to happen with increasing frequency, his train of thought was shunted off onto a siding.
“That’s been the harder part of it right now. No, I’m serious. Because we’ve become so divided—so divided in this. But one thing we were divided on when we ran—and, you know, I want to thank Mayor Bibb for the passport into the city. [Applause.] But we—we were divided on the question we’re celebrating today. And, folks, how about actually having a union guy as secretary of Labor? Isn’t that something? [Applause.]”
Was there an unexpected synaptic leap in his tired old brain from “unify” to “union guy”? Or was there, perhaps, just a moment of dawning realization that, if it were actually true that he had wished to unify the country, his whole presidency would have been other than it has been?
He wouldn’t, for a start, have lent his support to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s (D-Calif.) jihad—most recently pursued through the House’s Jan. 6 select committee—against Donald Trump and his supporters, who constitute half the country he claims to want to unify.
Nor would he have countenanced the politicization of the Justice Department under Attorney General Merrick Garland and of the armed forces under Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Gen. Mark Milley’s two developments that already bid fair, less than two years into the president’s term of office, to become the real threat to our security.
Vallely told The Epoch Times that similar grievances are surfacing at the Naval and Air Force academies, which suggest that such political impositions originate at the highest levels of civilian authority in Washington.
Here, he was obviously just repeating a Democratic Party talking point that attributed the riot by Trump supporters at the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, to “white supremacists.”
There wasn’t a shred of evidence for such an outrageous assertion, but the president and his fellow Democrats saw an opportunity to exploit popular disgust with the actions of the rioters in order to characterize them as a threat not only to the country but to “democracy” itself.
Milley was obviously falling into line with his civilian masters, with whom he also sought to ingratiate himself by telling of his own insubordination in going behind the back of then-President Trump to reassure the communist Chinese that he wouldn’t obey any order to attack them.
But senior officers who stood by the armed forces’ long tradition of staying outside politics and the rank-and-file whose willingness to serve their country had never owed anything to the sort of ideologies that Milley professed to find so enlightening can’t but have known how they’ve been betrayed by the politicized brass.
Few could have joined up with the idea of becoming not the force protecting their country from foreign enemies but the enforcement arm of one political party against the other.
NBC noted that “the pool of those eligible to join the military continues to shrink, with more young men and women than ever disqualified for obesity, drug use or criminal records”—but also “that only 9% of those young Americans eligible to serve in the military had any inclination to do so, the lowest number since 2007.”
Can it be only coincidental that the critical race theory praised by Milley and increasingly taught in U.S. high schools, as well as the service academies, also teaches that the country is shot through with “systemic racism” and unacknowledged “white privilege” and therefore can hardly be considered worth defending?
As the NBC report also notes: “Overall confidence in U.S. government institutions is also decreasing, and that has hit the U.S. military as well. In 2021 the annual Reagan National Defense Survey, conducted by the Ronald Reagan Presidential Foundation and Institute, found that just 45% of Americans had a great deal of trust and confidence in the military, down 25 points since 2018.”
We can well believe that such an elusive national unity is “the harder part” of the president’s job right now, and that the division he has found instead has a ripple effect on lots of the other difficulties he’s facing. But if so, he has only himself to blame.