One of the things the left hates most about the United States of America is that there are 50 of them. A leftist revolution is more easily accomplished in a country in which power is already consolidated in a single place among a small group of people. Despite the vast territory of the Russian empire under the last of the Tsars, Lenin was able to hijack the initial anti-Tsarist revolt and turn it into a Bolshevik seizure of power.
Over the course of the centuries, similar things have happened in France, England, and Germany. Indeed, after World War II, the western Allies insisted that the new German government be as decentralized as possible, with the governmental departments spread all over West Germany and the capital relocated to dumpy Bonn. They wanted no repeat of another Third Reich powerhouse headquartered in Berlin.
For decades, America has proven a harder nut to crack. Most of its election issues were too local, too diversified, too parochial to go national. The system of checks and balances instituted by the Founders cooled the passions as it was designed to do, rejecting the “fierce urgency of now” in favor of gradual change. From 13 East Coast colonies to 50 states, marked by deep regional differences, America weathered the storms of civil war, anarchism, socialism, National Socialism, and communism without succumbing to any of them.
For what the gangsters, almost all of them Democrats, learned and imparted to the academics was this: if you could take over the principal city of a given state—Chicago, New York, Detroit, Kansas City, et al.—you could then capture and own the state house and the mechanisms and monies of the state itself.
Even Clinton, though, was still at heart a regional politician. Barack Obama, from the thoroughly corrupt city of Chicago, was the real triumph of the left. Managed by red-diaper babies and schooled in the carrot-and-stick arts of political intimidation, Obama blurred ethnic and regional differences, nationalized issues such as “health care,” and proclaimed himself not just the president of the United States but a citizen-politician of the world.
Trump for Vice President
So, to echo Lenin one more time: What is to be done? The fleeting, constantly besieged presidency of Donald J. Trump demonstrated that there is still substantial conservative opposition to the Democrats’ drive to “reimagine” the old slogan of E Pluribus Unum from meaning a melting pot to a Stalinist conformity that erased all previous distinctions.Thus, the last two presidential elections have been decided, narrowly, at the margins. With the country now divided into two camps (one self-armed, the other in control of the military at the moment), a handful of “swing” states determines the outcome in the Electoral College. And as 2020 shows, the Democrats only have to win control of the levers of power by the slimmest of margins in order to bring the hammer down on their domestic enemies.
So now that the United States of America has become an all-the-marbles country, with presidents ruling by decree in the fashion of the Roman emperors, contemptuous of Congress at least until next year, and disdainful of the federal courts … what is to be done in 2024?
Before you scoff, think about it. Donald Agonistes is the movie we don’t want to see again. A second Trump candidacy would be subject to even more of a leftist assault on the nation’s traditions and institutions and push the country ever closer to civil strife.
If you thought the Democrat Media Complex had plumbed new depths of dishonesty and animosity in 2020, you ain’t seen nothing yet. Further, there is the question of whether a declawed Trump really has learned anything in matters of personnel and, more important, self-restraint. With the future of the country riding on the outcome, is Trump really the best possible candidate?
It’s the perfect solution. Trump’s thirst for revenge could finally be slaked, his voters assured that there will be a day of reckoning. Since the veep has almost no Constitutional power, the Democrats would be hard-pressed to argue that the Donald, his residence now declared in New York or New Jersey to get around the Constitutional provision that candidates for president and veep be from different states, would be a threat to the Republic.
DeSantis for President
And so, as President Ronald Dion DeSantis—a champion of the 10th Amendment and an exemplary governor of Florida—is sworn in on Jan. 20, 2025, all 50 states would understand that federalism is back, neo-Marxism has been repudiated, rule by decree is over, the phantom menace of COVID-19 and its ilk is defeated, China is on notice, and our great experiment in representative democracy is once again back on course.What’s not to like?