If you’re a proponent of election integrity in 2021, you’re a bigot.
If you still have questions about the integrity of the 2020 presidential election, you’re not only a bigot, but you might be a domestic terrorist.
What is going on here?
Claiming that the half of the country loathed by the ruling class is made up of bigots is nothing new generally, nor is fear-mongering that the belief people should vote in person, with identification, on a single election day is rooted in bigotry. But the linking of one’s views about elections to not only bigotry, but terrorism, does seem like a novel development.
Notwithstanding that those who claimed for years that the 2016 election was “stolen by Russia”—many of whom demonstrated in streets across the country, some violently, throughout the Trump presidency—were never treated similarly, the claim is that Jan. 6 illustrated that questioners of the 2020 election were spurred to commit terrorist acts.
There’s something deeper going on here beyond Jan. 6 serving the illogic that links conservatism to bigotry to terrorism—demanding a whole-of-government, if not whole-of-society, response—when it comes to elections in particular.
Yes, Democrats want to make 2020 the new standard in election law, and apparently believe casting their foes as “Jim Eagle” and dangerous conspiracy theorists constitutes an effective way to do it.
That something deeper is that the regime wishes above all else to retain its legitimacy, upon which its power and privilege rely. Who are you to question the election of its man, elections being the principal way by which he derives legitimacy? And if you do, what does that say about the strength of the regime?
If the regime harbored confidence in itself, it wouldn’t have to strain to turn the Capitol breach into Pearl Harbor or 9/11. It wouldn’t have to cast people questioning the sanctity of an election as terrorists. It would simply guffaw about states engaging in sure-to-be-fruitless audits.
The intelligence community’s domestic terror strategy, which threatens to unleash on citizens the powers of government—hand in hand with the private sector—in a way that would eviscerate liberty and justice, reveals a point:
Its “efforts speak to a broader priority: enhancing faith in government and addressing the extreme polarization, fueled by a crisis of disinformation and misinformation often channeled through social media platforms, which can tear Americans apart and lead some to violence. Enhancing faith in American democracy demands accelerating work to contend with an information environment that challenges healthy democratic discourse. We will work toward finding ways to counter the influence and impact of dangerous conspiracy theories that can provide a gateway to terrorist violence.”
Translation: The regime can’t tolerate questioning or dissension, and that of course includes the election of its man to the Oval Office, as well as future electors.
Ironically, the hysterical, over-the-top fashion in which the regime is currently operating will only erode the confidence people have in it, further undermining its legitimacy.