"We can't do all that!" Actually, we can.
Apr. 27th, 2026 08:38 amBehind the cut...
Behind the first group, though, is a MUCH more dangerous attitude which is usually expressed as something along the lines of "we can't do that quickly, you'll be lucky if we can get things back to where they were, don't push!"
This is, put bluntly, dead wrong.
Not only CAN we do a lot of the things that need doing quickly -- universal healthcare, kicking out all the incompetent idiots and replacing them with competent people in the agencies, addressing workers' rights, etc. -- but we SHOULD AND MUST.
Why?
Because going back to the _status quo ante_, with "ante" being "before Trump and his sycophants were in charge" is merely taking us back to the "we're almost there" point of Project 2025. It's a holding action and one that's doomed to failure because THERE WON'T BE ANY IMPROVEMENT from the point of view of a lot of the population. Which, naturally, translates to discouraged voters who either stop voting, or switch sides, and then you're right back where you started, only worse because whatever claims you made about this being the right choice now ring ever-more-hollow.
There are a LOT of imminent threats to human life, liberty, and dignity right now, and a lot of them synergize or are associated in various ways. All of them need to be tackled and not by a tiny incremental change every election cycle.
We've just had a clear demonstration that ONE YEAR is enough for an administration that doesn't give a damn and has widespread support in the key points of government to perform major changes in the methods, directions, and goals of much of the government. Yes, the Heritage Foundation spent a long, long time setting this up, but the fact remains that the current set of events demonstrates that the nominally balanced design of government can be paralyzed by what might be called "out of context" actions -- actions that simply go beyond any of the expected, normal behaviors in government. Trump and company's entire approach has been to simply DO stuff -- stuff that is, on paper, forbidden, undoubtedly illegal, often likely high crimes -- and get away with it because it's just... too much.
To stop a lot of this WOULD have been easy -- again, on paper -- by simply having the cops arrest everyone involved, from Trump on down, and have that happen to anyone who was violating the law and ignoring things like court orders. That's what happens to people in the NORMAL world who get a court order and then say "eeeh, who cares"; they get arrested, they get jail time, they get big-time fines.
But we've never encountered a situation in which the "proper response" was literally to arrest the entire sitting Administration and a lot of their appointees, so even the people who ought to know better have been situationally paralyzed.
The important point here is that a VAST amount of what they've done is illegal. Putting it back takes SOME time, but not NEARLY as much as the naysayers want. The pessimists are looking at having to do everything by a slow process, but slow processes are not always necessary, and certainly aren't required when you're dealing with clear cases of criminal behavior. You say "no, that was wrong" and rip out all the criminal and questionable elements -- and while you're at it and in a position to do so, you look at what might improve the overall ability of the organization to ACTUALLY accomplish the goals it's supposed to.
There are, indeed, many things that need to be done. And if it turns out that there ISN'T a Blue Wave, we're gonna be hosed.
But if there IS, that wave needs to be as powerful politically, needs to be surfed just as far, as Star Wars was by the entertainment industry.
Here's just a few things that need to be DONE, not just talked about:
We need to explicitly, in law, make it clear that ANY organization -- commercial, nonprofit, government -- has its FIRST responsibility to the people and region in which it exists. Its SECOND responsibility is to its CUSTOMERS -- the specific people or organizations that its products or services will be used by. Its THIRD responsibility is to its WORKERS -- the employees who do all the work. (I'm not sure if that shouldn't be the second, but I think this is the best setup). The FOURTH responsibility, then, is when we reach the investors, the stockholders.
There are currently data centers being planned which will take up a vast amount of the water and energy resources of the area they'll be built in -- enough to seriously impact the hundreds of thousands of people living in the area, making such resources more scarce, and more expensive, perhaps even seriously restricted in availability. THIS SHOULD NEVER HAPPEN. This should be ILLEGAL. A company that wants to build something with so great an impact should FIRST have to demonstrate how they will INCREASE the carrying capacity of the region -- how they will generate more power, how they can bring in more water, etc. -- without damaging the environment OR putting the burden of their operations on the general populace. Expenses of a company should be ON the company.
There are many companies whose employees often require public assistance just to survive. This, ALSO, should NEVER happen. A company whose employees take X billion dollars in public assistance should have to pay that X billion dollars straight back to the government. Plus a penalty for making people jump through hoops just to live (see "Basic Human Value" below).
*Universal healthcare. Every other civilized country on Earth has this. Yes, you can find horror stories of waits or mistreatment or whatever for all of those countries, but -- no surprise here -- you can find worse ones in job lots HERE. I can tell you some of ours, and ours haven't been nearly as bad as many other people have experienced. In actuality, people in comparable countries with universal healthcare are paying less for better care and are healthier. The USA's life expectancy is LOWER than that of most of the first world, because most of us are afraid to go to the doctor unless we're deathly ill or in some kind of major accident. This will NOT result in "unpaid doctors" -- the bloated healthcare costs in the USA are almost entirely due to the parasitic insurance industry. The taxes I'd have to pay for additional universal healthcare would be TRIVIAL compared to what I currently have to pay just to insure me and my wife (fortunately, NYS has programs that have generally covered my kids). You could (and probably should) double nurses' and doctors' salaries and STILL drastically reduce the costs of healthcare here. While NOT reducing the quality -- likely improving it.
*Universal bodily autonomy. The sad thing is that this is an assumed fact in a LOT of law. It's just that there are specific areas that a relatively small, but very vocal, group of people keep insisting that bodily autonomy shouldn't apply to, and of course most of this gets put on women and other minority groups. The right to choose whether or not to continue a pregnancy is one of the most obvious, but this issue also applies to trans people, and also to the general ... well, shocking APATHY that seems to apply to the abuse of women and girls in general. The basic principle needs to be explicitly and universally written into law so that there's literally no BASIS for people to deny others control over their own body.
*Universal Human Value. We have this stated in various documents, in different ways, most obviously in the Declaration of Independence ("...that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness..."), but the LAW has been rather patchwork about this, and because of that an awful lot of people suffer who shouldn't.
Specifically, we need to directly, and forcibly in law, recognize that EVERY SINGLE HUMAN BEING has these rights that we declare above, and that these are not PASSIVE rights, but ACTIVE ones. Every human being has the right to live. Every human being as the right to liberty. Every human being has the right to be able to pursue their own happiness. AND THIS MEANS EVERY HUMAN BEING MUST HAVE THE RESOURCES TO MEET THESE RIGHTS.
There is no "right to life" if your ability to LIVE is at the mercy of someone else. If you have the right to life, you have the RIGHT to eat. You have the RIGHT to be sheltered from bad weather. You have the RIGHT to healthcare to keep you from dying or suffering.
There is no "right to liberty" if your existence is so constrained that you literally have no choice but to spend all of your time surviving. There is no liberty in a grinding bare existence. You have the RIGHT to a life that gives you choices beyond "suffer and live" and "suffer and die".
There is no "right to the pursuit of happiness" if you have neither time nor resources to apply to the pursuit. You have the right to a life that allows you leisure, that allows you pleasure, that allows you, in short, to LIVE FULLY as a human being. Happiness ITSELF cannot be guaranteed -- that's partly due to our own natures and choices -- but there's a big difference between existing hand-to-mouth and actually LIVING in a way that might give you a chance to be happy.
*Explicit separation of religions and government. We've had too much trouble from having to argue whether that provision is actually in the Constitution; it needs to be put in specifically. This includes not merely eliminating the use of religion as a justification or framework for how government should act, but also explicitly eliminating any assumptions that any one religion is superior inherently to any other and therefore able to be used as a tool to oppress others. The Heritage Foundation and their apocalyptic Evangelical associates have made it clear that this is a necessary change.
It is absolutely possible for us to ACHIEVE ALL OF THIS, and not in decades. And we need to be TRYING to achieve it, and a number of other goals, from this very moment onward, not talking about maybe, someday, after we've slowly dragged things back to the very unsatisfactory way they used to be ten or fifteen years ago.
We need to follow Mamdani's example, and work on changing things at the local and state, as well as the Federal, level. Local social support programs can be invaluable; my own Rensselaer County has a number of services that help a lot of people maintain their basic living dignity. This isn't something that HAS to be dumped entirely on the Federal government. It is something that can, and should, be supported from the local through county through state level up to the Federal level.
Yes, of course, there's a lot more to write on all of the above, and a lot more to write on other important subjects we need to address, but I think for now that's more than enough to chew on!