Day in and day out, I continue to be astonished and pleased by how much unity the big tent, anti-Trump and anti-oligarchic forces in our country are managing to achieve.
Before the arrival of Donald Trump clarified much for many, I found Jennifer Rubin, then writing at the Washington Post, a loathsome Republican-excusing right wing pundit. She has been through some changes. The horror of the moment moves all of us in novel directions. Today Rubin writes prolifically at The Contrarian, using her sharp wit daily to skewer our aspiring dictator and his friends.
I'll applaud this version of Rubin. Here is a bit from today exploring what for her is likely improbable religious terrain taken up by leaders opposing the inhuman global authoritarian project.
Autocrats Don’t Fare Well Against Faith Leaders
... Pope Leo is as much a problem for Trump as Pope John Paul II was for communist Poland. When a native son (Leo of America, John Paul II of Poland) expresses affection for and understanding of his countrymen in their native language during a time of the oppressive rule, the Pope can form an emotional bond that rises above politics. His message of faith, peace, and love reaches far beyond Catholic churches and compels people to focus on matters and values more profound and compelling than partisanship. A Pope in tune with his flock who promotes a values-based worldview can illuminate an autocrat’s smallness, meanness, and desperation. ...
... As Catholics recall nearly fifty years later, Pope John Paul II’s visit to Poland in June 1979 helped ignite a movement that would upend the communist regime. ... A year later, Solidarity formed in the Lenin Shipyards in Gdansk to spearhead the anti-communist political movement.The Polish example reminds us that autocrats resort to bullying, violence, and fear because they cannot obtain people’s affection. Through personal experience with a despotic regime, regular people (whether in Poland in the 1980s or Hungary and the U.S. today) eventually recognize the regime as exploitive, corrupt, and cruel.
... The democracy movement is not a religious community, although faith motivates many in their opposition to ICE, racism, and neglect of the poor. Nevertheless, the pro-democracy movement can and should stay grounded in positive ideals — patriotism, decency, fairness, and empathy. Whether those values emanate from religious faith or humanistic values, once people rediscover a sense of obligation to something higher than themselves, they are more likely to lose fear of the regime, forge a community with other inspired democracy defenders, challenge authority, and view vulgar, crazed leaders as weak and transitory figures.
Democracy advocates should unabashedly denounce Trump in moral terms. Launching a war of choice and threatening genocide is evil. Taking away healthcare and food from the poor to enrich billionaires is wrong. Deporting grandmothers and children is cruel.
When the argument becomes right vs. wrong rather than right vs. left, an amoral, corrupt autocrat is cooked. ...
I might not be so generous toward an institutional church which still fails to appreciate the humanity of women and queers, but I too applaud when the generous and inclusive strain in Catholicism rises to the fore. And Rubin's frame seems very correct in this moment. The autocrat is just in the wrong for us all.











