This isn't over. Not yet. Maybe never.

Look. I've spent years into studying societies, how people fuck them up, and how they unfuck themselves. Politics is history happening, science fiction is the history of the future, and I write hopeful dystopian fantasy & science fiction. So of course I've been glued to the news for, um, ever, but especially the last few months. It's mesmerizing.

This post contains meandering musings about this & that, life the universe, and so on. No particular idea where it's going, so bail now if you're looking for a Dramatic Point or a Conclusive Proclamation.

I wish I was surprised by the direction politics have been heading in the US since, oh, since we hit the twenty-first century, but I'm not. I've been doing deep research on the history of religious cults, separatist groups, American fascism, racist organizations, Confederate true-believers, insurrectionist movements FOR 35 YEARS.

All this time, I've been disappointed and fearful about national politics more often than not, but I cling to hope that my country's leaders would avoid total collapse. I am too optimistic, perhaps. Still, I remain confident the world won't end, no matter what.

That's because I'm a biology major who studied ecology. I have immense respect for matters straightening themselves out on a planetary scale. Global warming may wipe out all life down to bacteria, but life will go on. It'll be different, it won't be a place anyone human can live, but...okay, maybe I have a weird perspective.

AND I DIGRESS. Ha. Big surprise. Moving on...

Here's one thing that sank in early in my fascination with studying ways the future might careen towards hell in a handbasket: wars don't happen the way I learned about them in history classes. They only look obvious in hindsight or from a distance.

The questions history likes to answer are ones like, "what caused the war?" "how bad did it get?" and "how long did it last?" No one can answer those from the happening side of a conflict. Worse, war in the modern world is messy. To borrow from Dr. Seuss, war can happen without uniforms, it can happen without guns, it can happen without declarations, legislation, or sides.

"War: a state of armed conflict between different nations or states or different groups within a nation or state" (italics mine, definition courtesy of Oxford Languages)

By that definition, the United States has been in a state of war for months now, and I don't think it's anywhere near over.

Skirmishes have been happening for years (Occupy movement. Bundys. Border detentions, Charlottesville...the list goes on and on.) Since June 2020 fighting has broken into the open and gone through multiple cycles of violence, truce, and renewed conflict. BLM protests. Pandemic protests. Pre- and post-election Trump rallies. The mob assault on the Capitol.

Yeah. That last one. That's the one that seems to have finally tipped the scales into "HEY WTF IS GOING ON" for a lot of people.

Looking back, it's always much easier to connect the dots.

I'm gobsmacked by how stunned people were that the "pro-Trump" rallies "turned violent." It takes a whopping big dose of denial to ignore the open calls for sedition from a movement so obviously, violently fascist that it embraces the use of the Nazi swastika, one whose followers put bullseye targets on pictures of their enemies, and who call for lynchings and firing squads against their own elected officials.

But hey, denial and lies have served conservative political representatives so well for so long that maybe they forgot that the people they were lying to believe the lies. There's a dangerous false security in downplaying calls to violence that don't meet the historical standard of "warfare." (They aren't fascists, pfft. That was 1930's Germany. This is now. They aren't racist, they're making jokes. They aren't proposing the overthrow of the elected government, they're merely objecting to results they don't like, and, uh, talking about holding the people who disagree hostage until they change the result...or lynching them...or...yeah...hm.)

I'm glad the Capitol incident made an impression. It barely escaped being a bloody, gruesome wake-up call. Call it a rally gone wrong, call it a riot, call it an organized insurrection--those labels can be discussed. But it escaped being a mass murder only by a chance combination of heroic actions coupled with good luck. It was almost an undeniable act of insurrection. It was almost the first battle in an undeclared war. (have you noticed how Americans only tend to call things wars if they happen somewhere else?)

I wish the immediate aftermath gave me more hope. Sadly, there was also an immediate return to the same old playbook of minimizing, and that doesn't stun me in the least. The whataboutisms, misdirection, false equivalencies, ad hominem dismissals, and wholesale denial of reality--those tactics have served certain government representatives for so long they can't seem to accept that they're not riding the tiger any more, that they're being batted back and forth by it.

It's been a quiet fortnight since January 6, in the news at least. It hasn't been peaceful, and too many people are suffering under the awful laws of the current regime, but the insurrection threats are being taken more seriously by the institutions that are still functioning. So there's that.

And tomorrow, if all goes well, there'll be a new president, one who has plans ready to go, a commitment to make the job more than a 4-year series of election rallies, and a team of idealists who want to make systems work better, not just make life better for some people under the current systems.

But those insurrectionists? They're not going anywhere. Most of them are home, and they live all over the nation. They live in my town and your town. In our neighborhoods. In our families. They work where I work. They shop where I shop.

That isn't going to end when control of the executive branch of the government changes hands.

But that's a good stopping point for my post. Time to go do some dreaming, hoping that the world will get better tomorrow and the next day, and maybe for a few thousand tomorrows after that.

Until later.

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Some awkward conversations