Joe Biden's Red-Tinged Speech
W.J. Astore
President Joe Biden denounced "extreme MAGA ideology" at a recent speech at Independence Hall in Philadelphia. I've been to Independence Hall, but never did I picture it like this, lit in a garish red light:
Readers here know I'm critical of Biden and Donald Trump. I don't want either man to get a second term. And MAGA, as in make America great again, is a movement that has cult-like elements in the way it elevates Trump as some kind of leader/savior figure. Being critical of MAGA is one thing, but Biden's speech had all the subtlety of the red-tinged image above.
Having watched too many episodes of "Star Trek," what I think of here is Red Alert. But painting all Trump supporters with the same red brush only aggravates tension and division.
Sorry, I don't see my MAGA neighbor as my enemy. He or she is a fellow American, probably one who's frustrated with the system as it exists today and is seeking an alternative to politics as usual. The shameful thing is our country's political duopoly, which offers only two choices, Biden or a Biden clone versus Trump or a Trump clone. Maybe the "enemy within" is the duopoly itself?
Biden's speech was disheartening. The way to win people over is not to paint your rival in red. Give people hope. Give them meaningful reforms. A $15 federal minimum wage. Affordable health care. Higher education that doesn't lead to huge personal debt. Environmental policies that preserve the earth and address climate change. An end to gargantuan military budgets and overseas wars. Heck, I'll settle for potable drinking water in Jackson, Mississippi and Flint, Michigan.
Railing against an "enemy" is easy. Sharing the fruits of America equitably among all Americans is the real challenge. Biden pushed a big red "easy" button that placed his followers on red alert against the MAGA foe, as if they weren't our fellow Americans but a quasi-Klingon empire of aliens out to attack and conquer. It's a move both wrong and wrongheaded. It's also yet one more reminder that America needs new political parties and a new direction.