Bob Muzelle, culture warrior and veteran of all social wars, simply couldn't believe the news on election night. 'How...how could that...that ignoramus, that fool, that....', he sputtered trying to find words for the unthinkable, the unconscionable. A Trump victory was simply not in the cards, a non-starter, and impossibility, but there he was, bloody ear and all, waving to an adoring crowd.
For Bob and his colleagues, the election was supposed to be a done deal. Good always triumphs over evil, and this was no different. The American people would see as clearly as a hand before their face the pure, unmitigated nastiness of the man, his unprincipled, arrogant, obsessive persona; and his blatant racism, misogyny, and homophobia. How could they not? The man was a blowhard, a fool, and crass, crude idiot out only for his own good without a sensible, compassionate thought in his head.
'How could they...', and here again Bob spluttered and stumbled. Living for so long in the warm, comforting assumption that right and good would prevail - that the truth spread by the progressive Left would be the truth, the only truth, and nothing but the truth.
But here he was, standing on the curb of Pennsylvania Avenue watching the preparations for the Trump Inauguration, billed as The Greatest Show on Earth, an extravaganza of whiteness, wealth, and privilege, a cavalcade of bimbos, airheads, and insurrectionists. He shook his head in dismay. 'No class', he muttered. 'A clown show, a vaudeville act, a shameless, buggering idiotic spectacle'
Bob was not alone in his agonizing grief. No one in the progressive cabals of Washington saw this coming. There was absolutely no way that this interloper, his crude, outlandish boor could ever make his way back to the Capital. They had spelled out the danger of his return - the man would seize all reins of power and within months would establish the foundations for autocratic rule. His storm troopers would be sent into the streets to round up black and gay people. His paramilitary would set up machine gun nests all along the Southern border and mow down all asylum seekers. He would turn Wall Street loose and the days of the Robber Barons would return.
The outgoing President, Joe Biden, looked in the camera a few days before leaving office, and warned people of the spawn of the devil. Donald Trump and his cadre of billionaire investors, captains of industry, and predatory insurance companies would create an oligarchy of white privilege never before seen. His accession to office will usher in a dark period of hate, prejudice, and oppression in which only the aristocratic few will benefit.
The Trump advance team howled with delight as they watched the old man tearfully address the nation. Squinting to make out the words on the teleprompter but grappling with the meaning of the words before him, Biden looked as lost and befuddled as ever. His script-writers and confidants had carefully framed his message to the American people, put in all the 'emphasis...pause...anger...smile' prompts in the text scrolling down the teleprompter in large, oversized letters, but the President bungled the enterprise, paused when he should have shown resoluteness, smiled as he mouthed villainy, and was just the sad spectacle of failed leadership he had always been.
Worst of all, thought Bob, was not so much the politics of the coming administration- the Left could deal with economic and financial challenges - it was the cultural upheaval that worried and dismayed him. Trump not only brought with him bimbos and airheads, but the unwashed, backwoods, gun rack, bass boat cracker mentality of the fifty million Americans who were duped by him and voted him in office. It was not the peaceful revolution Bob hoped for but the coming of the anti-Christ.
Gone were any thoughts of a verdant, peaceful, harmonious community of good; and only images of bare-knuckled, insensate, predatory wolves of Wall Street were left. God help us, he muttered, although quickly retracted his words. There was no God to call upon. They, the Left, had been the country's secular salvation, and now they, martyred, tossed aside, and left on the curb were no longer.
'Barbarians at the gate', his wife Corinne mused, remembering her Roman history. She had watched Gladiator five times and loved the first, dramatic scene where Maximus leads a Roman army to victory against the barbarians; and although she was against any kind of imperialism and colonialism, she couldn't help cheering when the phalanx of archers shot their flaming arrows into the ranks of the Goths. She felt like a Roman, ready to take on Donald Trump and his savage horde.
Of course neither she nor any of Bob's colleagues were up to the mark on that score. They had resorted to backbiting, lawfare, calumny, and an insidious campaign of calumny and hatred, so no frontline heroes were they, so the last recourse - violent opposition - was not in their profile. They hadn't even the strength or will to pull up the drawbridge.
This misjudgment, this impossibly myopic view of the issue, was the problem. The country had changed. The American people had changed. Rather than accept the progressive woke agenda, they had turned against it. The arrogant badgering, self-righteous hectoring and demeaning was galling. No mas! was the meme of middle America. We don't want what you're selling. These were not barbarians but normal, sane, responsible Americans who saw life and country quite differently from the whiny, morose, prophets of doom who came calling.
Bob watched the majorettes who would lead the parade practice on the Mall, high stepping, smiling, as beautiful as the Dallas Cowboys' cheerleaders, twirling their batons with verve and precision. It was captivating, and Bob smiled; but quicky erased it when he realized that these young women were shills for the cartoon character waiting in the wings. They didn't belong on Pennsylvania. They should go back to the fervidly ignorant patriotic towns where they came from.
As the boom and thumps of the Marine band, also practicing at the west end of the Mall came to Bob on a chill January wind, he shook his head. 'Madame was supposed to be here', he muttered, thinking of Kamala Harris, the Democratic candidate, a black woman of intellect, style, and agency who should have been on her way to consolidating the progressive victories recently won. Instead it was this imposter, this fool, this unreconstructed barbarians about ready to march down the Avenue to the Oval Office.
Bob shuddered again. Lines of old Beatles song came into his head, 'Let it be...let it be'; but he had never been one to do so, always an activist, a true believer in right and justice. One couldn't simply let anything be, so he stood there wondering. A Trump supporter in Lafayette Square thought he was a bum, just standing there in an overcoat.