THE CAPITOL-TAKING AND THE END OF THE TRUMP ADMINISTRATION

Web Graphic.

At last, as though all at once, the great, despicable cauldron has boiled over.

As thousands of sympathizers to a cause abhorrent stormed D.C.’s Capitol building, motivations evidently far from the actual best interests of the people, their endlessly wise inspiration described the clash as one of “the things and events that happen when when a sacred landslide election victory is so unceremoniously & viciously stripped away…”

Just days before, with Georgia Senate runoff races in full force, a phone call involving the President and Georgia’s secretary of state, Brad Raffensberger, set millions into a justifiable panic – what we thought would no doubt end up being be the biggest travesty of Donald Trump’s final days as the sitting leader of the United States.

In this call, the president audibly insists, relentlessly, for his fellow Republican to help him “find 12,000 votes”, continuing to cling on to a delusional death croak he has wielded for the last two months in an effort to retain any amount of relevancy possible; his true worst nightmare, as it has become clear, being condemned to obscurity.

Shortly after Trump spoke these words – with a danger unprecedented – into the universe, the Democratic Party earned its Senate majority, and a terror no doubt set in within the very souls of his devotees, their hearts long since somehow conquered by indescribably ignorant rhetoric.

Following a plan apparently concocted well in advance, nationalists from all around the country, happily accompanied by several conservative politicians, arrived at the confirmation of

the Democrats’ electoral victory with intent only to follow a one true order: to take what has been “stolen.”

Like tectonic plates of god-like proportion, the undeniably expansive political divide between Americans reached its ultimate (and arguably inevitable) untethering with a thundering crack, as a swarming, walking collection of neo-fascist memorabilia was pushed through bafflingly docile security measures (previously more than unforgivingly brutal during the summer of 2020’s ‘George Floyd’ demonstrations), and so forced our federal infrastructure to reveal how truly fragile it has always been.

In the wake of the siege, disdainful judgment has been greatly expressed from most political demographics, and calls for enacting the 25th Amendment, an initiative that would have the vice president take office for the Trump administration’s final days in power, have apparently been greatly considered; furthermore, a second impeachment of the president is now being deliberated as consequence for Trump’s repeated encouragement of ignorant violence.

Clearly, despite their efforts, various defeats wound up awaiting these loyalists to a man’s rotting rule, regardless. Just hours later, Biden’s winning electoral votes were confirmed, after all, and almost immediate de-platforming of Trump’s venomous dictation began, many critics arguing it was too little, too late, in fact.

But in the exchange, a death-cult ideology was given all the airtime these followers’ heart desired to flex their exploitative potential.

It is seemingly every day that we are reminded of the responsibility we have as a collective people to ensure the snuffing out of ultimately divisive, wholly destructive ideas.

It is far too late now to simply publicly condemn such a wicked mindset. It is time to make certain hate never breathes again.

At last, as though all at once, the great, despicable cauldron has boiled over. As thousands of sympathizers to a cause abhorrent stormed D.C.’s Capitol building, motivations evidently far from the actual best interests of the people, their endlessly wise inspiration described the clash as one of “the things and events that happen when when a sacred landslide election victory is so unceremoniously & viciously stripped away…”

Just days before, with Georgia Senate runoff races in full force, a phone call involving the President and Georgia’s secretary of state, Brad Raffensberger, set millions into a justifiable panic – what we thought would no doubt end up being be the biggest travesty of Donald Trump’s final days as the sitting leader of the United States.

In this call, the president audibly insists, relentlessly, for his fellow Republican to help him “find 12,000 votes”, continuing to cling on to a delusional death croak he has wielded for the last two months in an effort to retain any amount of relevancy possible; his true worst nightmare, as it has become clear, being condemned to obscurity.

Shortly after Trump spoke these words – with a danger unprecedented – into the universe, the Democratic Party earned its Senate majority, and a terror no doubt set in within the very souls of his devotees, their hearts long since somehow conquered by indescribably ignorant rhetoric.

Following a plan apparently concocted well in advance, nationalists from all around the country, happily accompanied by several conservative politicians, arrived at the confirmation of the Democrats’ electoral victory with intent only to follow a one true order: to take what has been “stolen.”

Like tectonic plates of god-like proportion, the undeniably expansive political divide between Americans reached its ultimate (and arguably inevitable) untethering with a thundering crack, as a swarming, walking collection of neo-fascist memorabilia was pushed through bafflingly docile security measures (previously more than unforgivingly brutal during the summer of 2020’s ‘George Floyd’ demonstrations), and so forced our federal infrastructure to reveal how truly fragile it has always been.

In the wake of the siege, disdainful judgment has been greatly expressed from most political demographics, and calls for enacting the 25th Amendment, an initiative that would have the vice president take office for the Trump administration’s final days in power, have apparently been greatly considered; furthermore, a second impeachment of the president is now being deliberated as consequence for Trump’s repeated encouragement of ignorant violence.

Clearly, despite their efforts, various defeats wound up awaiting these loyalists to a man’s rotting rule, regardless. Just hours later, Biden’s winning electoral votes were confirmed, after all, and almost immediate de-platforming of Trump’s venomous dictation began, many critics arguing it was too little, too late, in fact.

But in the exchange, a death-cult ideology was given all the airtime these followers’ heart desired to flex their exploitative potential.

It is seemingly every day that we are reminded of the responsibility we have as a collective people to ensure the snuffing out of ultimately divisive, wholly destructive ideas.

It is far too late now to simply publicly condemn such a wicked mindset. It is time to make certain hate never breathes again.

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