By Michelle Naranjo
Last week, I overheard an 8-year old say to her parent, "Maybe I would vote for Trump because if I robbed a bank, I could probably lie and get away with it." The parent laughed, and exhaustedly sighed through another teachable moment.
We have persevered four years of this presidency, so it seems as if we should all be able to trudge through the final 12 days.
But we can't, and we shouldn't.
This human-made disaster isn't about the personal indiscretions, the golf, the taxes, the children, or the fascination with dictators.
It is about the lies. They added up until there was a tipping point that has caused a historic amount of damage.
Inciting an insurrection with repeated and documented lies should have consequences.
If the 25th Amendment is not brought forward immediately, then there should absolutely be an impeachment as soon as possible.
But impeachment is just the start of the means to make the wrongdoer be held accountable. There should also be prosecution to return public trust and send a strong message to the treasonous supporters alike.
Too many have turned a blind eye too often to Trump's treasonous acts during his presidency. It is almost as if some forgot their inalienable roles as inhabitants and allowed themselves to become viewers to be bought and sold. Too many found the manipulations and bungles...funny.
The supporters of the inciter should also be held accountable, in whatever shape that might take. Historian Timothy Snyder recently wrote, "Politicians who do not tell the simple truth perpetuate the big lie, further an alternative reality, support conspiracy theories, weaken democracy, and foment violence far worse than that of January 6, 2021."
From the eight senators and 139 representatives who consciously chose to support the lies against democracy to those who claimed that believing was more important than their fellow citizens, violence and destruction is not an acceptable tactic to change the minds of non-believers.
The chasm in the culture of this country is repairable but is so very fragile right now.
Democracy is showing us a teachable moment. It is exhausting; it is not amusing.