I think you all are promoting a very objective, reasonable commentary on politics. It is very refreshing to see it. I voted for Evan McMullin in 2016, and I hope he forms an alternative party of reason in the coming years. I will vote for him. Keep up the good work and keep it unbiased. —Robert W., Texas
"Democracy Dies In Darkness" is the motto of The Washington Post. Our democracy will die if a significant portion of our citizens is in the dark when it comes to the principles that our constitutional form of government was founded on, or even how it works. In a survey that was conducted before the 2020 election, a sizeable number of Republicans thought that the President of the United States at that time should have had the authority to postpone his own election.
Many members of the House Republican caucus, having seen their candidate lose the 2020 presidential election, refused to certify the electoral count, and pretended that not certifying the count, which is a simple matter of tallying up the numbers of electors that were presented by each of the states, gave them the legitimate authority to overturn the will of the people. On Jan. 6, some supporters of the defeated candidate wanted to hang Vice President Mike Pence, because he was not willing to overturn the 2020 election results, despite his not having any constitutional authority to do so. Many of those same people claimed to be patriotic citizens, even as they vandalized the Capitol of their nation.
The only prior time that our Capitol building was successfully breached occurred when Great Britain was fighting a war against the United States. There was, however, another more recent attack launched against our capital. That attack was fomented by Osama Bin Laden and his al-Qaeda terrorist organization, when they hijacked civilian aircraft in September 2001, and then crashed one of them into the Pentagon. In the aftermath of that terrorist attack, President George W. Bush vowed to respond forcefully. Apparently many members of the current version of the Republican Party do not understand the definitions of the terms patriotism and terrorism. Apparently, they are also in the dark about the meanings of the governing principles that were set forth in our Constitution. —Bill M., Pennsylvania
|