CALIFORNIA
FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, MAY 16, 2025 OR
THEREAFTER
BY
THOMAS D. ELIAS
“TRAMPLED RIGHTS, LOST RESPECT: WHERE’S THE OUTRAGE?”
America
is now a country where lawful residents can be grabbed from streets and
sidewalks by black-masked operatives for government agencies acting without
warrants and sent to prisons in foreign countries.
It’s
also where the voter-established California Coastal Commission, despised by the
current president, can tell an oil company to cease making changes on
ocean-bottom pipelines – and then see the order ignored. This is still playing
out near Gaviota in Santa Barbara County, but for sure at least some respect
for legal authority has been lost.
It’s
a country whose president sought impeachment for judges whose decisions he does
not like, while his appointees sometimes pick and choose which legal rulings to
heed.
It’s
also where a non-elected “official” heading a quasi-government agency called
the Department of Government Efficiency could fire hundreds of workers from the
Social Security Administration, making citizen dealings virtually impossible
with an agency serving more than 70 million Americans until someone said “Oops”
and a partial emergency fix followed.
At
the same time, decades of formal assurances that tax filings will be
confidential were reversed with no notice, to make deportations easier. Never
mind that no one will ever trust the IRS in the same way again.
Any
of these actions might normally draw equally or similarly forceful reactions of
some kind under Isaac Newton’s Third Law of Motion. That law, long fundamental
in both physics and politics, says “For every action, there is an equal and
opposite reaction.”
California
saw this in a big way during the Vietnam War, when for every draftee sent off
to fight in the jungles of Southeast Asia, at least one and often more persons
took to the streets in myriad protests fueled by outrage.
There
has been no similarly organized anger today, not even when millions of
Americans lost trillions of dollars in value from their 401Ks and other
investment accounts due to an on-again, off-again tariff war started by a
president using powers many lawyers say he does not possess.
Several
pundits postulate that when 3.5 percent or more of this nation’s citizens
protest government actions, members of Congress from both major parties feel
sufficiently threatened to begin opposing or at least questioning the policies
drawing public ire.
That
has not come near happening this year. Major cities saw large rallies in both
early and late April, including one that stretched 20 blocks through lower
Manhattan and another where Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders drew more than 36,000
in Los Angeles.
But
overall crowds numbered fewer than 2 million each day, according to most
unofficial estimates. That was exponentially short of the approximately 13
million that would make up 3.5 percent of Americans.
Any
rage voiced fell far short of what it took to drive ex-President Lyndon Johnson
from office over Vietnam, for one example of impactful public outrage.
Some
of the most angry now advocate a literal interpretation of Newton’s Third Law
of Motion, saying that whenever masked agents capture legal residents on city
streets, beefy young men should physically accost those agents.
But
answering violence with violence never works in this nation; even the wild
demonstrations at the 1968 Democratic Party convention in Chicago produced no
policy change until years of nonviolent protests followed in myriad other
locations.
To
be effective this time, popular protests could be staged outside IRS offices,
health clinics and research laboratories shut down by fiat even though their
funding was supposedly guaranteed via acts of Congress signed by previous
presidents.
Even
these would not accomplish much unless they were constant and very large,
perhaps closing down major streets for days or weeks at a time.
President
Trump has loudly justified some of his most questionable moves this year as
mandated by a significant national majority in the last presidential election.
Yet, Trump won election by fewer than 1.6 percent of the total vote, falling
short of an overall majority popular vote.
Which
means that even if there were a mandate, it was given by fewer than half of
American voters, scarce justification for the scale of changes now seen in the
character of American life and public affairs.
-30-
Email
Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough,
The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch
It," is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias
columns, visit www.californiafocus.net