Calming the Storm

unnamedLike many of you out there, I was stunned by the results of Tuesday’s election.  I am old enough to remember WWII and the face of a man very much like Mr. Trump, a man who also ranted and raved and eventually came up with a “final solution” to his own bigoted, violent, psychotic misperceptions of those unlike him.

Being very much human and a “damned liberal” from early childhood, I have bounced back and forth between anger and fear, pausing only for short breaths at confusion and entropy.  What do we do now?

So I was greatly moved by this post from Avaaz, which I read this morning.  I hope it will help you as it has helped me.

Sometimes in the darkest moments the brightest lights shine. Let’s make Trump a force that brings the world together, to fight for everything we love.

With hope,

Ricken, Alice, Emma, Christoph and the whole Avaaz team.

PS – Here’s a letter with some more thoughts on the moment we’re in, and the plan going forward:

We wanted to write from the heart about what just happened in the US, and what’s happening around the world.

The shock is justified – the most powerful nation in the world will be led by a breathtakingly ignorant, bigoted, violent, pathologically lying, sexually predatory, vengeful, authoritarian, corrupt reality TV star. Those aren’t insults, they’re facts.

How is democracy coming to this? How do we deal with it? We want to offer 5 points:

    1. Acceptance – we can’t wisely change anything about the world or ourselves if we don’t first accept it. So take a deep breath, and let’s face it. President Trump. And Trumpism striving for power in many of our countries.
    1. Holistic Evaluation – I can’t find a better phrase for this idea, but our brains have a deep negativity bias. We are easily overwhelmed by fearful focus on the negative, and we make awful judgments when we are. This is how demagogues rise. We can’t let it happen to us. So looking at the situation holistically, here’s some reassuring points:
      • He’s not all-powerful – The US President faces many checks and balances from Congress, the constitution, the courts, his own party, and foreign leaders.
      • He was recently a liberal! – Trump is dangerous, but not a maniac. He has praised Hillary Clinton and donated to her campaigns and many of his positions are more reasonable when you scrutinize them. “Building a wall” is just saying he will physically police the US border. It’s distasteful, but not crazy. Much of his party opposed him because he wasn’t conservative enough!
      • He’s tapped into legitimate concerns – Trump’s supporters are not simply a racist ignorant mob. Polls show at least half are people who are well aware of his faults but are desperate for change, hate Hillary Clinton, and are willing to gamble on him.
      • The “people” are not with him – Trump lost the popular vote in the election (he just won through the US’s quirky ‘electoral college’ system). So don’t think this was a landslide.
    1. Focused Alarm – now that acceptance and holistic evaluation ensure we’re not freaking out unproductively, let’s focus our concern where it most needs to be:
      • Climate Change– Trump says it’s a hoax and wants to tear up the Paris climate agreement. Climate Change threatens our species and we’re running out of time – but IF we can make sure that world leaders don’t slow down, but speed up, the US alone can’t destroy us. The rest of the world will drive a clean energy revolution that will make renewable energy much cheaper than fossil fuels – the US will be forced to switch by simple economics.
      • Fascism – we just don’t know what kind of leader Trump is. Is he a Berlusconi, the Trump-like Italian billionaire Prime Minister who was outrageously corrupt and ridiculous but not a fascist? Or is he a Mussolini? We will have to watch like hawks and respond fast to the tell-tale signs of eroding the rule of law, rigging the electoral system, intimidating the media, or promoting hatred of some minorities.
      • Terrorism and War – Trump’s instincts in the campaign were to call for things like murdering the families of suspected terrorists and introducing widespread torture. This direction is a gift to ISIS and will fuel the global conflict with militant Islam. His ideas are mostly illegal, but we’ll have to watch closely and push back hard – domestically and through US allies – if this erratic man-child uses the US military brutally.
    2. It’s the Media Stupid – Despite ALL evidence to the contrary, the American public overwhelmingly sees Hillary Clinton as MORE dishonest and corrupt than Donald Trump. This, by itself, is the reason why Trump is president. And it’s the media’s fault. US network news devoted more time to coverage of Clinton’s totally BS email scandal than TO ALL POLICY ISSUES COMBINED. One the one side, we have ruthlessly sophisticated partisan propaganda media pushing Trump, and on the other an ‘impartial’ media that chases fake scandals and ratings and suggests false equivalence between the sides in the name of appearing balanced. This is the dynamic that gave us Brexit as well. We desperately need a smarter media. Very few organizations campaign on this, and Avaaz needs to.
  1. This is a HUGE opportunity, let’s rise to it – change doesn’t happen in a steady, linear way. We human beings learn best from crisis and calamity. Our brightest lights emerge from our deepest darknesses. World War II gave us human rights and the United Nations. And the darknesses of Trumpism could help us build the most inspiring movement for human unity and progress the world has EVER seen, to not only beat back the Trumps in each of our countries, but to do so with a new, people-centered, high-integrity, inspiring politics that brings massive improvement to the status quo. Let’s get to work on it :).

With hope, and apologies for the long memo,

Ricken and the Avaaz team.


Avaaz is a 44-million-person global campaign network
that works to ensure that the views and values of the world’s people shape global decision-making. (“Avaaz” means “voice” or “song” in many languages.) Avaaz members live in every nation of the world; our team is spread across 18 countries on 6 continents and operates in 17 languages. Learn about some of Avaaz’s biggest campaigns here, or follow us on Facebook or Twitter.

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