By Mildred Robertson
Today we sit on the precipice of a new year. America
has struggled through 2021 and looks with great anticipation toward a new year
that holds the potential for outstanding accomplishments or dismal failure. It
is a cliché, but nonetheless accurate to say “it is the best of times, it is
the worst of times.”
“It was the best of times, it was the
worst of times, it was the age of wisdom, it was the age of foolishness, it was
the epoch of belief, it was the epoch of incredulity, it was the season of
light, it was the season of darkness, it was the spring of hope, it was the
winter of despair.” –Charles Dickens, A Tale of Two Cities
The dichotomy of America’s existence is stark. In November of 2020, we exited perhaps the darkest
time in our nation’s modern history. We survived the unhinged reign of a narcissistic
sociopath who fed our worst inclinations toward selfishness and hatred. We
endured the onslaught of a pandemic that stole hundreds of thousands of our
friends and loved ones. We experienced a reckoning with police brutality and
its roots in slavery. We saw the demise of a once-mighty Republican party that
now indulges and promotes hate-filled radicals bent on destroying our
democracy.
While the November 2020 elections marked the
beginning of an end to this dark phase in our history, the challenges did not
cease. On January 6, 2021, we experienced an uprising that challenged the very
foundation of our democracy and threatened to topple our nation; an uprising
led by a defeated former president and members of congress.
We are witnessing an unprecedented attack on voting
rights, with Republican legislatures across the country rushing to pass
legislation that will limit access to the ballot box, and limit women’s rights
to control their own bodies. Countless individuals across the nation continue
to refuse to take a life-saving COVID vaccination that could help bring an end
to an epic worldwide pandemic. People
are dying because hospitals are foregoing or postponing life-saving treatment for
non-pandemic illnesses because COVID patients have overrun the system. As
Dickens said, “it was the worst of times.”
But there have been victories as well. Democrats
were able to piece together support for a massive infrastructure bill that is
touted to be transformative for America’s crumbling highways, bridges, rails, and
other public works. The Bipartisan Infrastructure
Law will expand access to high-speed internet, address climate change and
advance environmental justice. It will create good-paying union jobs and will
ensure that every American has access to clean drinking water.
President Joe Biden has been successful in
appointing a record number of judges to federal courts across the country to
counter the onslaught of conservative judges appointed during the Trump
administration. While COVID has been a formidable opponent, the administration
continues to promote vaccination and testing and to work with pharmaceutical companies
as they develop a treatment for the prevention and/or mitigation of the COVID
virus and its various manifestations.
A bipartisan committee is making slow but steady
headway into the investigation of the January 6, 2021 attack on the nation’s
Capitol, and the Justice Department has charged more than 700 people from more
than 45 states with participating in the U.S. Capitol riot. CNN reported on December 11, 2021, that only
50 have been sentenced, with most, however, receiving lesser sentences.
So as we examine 2021, it is almost as though
Charles Dickens was speaking directly about us when he wrote those storied words.
But 2022 is a new chapter. There are opportunities…it is our spring of hope.
We must pass voting rights legislation to ensure
that those who serve in our state and federal legislatures are a true
reflection of the people’s will. Every vote counts; and every vote must be
counted. This must be a top priority for President Biden and his administration.
He must pull out all the stops to ensure
that he keeps his promise to the black women and men who turned out in record
numbers to send him to the White House. There is nothing on his agenda that is
more important than voting rights. If we don’t safeguard the vote his agenda
will be the last in the foreseeable future to address the needs of American
citizens, particularly minority citizens.
As we head into the primaries in preparation for
the 2022 mid-terms, we must motivate the base to turn out and make their voices
heard. We must persuade them to vote despite
the herculean attempt by the far-right to block them from the polls. Meanwhile,
we must monitor the actions of states across the nation who are bent on
predetermining the outcome of elections and minimizing the voice of the people.
While we may tire of the seemingly endless battle
against COVID, the rabid radicalization of the far right, racial injustice,
voter suppression, misogyny, and copious other injustices over which we fought during
the past 5 years, 2022 holds hope for progress…redemption…rebirth.
It may not yet be the best of times, but the best
of times is within our reach. We must, however, reach out and wrench it from
those who would have us fail.
Happy New Year!