Editorial: Arizona GOP Thinks People Should Be Willing to Sacrifice Their Lives for Donald Trump

This week, the Arizona Republican Party sent a tweet asking supporters if they were willing to sacrifice their lives to support Donald Trump’s efforts to reverse the results of the 2020 presidential election. Until this moment, such a tweet would bring to mind suicide bombers in far-off countries, or citizens on the wrong side of democracy in a distant dictatorship. But now, an American political organization, an American political party, is implying that it would be an act of virtue for civilian Trump supporters to be willing to sacrifice their lives in support of Donald Trump’s self-serving obsession with overturning the certified results of an election.

On December 8, right wing activist Ali Alexander tweeted, “I am willing to give my life for this fight,” referring to his dedication to the “fight” to overturn the 2020 election results to favor Donald Trump. The Arizona Republican Party account retweeted the post, and added, “He is. Are you?”

This should terrify Republicans, but it doesn’t appear to. Donald Trump has spent more than four years working his supporters into a hysteria that has caused them to sever their relationships with rational thought.

Trump’s supporters have found him relatable (an “outsider,” just like them, who, they believe, has the same chips on his shoulder as they do). This has made them more than willing to hand Donald Trump the strings controlling their reality. They have heard and validated their own voices in his mocking of “coastal elites;” his fear mongering against immigrants (especially from “sh*thole countries”); his disdain for “others,” including non-white people, and those in the LGBTQ community. They see in him a green light for voicing the fears, the misogyny, the mistrust of the big “Them,” which includes anyone who hasn’t sworn fealty to Donald Trump. They are impressed by his bravado, and they either don’t notice, or don’t care, that the bravado is empty.

Even though Donald Trump has done very little for them, and in fact, one could argue that he has done quite a lot against them, he has convinced them that he has their backs. He has downplayed the coronavirus pandemic, knowingly put thousands of his supporters in danger by holding rallies, and discouraged safety measures such as wearing masks, social distancing, and staying home to help prevent the virus’ spread. Yet, they credit him with ending the pandemic (if, of course, it was ever real, anyway).

Trump’s supporters are willing to believe any baseless conspiracy theory Donald Trump pitches in their direction. Their Trump hysteria has, bafflingly, created a lens through which they see Donald Trump’s corrupt actions as heroic acts to save the republic. There is evil everywhere (especially where Democrats tread), except along the trajectory of Donald Trump.

Donald Trump set them up perfectly to believe that the only reason he would not win re-election would be if the election were “stolen.” No one should be shocked, then, that Trump had only to tweet “I won” for his supporters to work themselves into a frenzied, but baseless, insistence that Trump actually did win the election. 

Each recount verifying Biden’s victory, each rejected lawsuit (including two by the Supreme Court), each verification and certification of the results by even Republican officials who had voted for Trump, has only stoked the ire of the #StopTheSteal crowd, and somehow made them even more certain that the 2020 election was stolen from Donald Trump. Now, some of them, at least, are willing to die for the cause of overturning the election results, and the Arizona Republican Party is suggesting that this is appropriate, and even virtuous. (Will the next step be a promise of rewards in heaven in exchange for a life?)

They have been saving up their 2nd Amendment rights for a time such as this (and such as the peaceful protests and the coronavirus lockdowns). This is another moment for them to confuse themselves with actual patriots who join the real military to help promote and defend actual democracy and integrity— not threaten the lives of good people and endanger others in order to fulfill the corrupt wishes of a delusional man with authoritarian dreams.

We should be angry that so many Americans (or any, really) have become literal fools for Donald Trump. But it’s also a little sad, pathetic, even, that these people whom Donald Trump wouldn’t invite to dinner, ride the bus with, or acknowledge in an elevator, let alone care whether they caught COVID-19 and died, are now, some of them, considering that they might be willing to sacrifice their lives for Donald Trump’s efforts to remain king.

Ariz. GOP Asks Followers if They Are Willing to Die for Election Fight |
The Choice 
 [2020-12-09]

‘Die for something’: Arizona Republican Party deletes martyr tweet about election | 12News KPNX-TV [2020-12-08]

Editorial: In Some Ways, Donald Trump Has Won the 2020 Election

In some ways, Donald Trump has won the 2020 presidential election, even though he won’t be the one to be sworn in on January 20. Joe Biden is the legitimate winner of the election, despite what Donald Trump and his loyalists are willing to say and do to overturn that result. Nevertheless, Trump will leave a trail of lasting figurative slime for Joe Biden that will be a challenge for Biden to clean up, and Trump and his supporters will continue doing what they can to try to ensure Biden’s failure to do so. As they do, they will continue to insist that Donald Trump won the 2020 presidential election.

Trump was already carefully nurturing division and divisiveness between the political parties. Long before the election, he set the scene for his supporters to mistrust the Democrats, as well as to refuse to accept the integrity of a democratic election (unless Trump was the winner). More than one month after the election, and with just six weeks until Joe Biden is inaugurated, Trump loyalists, including most of the GOP lawmakers, won’t acknowledge or accept the results of the election. As states have counted and recounted votes, and certified Joe Biden as president-elect, Trump’s supporters have no basis in reality for their claims that Trump won the election.

Two-hundred twenty Republican members of Congress will not say who won the election. Two others maintain that Trump won. Only 27 GOP members of Congress acknowledge that Joe Biden defeated Trump. In effect, 222 Republican members of Congress (more than 88 percent), whether by their statements that Trump is the winner, or by their cowardice to acknowledge Biden’s victory, have been complicit in promoting the fantasy that Donald Trump has won the 2020 presidential election. How, then, will they acknowledge Joe Biden as their leader when the time comes?

According to a POLITICO/Morning Consult poll, 70 percent of Republicans say they don’t think the 2020 election was free and fair, despite even Republican experts verifying that it was the most secure election in our history. This lack of trust in the election results is directly due to Donald Trump’s continual rhetoric about the election being “stolen,” his vilifying of the Republican leaders and election officials who refuse to compromise the integrity of the election results, and his refusal to concede. In this way, Donald Trump has won the 2020 presidential election, because it is his rhetoric, no matter how irrational, that dominates the thought processes of his supporters.

When Joe Biden takes office, Donald Trump will leave the White House, but he won’t be gone. A man who can persuade his cult following to believe whatever he says, and who can incite them to violent language and actions on his behalf, won’t just fade away. As the new Biden administration works to unify Americans, we can expect Trump’s loyalists to put up a fight (quite possibly literally), with Donald Trump egging them on. As Joe Biden works to get his cabinet nominees confirmed, many of Trump’s loyalists in Congress will work to block them, as some of them have already declared they would.

Donald Trump has set up a post-Trump America where most of his party have no faith in election security, mistrust science, see all Democrats as evil socialists who want to take away their freedom and their guns, and view “patriotism” as the willingness to take up arms against what Donald Trump villifies— even public health measures such as a mask-wearing requirement during a pandemic.

In an America where nearly half of Americans no longer trust or respect the democratic process, and where the silence of their party’s lawmakers implies that these lawmakers concur with the view that Donald Trump is the legitimate president for the next four years (or even beyond, according to the wishes of some), Joe Biden is likely to face challenges unlike those of any other president. How, then, will he be permitted to lead?

The Trump legacy includes a coronavirus pandemic that is out of control, largely because of Donald Trump’s incompetence, his refusal to acknowledge the seriousness of the virus, and his perpetuation of conspiracy theories regarding it. As a result, many of Trump’s supporters have ignored public health recommendations, contributing to the deadly spread of the virus. Though the coronavirus doesn’t care what political party its victims belong to, its rampant spread can be attributed, at least in large part, to the behavior of those following Donald Trump’s example. As the virus continues to take thousands of American lives as a result of disregard for the pleas of health experts, Donald Trump is winning.

Joe Biden has committed to being president for all Americans, even those who didn’t vote for him. Will that challenge be insurmountable as some of them continue their unfounded rejection of the legitimacy of Biden’s election as president? Many of them have demonstrated that they are unable to distinguish fealty to Donald Trump from loyalty to country. Some of them have shown that in their loyalty to Donald Trump, they are willing to be unlawful; others have shown that they would at least support unlawfulness; still others have shown that they would at least not speak out against unlawfulness, if it is in support of Donald Trump.

As president, Joe Biden will face mammoth challenges that will not only include trying to heal a country that doesn’t necessarily or entirely want to be healed, they will also include renewing and repairing the global relationships that Donald Trump has damaged. But Biden knew what he would be facing, and he willingly took it on. Perhaps Joe Biden will be just the one we needed to reassure us that in no way has Donald Trump won the 2020 presidential election.

Weeks after the election, Republicans refuse to admit Biden won | Washington Post [2020-12-05]

Trump continues to deny election results despite legal losses | CBS Evening News [2020-12-07]