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A letter to the person leaving the FUCK BIDEN stickers at Starbucks

Dear Sir,

(I think it’s safe to assume “Sir.” I hate to stereotype, and a lot of women have risen to prominence with confrontational tactics recently, but it seems more likely that a man did this. Maybe you’re the person I once saw in this Starbucks who was telling his daughter the government had implemented “social justice scores” and then got mad at me when I Googled it, saying you didn’t ask to fact-checked. Or maybe not.)

I’m not going to try to convince you to vote for Biden in 2024. I’m not even going to try to convince you to vote for Democrats in 2022.

After all, you’re not trying to convince anyone to vote a certain way, either. “FUCK BIDEN AND FUCK YOU FOR VOTING FOR HIM” isn’t an argument, per se. It’s simply unfocused anger.

I’m guessing you’re posting this sticker on the Starbucks drive-thru bollard — for the third time, as of this morning — because you feel that you’ve been left out of the political power structure. You’re a minority — nationally, and certainly here in Northern Virginia. Biden’s approval ratings are low, but that’s a measure of the public’s disappointment in him, not their hatred.

And perhaps you feel compelled to do this after your candidate, the former president, has been publicly shamed and disgraced. He was twice impeached. It’s becoming clearer and clearer that his vanity, lack of empathy, and lack of intellectual curiosity led to a disastrous presidency and then a violent attempt to slash the heart of democracy. Perhaps you think he’s been unfairly accused. Perhaps you regret supporting him.

So you’re upset that people hate Donald Trump. A majority of people. A substantial majority of people.

But here’s a surprise for you:

We don’t hate you.

I’m making a few assumptions here. I assume you’re not a Proud Boy or an Oath Keeper or a white supremacist. I assume you don’t wish violence upon gay people. Perhaps I’m wrong, but I don’t see these stickers as a sign of blind hatred.

I think you feel lost.

Maybe it’s difficult for you to wrap your head around the way society is changing. It’s more diverse, and even if you’re OK with people of color or LGBTQ+ people in the abstract, you no longer feel culturally at ease with everyone around you. It’s OK. That’s normal. I’ve attended basketball games in which I was one of maybe five white people in the gym. I’ve been at a dinner table in which the majority of people at the table were lesbians. No matter how well-intended you are, it’s an adjustment. It takes time. I grew up as a conservative Christian who feared diversity. I’ve learned that it’s a wonderful feeling to embrace it.

Maybe you’re concerned about inflation. That’s also OK. Paying more for groceries and gas is inconvenient for some but forces a lot of people to make difficult decisions with their money. It eats into their savings. All I can tell you is that inflation is complicated, and the world’s top economists have a lot of different takes on why it’s happening and how to stop it. It’s nothing Joe Biden is doing intentionally to hurt you. If he could snap his fingers and stop it, he would.

Now here’s the flip side. We are scared. Donald Trump could’ve snapped his fingers and stopped a riot that caused some people to die and caused many more to be injured and traumatized. He didn’t. The people who walked the streets of Charlottesville chanting, “Jews will not replace us,” before one of their own drove a car into a crowd and killed someone could’ve snapped their fingers and stopped the violence. They didn’t. The people placing refugees in cases and separating them from their families could snap their fingers and stop it.

They didn’t. They aren’t.

Sometime in the past couple of decades, the people who do these things stopped trying to persuade us that they were right. Instead, they shout down their neighbors at school board meetings. They gloat about “triggering” people.

Well, yes. We’re “triggered.”

Because we care. Because we have the *courage* to care.

Consider the location of this Starbucks. It’s in Fairfax County, Va., in an area where most of us are white and affluent. As long as we’re not gay and we’re old enough to die before the bills fall due for climate change and all manner of debts, we have absolutely nothing to fear personally from a bunch of Republicans. Even if abortion law gets more stringent, we have the means to take a little “vacation” somewhere — even if it’s Ireland or France — where we can “take care” of things, no matter our religious or political views.

Maybe that’ll make you stop and think for a minute. “Wait a minute,” you think. “The people I’m mocking and bullying here — they’re not consumed by hate. They’re not even voting for their own self-interests.”

For the most part, no, we’re not.

Because we don’t hate.

We don’t even hate you.

We hate that our political landscape is so toxic, so dominated by the merchants of fear who have taken over the media, that you feel powerless. That you feel the only way you can participate is to sneak a sticker onto an otherwise useless bollard that partially obscured by nature.

We hope it changes.

But even more than that — we invite you to help us change it.

Yes, you.

We can talk about how to address inflation. We can talk about the best path forward in Ukraine. We can talk about how to deal with climate change — do we take stringent action to cut emissions, or do we work on adaptations, or some mix thereof? We can even talk about the specifics of when it’s OK to have an abortion — how late in the pregnancy, what kind of circumstances, etc.

But we can’t talk on a bollard. We can scratch away the sticker, you can replace it, we can scratch it away again, and what’s that getting us?

So let’s talk.

Leave a comment here. Go on social media and try to engage with someone who seems willing to have a conversation. Find out why people feel the way they do.

You’ll find that it’s not because anyone wants to oppress you. No one wants to shut down your church — though I’d imagine your pastor might want a word with you upon seeing what you’re sticking on this bollard. No one wants to take your job — unless it’s a progressive-leaning job that appeals to the Millennials and Zoomers who are specifically seeking those, but, no offense, I don’t think that’s the job you have. No one wants to groom your daughter to be gay — just be warned that she might be, anyway, and your neighbors will be there to support her either way.

You’ll find that we voted for Joe Biden and will do what we can to stop Donald Trump because we care. That’s not going to change because you said, “FUCK YOU FOR VOTING FOR HIM.” If anything, it’ll stiffen our resolve to go out there and make sure the Democrats win the midterms. (The Senate map at the moment actually looks pretty good for the Blues.)

Because we care.

We even care about you.

Enjoy the rest of your summer.

cynicism, politics

Being “triggered” is an act of courage, not cowardice

Dear Donald Trump Jr. (and Boris Johnson … for that matter, and Vladimir Putin),

On behalf of “liberals,” “progressives” and former Republicans, I would like to say the following …

You’re damn right we’re “triggered.”

We’re triggered because we’ve seen a rise in violent racist hate crimes and other signs of emboldened racism, including a fatal rally in Charlottesville that its own organizer said “wouldn’t have occurred without Trump.” (No, the recent action that’s supposed to help fight the rise in anti-Semitism won’t help.

We’re triggered because we know separating kids from their parents and keeping people in inhumane conditions because they’re seeking the same opportunities our grandfathers sought is incompatible with any sort of morality, secular or religious. And it’s even taking a toll on the economy.

We’re triggered because we know the bill will come due for the corporate debt and federal debt we’re using to prop up the economy while people like you are afraid to steer us toward *long-term* prosperity. (Yes, Obama ran up deficits, but only to bail out the last Republican president, and it worked. When the economy recovered, so did the budget.)

We’re triggered because we know we’re also passing the bill for climate change to our kids and grandkids. We don’t all buy into the worst-case scenario of impending extinction, but we know we’re going to be spending a lot of money to relocate and renovate farms, put up seawalls (got $46 billion?) or simply move cities inland, and repair all the damage from stronger storms and fires.

We’re triggered because we’re the developed world’s biggest hotbed of gun violence, and yet a minority of people who insist it’s somehow not about guns has managed to intimidate people like you.

We’re triggered because Puerto Rico is part of the United States and shouldn’t have to jump through hoops to get aid after a hurricane.

We’re triggered because we think 25-year-olds who are diagnosed with cancer while they’re working entry-level jobs without insurance shouldn’t have to declare bankruptcy to get the care they need. (They’re just part of the hundreds of thousands of people who do so each year.)

We’re triggered because younger generations are racking up massive debt just to go to college, something other countries have managed to make accessible to all.

We’re triggered because we’re the world’s laughingstock. (OK, that’s not really directed at Putin.)

We’re triggered because we believe women shouldn’t be sexually assaulted. (No, we haven’t forgotten. Nor have we forgotten that he said it was OK.)

We’re triggered because we believe our gay and transgender friends and family should have the same rights we have.

You’ve convinced farmers you’re on their side, even as your tariffs ruin them.

You’ve convinced hard-working people that they can keep their coal and manufacturing jobs rather than working to train them for the future, and they’re already losing out in industry and agriculture — thanks in part to Trump’s tariffs.

You’ve convinced evangelicals to support you despite your obvious lack of morality because they think you’ll get abortion banned. Let’s not even debate the thorny biological and theological questions there. Let’s tell the truth. If you or one of your buddies knocks up your mistress, you have the means to push her onto a plane to fly somewhere abortion will still be legal, and you can pay for the procedure while slipping her a bit of hush money. You know abortion will only be banned for poor people.

You’ve convinced people on Wall Street that it’s OK to buy into your short-term thinking and keep their party rolling.

You haven’t convinced us.

And it’s telling that you’re not even trying. Your book isn’t called “Persuaded.” You don’t even care.

We do.

We care about other people, and we will never be ashamed of it.

We will never stop fighting for them.

You will be defeated.

The good news is that a lot of us still believe in repentance. Your path back is clear.

Donate your royalties to causes that will help undo everything you’ve done.

Then come back and work with us instead of treating us as the enemy. We’re good people. You’ll feel good about it.

I’m really writing this for you.

The person who has read this far.

You can stop this. You can stop buying into the propaganda. You can join us in fighting for others.

You can vote with a conscience.

“Triggering” is easy. It’s not an accomplishment.

You can have the courage to care. To fight back.

To be positive. (Yes, it’s OK to live a happy life. We’re not just negative nannies. We want to encourage people to share the joy we get from pursuing the good life without stomping on those in need and future generations.)

Besides, we have all the good bands. All the people who make good TV shows and movies. All the good writers. We even have all the good preachers.

So come join us. We’ll have fun. ALL of us. Not just those who were born with all the advantages the world can offer and chose not to use them for anything but self-gratification.