Republished with permission from John Pavlovitz
All day long I see people posting or asking the same rhetorical question: how can this race be so close?
They see that on one side, we have an experienced, qualified, intelligent woman with a campaign of joy and hope; one centered on making the opportunities and benefits of this nation available to all people. They see someone who has been an experienced prosecutor and Attorney General, a respected Senator, and a Vice President in one of the most successful Administrations in recent memory.
And on the other side, they see a C-level reality TV star/slumlord: a vile, traitorous, adjudicated rapist and felon who traffics in the ugliest slurs and stereotypes. They see a man incapable of complex thought, fluent in abject lies, and shateful to so many who call this place home or wish to. He is a man without a noble impulse whose cognitive decline is unmistakable, working solely for the whitest and wealthiest.
And these otherwise reasonable, perceptive people are looking around and asking how we could be in a virtual dead heat between two choices, that to them, seems obvious.
I get it. I ask that question, too.
I’m trying to remember that while I’m shocked that the race is this close, as someone who has called this place home for all of my fifty-five years—I really shouldn’t be and neither should you. You know why it’s close.
This race is close because bigotry, racism, misogyny, and xenophobia have been woven into this nation from the beginning, and because that mythology of American “greatness” is what he kindles in them. He speaks in the vague platitudes of American exceptionalism, and in their intoxicating nationalistic fervor they don’t care about the details.
It’s close because tens of millions of Americans are daily polluted by Right-Wing media, politics, and religion which leverage fear and prejudice, causing them to see enemies and adversaries in their neighbors and strangers and in anyone who they see as different in any way from “normal”—of which they themselves are the baseline. They are largely perpetually-petrified white people, convinced that they are in grave danger by progress and change.
The race is close because this nation is filled with people who have tethered their sense of identity to him and they are going to support him no matter what he has done or will do. They will allow this nation to fall into the very fascism they’ve spent their life decrying, all to avoid simply admitting they were wrong. It is ego self-preservation at the cost of Democracy.
It’s close because America has slowly produced millions of intellectually-lazy people who don’t want to take the time and care to wade into the complexities of issues, the details of policy, or the workings of our Government. They want a satisfying sound bite that will emotionally soothe them but not require anything from them, and their politicians and preachers parrot a steady stream of them.
The race is close because Conservatives have always gravitated toward authoritarianism. In politics and religion, they want a powerful authority figure to take care of them and tell them what to do, even if that person is predatory toward them and antithetical to their own well-being.
So, while we can all be saddened and worried and pissed off that we are fighting like hell for the slimmest margin of victory here when we should be resting in a coming landslide, we shouldn’t be shocked.
This is who we have been and still are—but it is not who we can become.
The fact that we are in this race, despite candidate changes and gerrymandering and voter suppression and Russian interference and media bias and Electoral College obstacles—shows that the tide is turning here, that equity and empathy are gaining ground, that goodness is beginning to trend.
And if we prevail in November, we can continue to show tens of millions of Americans a better version of our nation, one where competition gives way to collaboration.
If we prevail in November, we can wake up the imaginations of people who have forgotten the beauty found in diversity, by having it embodied in our leadership.
If we prevail in November, we can finally break the fever of this cultic sickness and reconnect with those who presently feel beyond reach.
And if we prevail in November, we may find ourselves soon living in a nation where such races aren’t close because we have collectively outgrown cruelty and hatred once-and-for-all.
Right now, all we can do is try and make the race a little less close.
Press on, good people.
John Pavlovitz
John Pavlovitz is a writer, pastor, and activist from Wake Forest, North Carolina. A 25-year veteran in the trenches of local church ministry, John is committed to equality, diversity, and justice—both inside and outside faith communities. When not actively working for a more compassionate planet, John enjoys spending time with his family, exercising, cooking, and having time in nature. He is the author of A Bigger Table, Hope and Other Superpowers, Low, and Stuff That Needs to Be Said.