Tag Archives: Kamala Harris

Infidelity and Soap Bubbles

An August afternoon in Bath. The weather’s being kind to tourists and photographers alike, and the street performers are out in force. In the heart of the city, a man’s making bubbles, to the delight of a crowd of children. I stop to watch as he lifts a net out of a bucket of soapy water and sends a myriad giant rainbow-tinted bubbles skywards. The children shriek with joy. As generations have done before, they chase the bubbles with outstretched arms, only to see them vanish at the smallest touch. I stand fascinated as the bubble man lifts a different net into his bucket. This net creates just one enormous bubble. The crowd holds its breath as he lifts it. A tiny, blond toddler stands very still immediately in front of the bubble man. The man manoeuvres the bubble skilfully until it surrounds the enraptured child. For a brief second, he and the child are enclosed, then the bubble’s gone and the chase resumes.

I’m at the beginning of my eighth decade on this earth, yet something in me still connects with the magic of chasing bubbles. I’m sufficiently wise now to know they’ll always burst at a touch, but still a child enough to feel the delight. It’s a delicate balance though. There’s a place somewhere between longing to catch and control things that are essentially ephemeral, and becoming cynical because I know it’s not possible. 

That place can be hard to find, and these past months it’s been particularly difficult. When a certain Donald J. Trump burst upon the political scene a few years ago, a friend remarked that it felt as if the whole of America was now in an abusive relationship. Over time, the parallels have become increasingly stark, and the relationship has begun to threaten not only America but the planet itself.

I think anyone who’s experienced an abusive relationship will understand how it feels to live in a bubble. The highs of absolute connection can be breathtaking, but the bubble is fragile and will vanish in a puff of wind for any or no reason, at the whim of the abuser. That Trump threw a plethora of tantrums when America rejected him in favour of Biden came as no surprise. The lies, threats and dominance displays were absolutely to be expected. So was the continued wooing of his base – that part of the American psyche that hadn’t yet seen through him and longed to be back in the bubble, a sensation painfully familiar to anyone who’s experienced that particular addictive craving.

Over the past four years, Trump and his team have woven deceits of such magnitude that more or less anything that comes out of his mouth these days is probably a lie, or at least a gross distortion of the truth. It’s textbook abuse, and increasingly hiding in plain sight as Trump, whether through genuine mental decline or simply because he’s confident he can get away with it, continues to bluster and threaten with impunity.

Suddenly I’m back in 1985. The fire’s burning low in the grate and there’s a distinct chill in my living room as four men attempt to manipulate me into submission to my husband. 

The Bible says …

This is evangelical Christian marriage counselling, and it’s not a form of therapy I’d recommend. Small wonder that watching successive evangelical Trumpians insist their wives have no right to decide for themselves how to vote in the upcoming election has triggered the memory. The greater wonder is that I emerged from the experience unbowed, even though considerably sadder and wiser.

Abusive relationships, whether between couples, institutions and their members, or nations and rulers are invariably about someone demanding a level of control to which they have no right. This may begin with the addictive magic of love-bombing, a sense of deep emotional connection or perhaps the fervent worship experience of a Trump rally. However, the bubble will burst at a time largely determined by the abuser. From there the abuser will feed their chosen prey just enough of the original magic to keep them in thrall, whilst gradually ratcheting up the level of control. 

Short of a miracle, the abuser has no interest in breaking a cycle that works wholly to their advantage. It’s a depressing statistic that the most dangerous point in any abusive relationship is when the victim makes a break for freedom. In the UK alone, two women every week die in the attempt. With this as context, Trump’s threat to protects women ‘whether they like it or not’ hits at a visceral level.

Doing anything to another human being ‘whether they like it or not’ is abuse. My Facebook feed yesterday included a sponsored post from Womankind Worldwide reminding me of the plight of women in Afghanistan. Under the guise of religion, the Taliban claims to protect women from predatory men who might become inflamed with uncontrollable lust. More than half the population – human beings created in the image of God, with hopes, dreams and aspirations of their own – are no longer allowed to sing, to dance, to have access to education, or even so much as to speak outside the confines of their own homes. The disciples of Trump want to take America in the same direction, because when push comes to shove there’s no real difference but the label between one religious fundamentalist and another. All of them are out for control, whether they abuse the name of Jesus, Mohammed or even Donald Trump to achieve it. 

In keeping with the example of their leader, Trumpians view serial cheating on the part of men as wholly acceptable. However, for a woman so much as to hold a different view of the world from her husband is cast as disloyalty. For her to vote for the wrong presidential candidate is outright infidelity, and just ground for divorce. The double standard is breathtaking, and exposes as pure deceit any pretence that these people regard women as human beings. It also exposes the smallness, meanness and utter narcissism of the ‘god’ they’ve made in their own image.

It may sound as if I’m suggesting that America’s case is hopeless, but ultimately, there’s a flip side to all this. Abuse addiction is tough, but it’s not impossible to break, and often the decisive moment comes when the abuser gets overconfident and displays too much of their intent. Last week’s appalling rally in Madison Square Gardens may have revealed MAGA’s hand in the nick of time. The current scramble to get conservative women back on board certainly suggests a level of panic amongst Trumpians. We can only hope and pray that the backlash from the abuser will be minimal when he’s finally spurned.

In my last post I spoke of the way their campaign of hatred and vilification contrasts with Kamala Harris’ joyfulness and inclusivity. To quote Rebecca Solnit, writing on LitHub

So many powerful forces conspire to try to convince us that we are basically selfish …That’s the story of human nature we get told the most. But in fact most human beings are altruists and idealists, which is to say we need a lot more to feel right in the world. We want justice and peace, want to live in a society that supports these things, want a relationship with nature, and we want that nature to be protected and thriving”

I believe it’s imperative to understand that opting for control is to kill all that’s good and beautiful in humanity. To attempt to strangle the wild and complex magic of human spirituality and to set up a false god in its place is invariably the road to hell.

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Prepare to meet thy God

It’s October in the city, and the flow of shoppers is already hampered by the soon-to-be-open Christmas market. Its construction is presided over by three thoroughly miserable wooden effigies of Santa Claus. They’re certainly not designed to fill anyone with delight at the prospect of the festive season. 

Signs of stress are everywhere, but nowhere more so than on the face of the preacher who’s waving a battered Bible at the oblivious crowd, whilst assuring us we’re all going to hell. I turn to catch a photograph, and realise the illuminated sign behind him is displaying an advertisement for Call of Duty – Black Ops. It feels oddly appropriate, given that his vitriol is giving the three grumpy Santas a proper run for their money.

Further on, and another street preacher is also doing his best induce guilt and depression. He’s taken it on himself to berate the motley crowd of drinkers, addicts and homeless people who inhabit the benches outside Tesco’s. He seems even angrier than the first guy, and I guess if his anger was directed at a society that leaves vulnerable people to fend for themselves in the midst of an ever-shrinking support network I might have some empathy. Instead he’s telling people already living hell on earth that they’re going to spend eternity there, which would seem both cruel and counter-productive if anyone was actually listening.

Maybe the level of cruelty in religion has always been the same, and it’s simply my current anxiety about the election in the USA that’s brought it into focus. After all, I was once thrown out of a church for having too much compassion, amongst other personal failings. Even so, I find it hard to get my head around evangelical Christians who are willing to throw in their lot with a lifelong philanderer, blatant racist, misogynist and convicted fraudster who’s shown no signs of remorse or repentance. I know God forgives, but I think the deal is we’re supposed to show some kind of willingness to change. Instead, Christianity these days seems to be regarded as a personal get out of jail free card. Any two-bit celebrity can wave their new-found faith in the face of their detractors and claim immunity from the consequences of their actions. Or in the case of a contender for the US presidency, skip the faith bit and persuade their disciples that they’re the second coming of Christ.

This last I find completely unfathomable. I’m not one to cry blasphemy, but the Jesus I’ve loved for more than half a lifetime has nothing but human form in common with the purveyor of fear and hate who took centre stage at Madison Square Gardens on Sunday night. I don’t often throw around quotes from the Bible in public these days, but I was under the impression that the fruit of the Spirit was ‘love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness and self-control’ (Galatians 5 v 22-23). There didn’t seem to be much of that on display at a rally whose attendees greeted a disgusting slur against the island of Puerto Rico, its inhabitants and the Latino population in general with rapturous applause.

From the relative safety of this side of the Atlantic, I’m growing more and more conscious of the partisan nature of American politics. On the one hand there’s Kamala Harris and Tim Walz presenting sound policy, reasoned discussion, intelligence, warmth and integrity, their campaign marked by a joyfulness wholly absent from their opponents’ rallies. While I may not agree with Harris on every detail, there is at least some compassion, humanity and optimism to her politics, all of which are starkly absent in her opponent.

George Monbiot, writing in today’s Guardian, says

‘Never underestimate the vengeful nihilism at the heart of this movement. The glitter-eyed fanatics behind Project 2025 and other such programmes will smash whatever is most precious to you, partly at the behest of commercial interests – but also to enjoy the pain it inflicts. They will crush beauty, joy, community and hope precisely because other people value them’

Indeed, Trump has made no secret of his thirst for revenge against anyone who fails to offer him full fealty. His political campaign has been marked by threats to the extent that almost everyone on the planet might have just cause to fear his ascent to power. Yet somehow the show goes on.

In another life, I spent many happy hours reading aloud from C.S. Lewis’s Narnia books, and in these strange days, I can’t help being reminded of the final volume. In The Last Battle, a wily ape realises he can deceive the rest of the animals by disguising a donkey with the skin of a dead lion and passing him off as Aslan. This fake Aslan isn’t at all the wild, joyous, compassionate, inclusive and life-affirming lion of the past. Instead, the ape keeps him hidden away, claiming he’s so angry with his subjects’ bad behaviour that he won’t speak to anyone else. The Aslan the ape creates is vengeful, manipulative and destructive, and demands absolute loyalty from his subjects. I can’t help seeing reflections of him in the right-wing evangelical movement, whose ‘god’ seems gleefully determined to consign the greater portion of humanity to the fires of hell

But the parallel goes further. Trump is now elderly and increasingly incoherent. Still filled with anger, resentment and entitlement, he’s the figurehead for a movement that flatters his vanity, but is beginning to outgrow him. It’s a ruthless movement of men (and I use the word advisedly) seeking absolute power for themselves in both the political and the private sphere, and only too happy to pervert or destroy anything that stands in their way.

Meanwhile, here in Bristol the Santas may scowl and the preachers harangue, but if every hellfire-and-damnation preacher on earth turns out to be right after all, I’ll still choose compassion and delight over anger and hate. I can only hope and pray that America has the will to do the same come polling day.

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