Please Accept My Apology


Since Donald Trump's inauguration; the beauty of my bedroom; the solace of nearby Mt. Pisgah; and the affection of Peggy, our cats, and some of you, are like islands in a stormy sea. What I would like to do right now is to share a pleasant post that I have been working on for weeks about my bedroom. Unfortunately I feel ethically compelled to first apologize to you for what is happening in America. I'm especially concerned about the feelings and opinions of readers who live in Britain, Canada, Australia, India, and—prior to the invasionUkraine (https://dablogfodder.blogspot.com/). It is they who constitute nearly all of my active readership, and this is what I want them to know:

(1) I am ashamed of what my nation has become, and I am frightened that it will continue its hellish dissent into totalitarianism.
 
(2) I cannot divorce my personal identity from my national identity. 
 
(3) I worry that my non-American readers will also be unable to divorce my personal identity from my national identity, and that this will lead them to abandon me.
 
(4) Only a callous, arrogant, petty, and vicious nation, could elect a demon like Trump and stand passive while he destroys its democracy. Although offering you my apology might seem pointless, I don't know what else to do, and it is surely better to apologize than to behave as though everything were normal.

3 comments:

angela said...

We know it’s not you. And I’m sure most of your countrymen are angry, embarrassed or just mortified.
When someone says what everyone wants to hear. They get elected. He has duped many people. Unfortunately it might just be too late to fix it now

Andrew said...

Those of us who are not in your country but yet feel your pain, do not blame the decent citizens of a country where chaos reigns. We are not smug in our thoughts that, lucky it is not us. It could well be.

Strayer said...

I have been horrified too, Snow, and embarrassed, apologetic. Especially about how our friends are being treated, Canada and Ukraine in particular, but all. Turning our backs on them, berating and demeaning our allies and friends, what in the world has America become. One of the European leaders said after the Ukraine incident that we need a new leader of the free world. I knew what he meant and the fear that we are not long to be part of the free world tied a knot inside me.