It wasn't the outcome I expected -- but I wasn't expecting it very strongly. Hope is for saps, as the Greeks warned us in the story of Pandora. One side or the other opens up the box every election, and what comes out is
rarely never rainbows and unicorns.
On social media, a few people have written, "This fundamentally changes my understanding of the American people," or similar notions and that's what hope gets you -- it was our response to the pandemic that put a spotlight on the American psyche for me, mostly our reactions to the measures that tried to limit it: a slim majority of us are ignorant idiots, suspicious and resentful of expertise and willing to ride "You ain't the boss of me" all the way to the ground like Slim Pickens on an atomic bomb, even when reason and logic clearly shows that going along leads to the best outcome (and you can kick the would-be bosses to the curb later).
So Mr. Trump won, both in the Electoral College and (so far) the popular vote. A majority of us chose anger over joy, rants over laughs, an inarticulate man over an articulate woman, a promise of mass deportation and high tariffs over taxing billionaires and oligarchs while providing paths to citizenship for sincere immigrants, the government (of mostly men) controlling women's bodies instead of minding their own business.
As I write, control of the next U. S. Senate will rest in Republican hands by the thinnest of margins; the balance of power in the House is still undecided but it, too, will be on a knife's edge. That's not a mandate; it's a great big caution flag. I doubt it will be heeded.
If Mr. Trump gets his tariffs, look for economic hard times before the middle of his term. Look for higher prices; tariffs are paid by the importer, not the exporter, and are passed along to you and me. Even when tariffs succeed in encouraging domestic production to replace imports, the heavy thumb of government remains on the scales, impeding the workings of the free market: the version made here only needs to be cheaper than the cost of the import plus the tariff.
And about making that stuff here? If Mr. Trump gets the mass deportations he and many of his supporters long for, it will rip out the bottom of the labor market. Those low-wage workers will be gone, and it was never that they "did the jobs Americans won't do," it was that Americans won't do those jobs for such low pay. Assuming the now-open jobs can be filled, they're not going to be filled as cheaply as they were, and you know where that shows up? Mr. CEO and his Board of Directors aren't going to take a haircut over it! You and I will pay more for those goods and services. Of course, we'll want raises too, and when wages and prices chase one another, you know what you get? Inflation.
The darker side of mass deportation is that if it is carried out as described, the result will be a horror that will shame this nation for generations; the scale of the effort and the incarceration required will inevitably produce tragic results.
Between people who glory in chaos and violence (and/or grift), like Steve Bannon and Stephen Miller, between nutjobs like Robert R. Kennedy, Jr. and Tulsi Gabbard, between "Christian Nationalists" and "Dominionists" who are hoping to ride the multiply-divorced convicted felon to cultural control (look up what they say; the language is Biblical but their intent is clear: he's a means to an end), between men like Vivek Ramaswamy and J. D. Vance who have made themselves willing tools of democracy-skeptical oligarchs, Mr. Trump's second term will be fraught with wild notions, fringe theories, and cliques with interests greatly divergent from those of the country as a whole, if not downright inimical to them. Elon Musk is brilliant promoter and a good judge of when to get into a line of business, but he couldn't manage or engineer his way out of an oversized boot with the instructions on the heel.
A majority of my fellow citizens have chosen to run this experiment at full scale. The party they voted for won the election. That does not automatically mean it was the right choice.
Time will tell. I remember how things were four years ago, how things were from 2016 to 2020, beginning with lies and ending in insurrection. It was not a halcyon time, dripping with milk and honey. Don't count on any nourishing sweetness this time either, not even if you're pale, hale, well-off and male.