Fighting for Our Democracy

By Kerry Hall and Marcia Bernsten, CAPA Board Members

February 14, 2025

Ready, aim, fire!  This is the new mantra from the White House.  It’s easy to feel overwhelmed at the pace of major actions coming from our capital.  Information overload is one of their goals.  But the very pillars of our precious democracy are under threat like no time since the Civil War and we need a plan to respond.  What is under attack and how should we respond?

The press continues to be attacked, discredited, and silenced.  The President is trying to abolish the bedrock of the 14th Amendment, birthright citizenship.  Presidents cannot change the Constitution.  He flouts the law against Tik Toc ownership and against the proper legal manner to fire Inspector General.   He fires dedicated FBI employees who helped to prosecute him.  Our checks and balanced are being destroyed before our eyes as the President flagrantly ignores court rulings and takes over Congress’ clear constitutional power of the purse.  JD Vance is inspired by President Andrew Jackson’s brazen refusal, in the 1830s, to follow a Supreme Court decision with which he disagreed.  This list is not complete.  In fact, due to all the spaghetti being thrown against the wall, in this first draft  we had forgotten to include the pardon of police-pummeling protestors on January 6.

Since this piece was written for CAPA Viewpoints, there is no doubt more to add to this scary and growing list of threats to our democracy.  Heck, Kash Patel has been on the job for only a few days. When law breaking becomes the norm, it’s hard to put the genie back in the bottle.  The latest example comes from the dropping of charges made against the mayor of New York. 

The autocratic playbook from countries like Hungary, Russia, and Venezuela is being implemented, as we learn from the poignant book How Democracies Die by Ziblatt and Levitsky.  They point out that once the courts, the press, and Republicans in Congress have been cowed by anticipatory obedience, it can be much, much harder to regain the basics of our democracy.  Republicans in Congress are cowed by the threat of being primaried with Musk’s money.  May we soon not even be debating the powers of Dictator Don and King Elon. 

However, all is not lost.  Was the best action forward?  It’s tempting to be overwhelmed and put our heads in the sand.  Afterall, what power does one citizen have?  Perhaps you already contribute to a pro-Democracy cause, you already vote and stay informed, you contact your members of the House and Senate, and you attend CAPA events.

What else is there to do?  Resist!  Join a protest.  Kerry started one last week in his community, holding a pro-democracy sign by himself on a cold, snowy street corner in Wilmette.  Then, two of his friends joined.  Our numbers will grow every week.  It is invigorating and actually fun! 

Join the protest in downtown Wilmette every Saturday at 10am.  Bring a creative sign.  Or, consider starting an act of resistance in your own neighborhood.  Do your small part to save our democracy–before it is too late. 

Cultural Center Art Represents Harsh Reality

by CAPA Climate Change Working Group member Carter Cleland,
published February 8th in the Chicago Sun-Times.

I’ve got blood on my hands, just as the “protest puppet” at the Chicago Cultural Center. Why? Because my tax dollars, and yours, and those of Alderpersons Debra Silverstein, Byron Sigcho-Lopez and Bill Conway, go toward the purchase of U.S.-made bombs that, to date, have killed nearly 47,000 Palestinians, 70% of whom are women and children. Tens of thousands more have been maimed, and the dead buried under the rubble that was once Gaza may double or triple the known casualties. I’m sickened by my complicity in this conflict, and if that makes me an antisemite, so be it.

Carter Cleland, West Ridge

A Conversation about USAID between Stansfield Smith and Charles Johnson

Stansfield Smith:

[Stansfield Smith, a member of CAPA’s Foreign Policy Working Group, is a writer and organizer with Chicago ALBA Solidarity.]

Here are a few articles on USAID supporting US coup operations in a couple countries. I could take any country where the US has backed coup forces and find information on the role of USAID in coup operations. (likewise with NED, and CIA). Even Google, which heavily censors what we search for,  provides some of that. 

The CIA says it is all about collecting intelligence. And it is important to have good information on other countries. The National Endowment for Democracy says it is all about supporting democracy. And it is important to have democracy. USAID says it is all about humanitarian aid. And it is important to provide aid.

But in all three, those are just covers to put in pro-US regimes in different countries.

It would be much more appropriate if we campaigned, not to maintain USAID, but for the US government to increase US funding to United Nations relief agencies.

Granma: USAID and the deep pockets of the counterrevolution

Granma: USAID thieves in Latin America

Granma: Another USAID covert plan exposed

Washington Has Used USAID to Destabilize Governments Around the World

President AMLO Denounces US Interference in Mexico

FBI Investigates Juan Guaidó and Carlos Vecchio for Misappropriation of USAID Funds

USAID Admits to Venezuela Regime Change Fraud

‘Humanitarian’ agency USAID was ‘key tool’ for Washington undermining the Venezuelan government, official review reveals

USAID and the Dance of Thieves in Latin America

Nicaraguan Opposition Candidate Chamorro Received USAID Money

How USAID created Nicaragua’s anti-Sandinista media apparatus, now under money laundering investigation

USAID-Funded Coup Plots in Bolivia

Bolivia Expels USAID Because They ‘Continue to Conspire’

Stan.

Charles Johnson:

[Charles Johnson is CAPA’s Organizing Director and an activist with groups including Nonviolent Peaceforce.]

While USAID seems to be funding some helpful and life-saving programs where help is needed (for example Gaza), I agree with Stansfield Smith’s concerns about its overall motivations. In USAID’s own words: “U.S. foreign assistance has always had the twofold purpose of furthering America’s foreign policy interests in expanding democracy and free markets, while improving the lives of the citizens of the developing world.” Many peace-minded people worldwide take issue with this “twofold purpose.”

One question is how to move away from systems with dominant, extractive, superwealthy nations bestowing aid, moving to where people can flourish with their own systems and choices instead of dependence. How to reduce the world’s imbalance of wealth and ownership, how to make the U.S. less profit-seeking and charity-distributing, moving toward cooperation, equity, equal dignity of nations. In recognizing the great work some USAID programs and partnerships do, how could this be done more cooperatively, without a wealthy empire leading with its vision of progress…


Charles.

09.22.19

40th ANNUAL