I became a naturalized American citizen in 1985, joining about 150 about-to-become-Americans from around the world to take the oath of allegiance in a spacious room in the old City Hall of San Jose.
On January 6th, when armed insurrectionists,
incited by president Trump and his enablers, stormed the US Capitol, I re-read
the oath I took over three decades ago. One sentence stood out: “I will support
and defend the Constitution and laws of the United States of America against
all enemies, foreign and domestic.”
It is the last word of that sentence that riveted me, for
it was clear watching the horrific events unfold in our Capital that what most threatens
our country now is domestic terrorism by white supremacists.
While lawmakers weigh various options to prevent a rogue
and reckless Trump from causing even more carnage in the last days of his
presidency, I find myself asking, “As an ordinary citizen, what can I do to defend
my country against domestic terrorists in these terrifying times?”
Here’s what I am committing myself to, and I hope my
fellow-Americans, by birth or naturalized but perhaps silent until now, will make
similar commitments.
First, I will join hands with as many organizations as I
can across America who are determined to root out the evil of racial
superiority through legal means. In that regard, irrespective of creed and color,
we must always remember that it was blacks who were most instrumental in
delivering the presidency to Joe Biden in the November 2020 election. His
campaign was on life support until South Carolina’s congressman James Clyburn offered
his impassioned support in February last year that propelled him to the front
of the pack. Biden never looked back after that.
What about Democrats flipping the Senate only a day
before our Capitol was desecrated? The wins by Raphael Warnock and Jon Ossoff
were mostly due to massive voter enfranchisement effort led by Stacey Abrams,
whose ‘Fair Fight’ group helped register 800,000 new voters in just two years,
despite insidious voter suppression tactics used by Georgia’s Republican
establishment.
Second, I will connect with our elected officials to convince
them that while we revere our Constitution, we should not treat it as an immutable,
timeless document. The history of amendments, beginning with the Bill of Rights
(Amendments 1-10), adopted in 1791, to Amendment 26, adopted in 1971, show that
we can treat our constitution as a living and breathing document that can change
to meet the challenges of the times.
The anachronistic electoral college is certainly
something to be looked at, but one area that needs urgent consideration is the
power of the Executive branch of our government.
The constitution was written by patriots for whom it was
an article of faith that the highest office in the land will always be held by
an American of character, decency, reason and sanity. The last four years have shown
how a president, bereft of such qualities, can exploit the constitution for his
vile and demagogic purposes. Unless we close the loopholes that give unlimited
power to an unfit president with his personal mercenaries, more carnages and assaults on our defining values will
continue under future Trumps.
Evil triumphs when good people do nothing, as Edmund
Burke wrote over two centuries ago. I know I can do more, but these are my two immediate
action items to help me keep my promise as a Bangladeshi-American to “support
and defend the Constitution and laws of the United States of America against
all enemies, foreign and domestic.”
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