Is It Happening Here?

To My Fellow Biden-Supporting Friends

Rajiv Satyal
7 min readNov 12, 2020

“They realized that to be in power, you didn’t need guns or money or even numbers. You just needed the will to do what the other guy wouldn’t.”

The Usual Suspects

It was a thrill commiserating and then celebrating the 2020 election results with so many of you. The camaraderie we felt last week as we messaged into the night, only to wake up and do it all again, is something I’ll never forget. This past Saturday, when the press finally called the race for Joe Biden + Kamala Harris, I had mixed feelings: happiness, gladness, joy, cheer, mirth, pleasure, jubilation, bliss, delight, delirium, exhilaration, elation, euphoria, ecstasy, enchantment, enjoyment, lightheartedness, glee, merriment, joviality, contentment, satisfaction, well-being… and whatever emotion comes from accessing a thesaurus.

And yet, over the last few days, these sensations have given way to one of dread. Most of my friends know me to be a diehard optimist. Indeed, my texts even deep into the darkness of Election Night showed I was keeping the faith; I began celebrating on Friday, not waiting till Saturday. We got this. Three years ago, I predicted the Biden+Harris ticket and that they’d win. I mention that not to boast but rather to lay the groundwork for what I’m about to convey.

Similarly, three years ago, Bill Maher forecast Donald Trump’s refusal to concede. And if it were just the latest in a series of Presidential tantrums, I’d take it as somebody who’s trying to spoil our good time, to rain on our parade, to piss in our soup. But Maher also said we’re witnessing “a slow-moving right-wing coup”: the complicity of the GOP evidently knows no bounds.

Look. Donald Trump is well within his rights to contest the election: I’d like to believe that if the shoe were on the other foot, we’d grant Biden that latitude. We wouldn’t want him to back down until it was truly over. However, what I’m detecting is something more sinister.

Trust me: it pains me to write this. And I do so with some risk: I’ve branded myself The Man in the Middle, and I want to bring people together, not cut my potential viewership in half (from ten people to five).

Gettin’ Elephonkey.

I don’t want to scare you or give you any (more) heart palpitations. But we need to stay on our toes here. Trump is trying to steal this election. What are his chances? Low. But higher than actually winning it outright. And any nonzero percentage is terrifying: losing in an election isn’t losing your country. Losing in a coup is. If you’re saying, “It can’t happen here,” well… it kind of did. Could you imagine Trump’s getting away with any of the things he has over the last four years? In fact, you could go all the way back to the 1980s: he should be in prison for the stuff he’s done. And still, he’s avoided true accountability at every turn.

Cue up to now. Besides Joe Pesci in My Cousin Vinny, it’d be hard to conjure up anyone in history who has had more riding on the outcome of anything than Donald J. Trump in this election. He’s facing global humiliation, financial ruin, and possible jail time. He needs a victory.

It’s easy to laugh at someone whose campaign began insulting Mexicans and wound up at a landscaping company. Trump is nothing if not a reality star who viscerally understands “The Show Must Go On” and that the television series concludes when he concedes. It’s like the end of the musical, Chicago, when nobody even cares what the verdict is… we’ll move on that fast.

But the rhetoric is harsh and the support is real: we have only two viable political parties in this country and one is nearly wholly behind this President. Watch Sen. Majority Leader Mitch McConnell’s speech… not at a presser… on the Senate floor.

And again, you can shrug it off and say, “Yeah, yeah, we’re the majority; we’re on-track to win 80 million votes.” OK, realize the U.S. has the Electoral College. And the U.S. Senate, where Republicans represent 20 million fewer people than Democrats do. And a Supreme Court on which over half of the justices (five of nine) were appointed by Presidents who lost the popular vote. So, we already have minority rule. And if that doesn’t convince you, then maybe this movie clip from The Devil Wears Prada will?

“I don’t think I’m like that. I… I couldn’t do what you did to Nigel, Miranda. I couldn’t do something like that.”

“Mmm. You already did… To Emily.”

Yeah, I just quoted The Devil Wears Prada. But we’re talking about the devil. And Nigel’s my doppelgänger.

And speaking of “wears,” I know we’re worn-out.

I know we’re tired.

I know we’re exhausted.

I know the fight now moves to Georgia, where control of the U.S. Senate is at stake.

I know Trump’s best chance was to rig the election beforehand, and Lord knows he tried. Exhibit A: The U.S. Postal Service.

I know he’s trying to delegitimize Biden’s Presidency, which is shameful and dangerous in and of itself; as Americans, we should all be deeply offended by this. (Perhaps not all 70 million Trump voters would see Biden as a fraud but tens of millions might… and that’s enough to shake confidence in the whole system.)

I heard something interesting this week: The last two one-term Presidents, Jimmy Carter and George H.W. Bush, watched their support collapse. Trump’s support didn’t collapse. On Saturday, I drove my wife over to Beverly Hills for sushi near the Prada store (being the man of the people that I am). Two blocks before Rodeo, we turned the car around, because we saw hundreds driving pickup trucks and marching down sidewalks, yelling, donning MAGA gear, and waving huge Trump flags. Maybe they thought it was an actual rodeo? I tell you, though… It was scary. We witnessed first-hand how fired up these people are — and that’s after a (supposed) loss. While I’m no mind reader, I do get paid to understand crowds. And this didn’t look like a defeated throng. These folks looked like they knew something we didn’t.

To stay calm, I’ve been scrolling through Twitter… a surefire way to inner peace as it’s an oasis of tranquility. On the real, though, there are brown voices like Asha Rangappa’s, who wrote a masterful thread about why we should step down from the ledge and not worry so much about this 45th President.

That said, I like that one Cornershop song and wouldn’t want to see a Brimful of Asha on the 45.

Then Preet Bharara summed it up with his @-reply to somebody who wrote, “Just tell me how scared I should be”: “For now, more disgusted than scared. But stay tuned.”

“For now” and “But stay tuned” aren’t exactly reassuring. This isn’t over.

If all Trump wanted to do was settle scores and protect himself by issuing pardons and firing people, he could do that. But he has refused to honor the peaceful transfer of power. He has declined to give a concession speech, directed the GSA not to authorize the transition, and fired the top brass at the Pentagon… all during a peaking pandemic.

“Something is rotten in the state of Denmark.” Or, if you prefer Bill & Ted, strange things are afoot at the Circle-K.

What’s Trump’s path? Well, when you’re winning, clarity is your friend. When you’re losing, chaos is your friend. Aim to distract, deflect, deny, and divide. Or, if you prefer Dodgeball: dodge, duck, dip, dive, and… dodge.

Specifically?

  • Pressure the courts by suing as many people and entities as you can.
  • Pressure GOP legislatures to neglect the will of the people in their states and submit a Trump-friendly slate of electors.
  • Pressure the actual electors to change their votes. They’d be “faithless electors,” and given Trump’s three marriages, he knows something about being faithless.

Are these likely to work? No. At the same time, here’s the thing: they’re not illegal. Isn’t that insane? Yep, there is technically no law that prevents any of those things from being successful. What stops him?

Us. We do. The masses.

When I began writing this, I wasn’t sure of the Ask. What am I imploring us to do? I don’t know. I’m hoping we can find the solution together. But one thing I do know is that we have a platform… some of you much larger than mine. And the other side (pains me as it does to call it that) needs to see that we’re ready to fight (and maybe not do a U-turn in our car, as I did). For now, speak up online. And know that it could develop into more: like the rest of the marches, we may need to get ready to travel. To our cities, to our state capitals… hell, all the way to D.C.

No. Sleep. Till. Biden.

I hope it doesn’t come to that. I hope I’m wrong. (I’ve heard being wrong is this weird feeling… I’ve yet to experience it. What’s it like?) I hope, on January 20, 2021, some of you forward this to each other and go, “Dude, Raj really lost it that day. What was that old bald fool thinking?”

All I’m saying is let’s keep our eyes and ears open. Let’s summon the will that the other guy clearly has. I’d rather win in my paranoia than lose in my smugness. I’d rather pull a reverse-Drake and Cry Now Laugh Later.

And if nothing else, I hope I put that Cornershop song back in your head. You should listen to it. It’s really good.

Remain Vigilant.

That Old Bald Fool Thinking.

🇺🇸 Veterans Day 2020 🇺🇸

Rajiv Satyal is a standup comic. He resides in Los Angeles. And he’s a lot funnier when the fate of the world isn’t at stake.

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