Standing Up and Facing Down Corruption
Standing Up and Facing Down Corruption
Could this be the year the tide turns? Along with the pandemic, 2020 brought us an Establishment that may have finally overplayed its hand. People who were already on the edge have been pushed too far. They've had enough. Now they're standing up and facing down corruption, despite the risks. Will insurgent sentiments leave the safe confines of armchair slacktivism and start organizing for real action? If not now, when?Coronavirus is slicing through the Navajo Nation. With a per capita infection rate of 2,344 cases per 100,000 people, the Diné have surpassed New Yorkers as the hardest hit group in the country. Multigenerational households are hard to effectively quarantine, and the lack of running water makes sanitation difficult. Even with the deck stacked against them, though, Diné youth are standing up and facing down the virus that threatens their elders and their culture. Together, they've built mutual aid networks out of almost nothing in order to make sure their people have the information and resources they need to make it through the pandemic as whole as possible.Meanwhile, Zach Fuentes, President Trump's former deputy chief of staff, saw an opportunity. He formed a company and suddenly, 11 days later with no federal contracting experience and limited competitive bidding, he secured a $3 million federal contract to deliver respirator masks to the Navajo Nation. Although he charged the government $3.24 per mask, triple the going rate before the pandemic, 247,000 of the masks he provided were unfit for medical use, and another 130,400 were the wrong kind entirely.This is far from the first or only time that the Trump administration has emerged, green and slimy, from the same fetid swamp he promised to drain. Examples abound and have been obvious for years to anyone who ventures outside of the Trump cult's echo chamber. Recently, though, the Administration's attempts to dodge oversight reached a new level of corruption that would be comic if it weren't so corrosive.
Official photo of Howard Elliott. Public domain photo by the United States Department of Transportation, courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.
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About Dawn Allen
Dawn Allen is a freelance writer and editor who is passionate about sustainability, political economy, gardening, traditional craftwork, and simple living. She and her husband are currently renovating a rural homestead in southeastern Michigan.