What Do We Tell Our Grandchildren?

Well, I see that Trump’s effort to remake America into a gulag has claimed another victim: Americorps. 

If you are unfamiliar with Americorps, a recent description from the Brennan Center might be helpful.

The 1994 launch of AmeriCorps—the nation’s premier public service program, a sort of domestic Peace Corps—was one of former President Bill Clinton’s signature achievements. The program aimed to harness the idealism and spirit of service of thousands of Americans eager to contribute time and energy to addressing pressing national and community problems in a hands-on fashion.

That basic vision continues today in the efforts of some 80,000 mostly young AmeriCorps members, who receive minimal living expenses and a modest education stipend (currently $5,815) in exchange for an intense year of work. They perform tasks like tutoring struggling schoolchildren and helping out with after-school activities at under-performing schools; cleaning up parks and other public lands; providing help to veterans and their families; and responding to hurricanes, floods, tornados, and other emergencies. No program, especially one so large and challenging, is perfect. But for most participants, it’s a life-changing experience, one that can help open doors to post-AmeriCorps jobs and careers. The current funding level is $386 million, the same as for fiscal 2016. The agency’s overall allocation is a little more than $1 billion.

I can confirm that reference to “life changing”–my youngest grandson took his gap year as an Americorps volunteer. He was always a good kid–did well in school, didn’t get into trouble, and displayed the sort of empathy currently missing from our federal government–but that year saw enormous maturation. He worked (hard!) with an assortment of young Americans who came from a wide variety of backgrounds, and became newly appreciative of his own privilege. 

That grandson is graduating from college next month. He had initially hoped to work in government, but Trump’s election took that option off the table. He will join an entire cohort of young people graduating into a newly chaotic economic environment, and a threatening political and civic one.

Frank Bruni recently addressed the dilemma of these graduates in a column for the New York Times. I think he spoke for millions of us when he wrote,

It’s a hell of a thing to be surrounded by college seniors a month away from heading out into this new America, a land of malice and madness. My fellow professors and I are supposed to have nuggets of optimism at the ready, gauzy and gooey encomiums about infinite possibilities, the march of progress and that apocryphal arc, the one that bends toward justice. But all I’ve got is the metastasizing pit of fear in my own gut.

In his conversation with students, BruniI recalled the anxiety and uncertainty he’d experienced at their age, what he described as “the gnawing suspense of being on the threshold of adulthood with no clue what it had in store for me.” He confessed an inability to imagine that flux of emotions in a political moment like this one.

College students throughout the country made all sorts of decisions and nurtured all kinds of expectations based on one version of America only to encounter, less than three furious months into Trump’s second presidency, a much, much different one. It’s a situation suffused with bitter ironies: Those students have often been caricatured and vilified for not seeing enough good in America — for focusing on its betrayals rather than its ideals — and now they’re watching its leader betray those ideals daily, hourly, with a shrug or a smirk or, at least metaphorically, a cackle.

Bruni enumerates just a few of Trump’s betrayals: his calculated abandonment of a man consigned to a hellhole in El Salvador because of an administrative error, his “morally perverse assertions that Ukraine is evil and Russia rightly aggrieved, and his pardoning of the savages who smashed their way into the Capitol and bloodied police officers on Jan. 6, 2021.” 

How do we counsel these young people who are encountering, as Bruni says, not merely a change in the rules but the collapse of decency and dignity? What do I tell my own grandchildren, who were raised by a bunch of lawyers and educators and are painfully aware of the severity of the current assault on American values?

What– Bruni asks-is the fallback for a teetering democracy?

The only answer I can muster is to redouble our fidelity to the values exemplified by Americorps and the thousands of other government agencies and nonprofit organizations working to make life better for those who are less fortunate. 

Refuse to submit. Be one of the good Germans.