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The Healing Function of Investigatory Process in Sexual Victimization Cases

3/15/2021

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     It’s the Ides of March, and there is a growing clamor from Democrats in Congress, as well as within the New York State Legislature for Governor Andrew Cuomo to immediately resign from office because of a number of allegations of improper sexual behavior that have been lodged against him in recent weeks. The prevailing rationale is that he has lost the capacity to govern effectively in the absence of sufficient political support. The calls for him to leave are also reflected in the announcement of impeachment proceedings in the New York State Assembly and of an investigation overseen by New York State Attorney General, Letitia James. Yesterday, we heard from President Joseph Biden on this question for the first time. In responding to a reporter’s question, he demonstrated why he is president and the rest of us are not. Alone among the state and national political leaders who are demanding Cuomo’s immediate departure, the President asks only that Ms. James’ investigation proceed without delay. In so doing he expresses much confidence in the Attorney General and underscores the importance of allowing the investigatory process to be carried out to completion. President Biden nailed it. He is absolutely right to insist that a thorough, objective investigation do the job of shedding light on what may have occurred, the degree of responsibility borne by Governor Cuomo, and the impact the entire experience may be having on those who claim to have been victimized. If the investigatory process were to be short-circuited, the answers to those three questions would be less complete, more ambiguous and likely to twist in the wind for weeks, months, years and even lifetimes. There would predictably be an interminable second round of victimization due to the failure to properly process the allegations. As a consequence, the victims may never get the opportunity for full validation of what they claim to have experienced. Absent such validation, they become easy targets for being cast as villains or social pariahs. They become more likely to suffer from Depression, PTSD, social isolation, and poor adaptive function for the rest of their lives. Absent the investigatory process, victims are less likely to receive the social and emotional support their healing requires.

     Governor Cuomo has denied committing the acts of sexual harassment, non-consensual sexual contact and abuse of power that have been claimed to have occurred. He may be lying, but it is also possible that one or more of the complainants is either lying or distorting the true nature of what might have occurred. He deserves what every other American deserves under our constitution, the right to be regarded as innocent until such time that he has been shown to be guilty. What happened at the Capitol this past January 6th is but a more dramatic, violent version of what is happening when premature calls for resignation threaten to quash our centuries long instinct for fairness within carefully crafted democratic institutions. What almost happened on January 6th was nothing less than the crushing of our democracy; when due process is denied this too is a crushing of our democracy. What seems to have taken hold over the past couple of weeks is the latest incarnation of the cancel culture mentality which gained traction a few years ago as the remedy for the heretofore almost total ignoring of victims’ rights. The remedy of cancellation of the offensive party, whether it pertain to sexual, racist, xenophobic or other socially disapproved acts has been manifested by attempts at erasing the person from our memory and awareness. So we lose a Senator Franken for offenses that pale in comparison to those perpetrated openly and defiantly by the 45th president, simply because he is a member of a political party obsessed with avoiding looking hypocritical. We decide to never listen to recordings of Kate Smith singing God Bless America. We make plans to strip schools, roadways and bridges of such names as Thomas Jefferson and George Washington. Our default “corrective action” is to cast away rather than to rehabilitate. In so doing we attempt to erase from memory any redeemable qualities or accomplishments associated with those destined for the cancel culture garbage heap. In the tradition of American exceptionalism, we’ve become the world’s expert at institutionalizing criminal offenders of all stripes, particularly when they are persons of color. In the present circumstance, the call for Cuomo’s immediate departure may be of great negative consequence to the people of New York and the U.S. During the darkest early days of the pandemic, last spring, when New York was the world’s catastrophic epicenter, somebody needed to step up to give direction, hope and strength. Such leadership was MIA at the White House and in many governor mansions across the country. Cuomo’s daily briefings on the status of everything COVID, was viewed religiously by millions of New Yorkers, other Americans and people throughout the world. No, that doesn’t give him a pass on any sexual transgression he may have committed or excuse him from any role he might have played in issuing misleading reports about number of nursing home deaths, but it does recognize his past, present and future importance to us in at least completing the mission of ending the pandemic and returning to normalcy. The same skills and complex personality which eventuated in monumental leadership a year ago are still needed to ensure that New Yorkers continue to practice whatever the CDC recommends, to ensure we are all vaccinated this spring, and to implement a business – economic plan for restoring normalcy to our lives. Perhaps we will need another half year or longer before we arrive at the point where our need for a leader like Cuomo will not be so dire. By then, the investigation by Ms. James will have presumably provided us with the clarity needed to secure justice and due compensation for all, be it the victims or the falsely accused. At that point, Cuomo would either be exonerated, or found to be at fault and not worthy of completing his third term in office. It is then that resignation or impeachment would be most appropriate.

     Those who viewed the HBO documentary series, Allen v. Farrow have had the opportunity of seeing what can happen when the investigatory process is sidetracked in the context of a case of child sexual abuse. In 1992 at least three investigations were initiated in response to revelations made by the 7 year-old daughter of Woody Allen and Mia Farrow, Dylan, that she had been sexually molested by her father. An investigation conducted at a children’s mental health facility in Connecticut failed to confirm the allegations, as did a parallel investigation conducted by The New York City Child Welfare Administration. A focus of the 4th and final series episode was on the criminal investigation conducted by Connecticut state attorney, Frank Maco, who, although believing there was enough evidence to conclude “probable cause,” decided to abort the process. He determined that subjecting Dylan to examination and cross-examination at trial would predictably have been traumatizing, thereby exacerbating the impact of any trauma already experienced via sexual victimization. We see a poignant conversation between Mr. Maco and Dylan, some 28 years later, who listens to his explanation about why the decision to drop the case was made. We also see Woody Allen at a press conference that took place when the charges were dropped. Dylan shows gratitude for what Mr. Maco did or didn’t do. She believed that Mr. Maco indeed acted in her best interest by shielding her from the experience of being questioned in Court, surrounded by the peering eyes of strangers and family, especially the bespectacled eyes of her father. Woody, despite being off the hook for criminal prosecution, expresses great displeasure with Mr. Maco, who essentially did a  “Comey” twenty-three years before FBI Director James Comey announced he would not be filing charges against Hillary Clinton and then proceeded to excoriate her for mishandling of emails. In each instance the message delivered by law enforcement serves to permanently tarnish the reputation of the accused who is deprived of any opportunity for exoneration at trial.

     A closer look at the events of the early 1990’s reveals that a much more just and emotionally healthy outcome could have been realized. Dylan could have been spared more than a quarter of a century of blaming herself for wrecking the family, for bringing shame to herself and family, for feeling socially ostracized, for feeling permanently damaged, for feeling that she must keep her true self hidden from everyone, which means to sacrifice authenticity. Her father need not have endured the protracted attack on his reputation and career, even if he were found guilty of a crime in 1993. In that instance, he would have had the opportunity to rehabilitate and to find a new path for living life without perpetually having to brace himself for the next attack. What Dylan needed back then was the opportunity to express whatever she endured within a suitable environment featuring support, and relative privacy. She would have been able to relay her personal narrative as much as she would have been capable of at age 7 or 8, and subsequently be in a better position to modify her narrative at later times in her development. Of significant importance, Dylan would have been relieved of the tremendous, toxic burden of secrecy as the core requirement of her childhood. To feel compelled to keep such secrets is to guarantee the eventuation of shame, accompanied by social avoidance, depression and diminished adaptive function. So what could have been done differently?

    It turns out that Mr.Maco might have been able to go through with a trial and still afford Dylan a considerable amount of protection from the stressors of having to testify against her father in open court. He might have been able to take advantage of a decision handed down by the U.S. Supreme Court more than 2 years earlier on June 27th 1990. In the case of State of Maryland v. Craig, No. 89-478, the Court ruled that a child victim of abuse may be allowed to give her testimony via closed circuit television under certain circumstances, without that being a violation of the defendant’s 6th Amendment right to be able to confront his accuser.. It would have been Mr. Maco’s task to prove to the Court, with the assistance of expert testimony, that the child would be traumatized by having to testify in the defendant’s presence. It is conceivable that Dylan could have repeated the narrative that she previously told her therapist, probably with the extra reassurance of having the therapist nearby. Testimony could have been taken in the Judge’s chambers or in another setting much less austere than a courtroom. The swing vote in this 5 to 4 decision belonged to Justice Sandra Day O’Connor who recognized the “state’s interest in the physical and psychological well-being of child abuse victims… which may be sufficiently important , at least in some cases, a defendant’s right to face his accusers in court.” With such protection in place, Dylan’s participation in search of justice, backed by her mother, other close relatives and high ranking state officials would have catalyzed her much needed journey from victim to survivor to just another lovable, normal kid focusing on the task of mastering what other 7 and 8 year olds attempt to master. In his seeming benevolent gesture of “protecting” Dylan by short-circuiting the investigatory process,  he inadvertently hindered and delayed her recovery well into adulthood. Only Mr. Maco knows whether there may have been an additional factor which convinced him to steer away from proceeding with charging Mr. Allen. In the majority of intra-familial sexual victimization cases, there is little if any physical evidence or eye-witnessed account of the alleged crimes. That makes it quite difficult to win convictions, which is not helpful to an official who might be facing the pressures of running for re-election. It is not known whether Mr. Maco was facing such pressures, nor did the documentary indicate whether a trained forensic mental health evaluator was enlisted by him to search for credible or exculpatory evidence. His commentary during the documentary implied that he served as his own evaluator, mentioning how daunting it was to elicit Dylan’s candor. An unspoken third possible reason for not pursuing the case to trial, is a paucity of clear, unambiguous, specific, disclosure, even though ample situational, incriminating evidence  was found.

      In sum, in a society such as ours, one which is supposed to nurture aspirational humanistic, democratic values, political or personal agenda which is disruptive and likely to derail due process in general and investigatory process in sexual victimization cases in particular, should be eschewed. Due process takes longer and may still fail to provide all the answers one is trying to answer, but it comes much closer to promoting the emotional health and dignity of everyone concerned. For the child sexual abuse victim or even the adult victim of childhood sexual abuse it may be regarded as a necessary component or means of realizing the most complete, enduring recovery attainable. What would have happened in 2018 if the investigatory process pertaining to allegations lodged against Brett Kavanaugh wasn’t sabotaged by the very effective, contrived tantrums of Senator Linsey Graham? A comparable question might be asked about the impact of Clarence Thomas’ contrived mini-tantrum which succeeded in distracting Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Joe Biden from pursuing the investigatory process regarding sexual victimization allegations made against him to completion. When those in charge choose to prematurely abandon the investigatory process, it usually means that politics has taken over and that emotion-focused coping has replaced higher forms of intellectual problem-solving. For the most extreme recent example of the dangers of choosing emotion focused coping over problem-focused coping take another look at the videos taken at the Capitol on January 6, 2021.                             

​ Leonard T. Gries, Ph.D. The Ides of March, 2021

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“ALIENATED CHILD” VOTERS IN 2016 ELECTION

12/15/2016

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This past July, while attending what was billed as Paul Simon’s last American concert at Forest Hills Stadium, a torrential storm caused a rain delay, necessitating spectators to huddle close together under the grandstand. It was during this protracted delay that I came face to face with a Trump supporter for the first time. As a New Yorker, I had been accustomed to speaking with Hillary or Bernie people, while being shielded from having contact with Trump supporters. It didn’t take long for the conversation with the stranger to lead to a revelation. The Trump supporter had very little to say about what he liked about his candidate, but he was passionately outspoken about his hatred for Hillary. He quickly and angrily “accused” me of being for Hillary. Mercifully, the rain stopped and my acquaintance and I parted company forever. What lingered was the question of what instilled such hatred for Hillary. With the passage of time it became quite evident that millions of Americans across the country shared the sentiment to the extent that it appears to have been a significant determinative factor in the outcome of the election.

In my capacity as Psychologist who conducts Forensic Child Custody Evaluations for Family Court and New York Supreme Court, I often encounter an insidious condition that is quite debilitating for the children who are afflicted with it. It is child alienation, also referred to as parental alienation. The former label focuses on the child victim’s signs and symptoms, whereas the latter label pays more attention to the alleged perpetrator’s actions. Only recently has it hit me that there is a remarkable overlap between the presentation of an alienated child and that of a Hillary hater, such as the man at the Simon concert.  Anyone who has ever lived with, assessed or otherwise observed an alienated child knows how impervious he or she is to considering any information that departs from a fixed perception of the rejected parent. I’ve found the following definition of the alienated child to be most useful: “One who expresses freely and persistently, unreasonable negative feelings and beliefs toward a parent that are significantly disproportionate to the child’s actual experience with that parent.” Furthermore, rejection of the parent is intense, total and intended to be permanent; the child fails to acknowledge the presence of any redeeming qualities about the rejected parent. The following are characteristics of the alienated child that are most salient to the present discussion:
  • relentless hatred towards rejected parent
  • no ambivalences about rejected parent or about favored parent (one is considered all-bad; the other is considered all-good)
  • child engages in aggressive, hostile verbal (sometimes physical) attacks on the rejected parent without guilt or remorse
  • child parrots the favored or alienating parent
  • many of child’s beliefs are enmeshed with those of the alienating parent
  • many beliefs are irrational, even delusional, as they are not based upon actual experience with the rejected parent
  • child is in lockstep with the alienating parent to denigrate the rejected parent
  • there seems to be no capacity to forgive the rejected parent

For alienation to take hold, several conditions must be in place and several events must occur over time. Most obvious is the engaging in alienating behavior by the alienating or favored parent. Parental alienation strategies include making negative comments, encouraging disregard, and fostering anger/hurt towards the rejected parent, while promoting total reliance on the favored parent. The underlying message is that the rejected parent is unsafe, unloving and unavailable to meet the child’s needs, thereby creating the appearance that the rejected parent has rejected the child.

As consequence of being subjected to such alienating practices, the alienated child typically feels worthless, flawed, unloved, unwanted, and endangered.  Most often there are pre-existing conditions that heighten the probability of alienation to occur. A vulnerable child, one who is overly dependent, anxious, fearful or troubled, is more likely to be responsive to the alienating strategies of the favored parent. Developmental factors such as the child’s age, cognitive capacity, temperament, and individuation history are also relevant. Furthermore, the likelihood of alienation is heightened by the child’s being subjected to a family environment featuring domestic strife, physical or psychological abuse and/or neglect. Finally, it also “helps“ if the rejected parent resorts to inept parenting practices, as well as engages in counter – rejecting behavior aimed at the child and the favored parent.

When all or most of the above conditions and events are present for a sufficient duration, a perfect storm is created, and child alienation is highly likely to occur. It is theorized that the child, overwhelmed by parental conflict, and subjected to alienating strategies by one parent, possibly coupled with inept parenting by the other parent, is apt to regress, resorting to the defensive operation of splitting, so as to reduce anxiety. The child ultimately accepts the distortion of history presented by the alienating parent, while simultaneously relinquishing the capacity or desire for engaging in critical thinking. Self-doubt about one’s own perceptions emerge, in association with increasing dependence upon the perceptions of others in defining “the truth.” A low sense of self-efficacy, and diminished self- esteem are the inevitable sequelae, which serve as mediators for the development of such negative outcomes as depression, anxiety disorder, dissociative disorder, conduct disorder and substance use disorder.

So what does all of the above have to do with the 2016 presidential election? Among the unique aspects of this election campaign was the significantly high unfavorable ratings of both candidates, hovering somewhere around 60% or higher in poll after poll. Those who opposed Donald Trump felt he was unqualified for the job and were repulsed by many of his outrageous sexist, racist and xenophobic remarks. Those who opposed Hillary Clinton objected to her seeming dishonesty regarding past handling of emails, her purported cold-hearted response to the Benghazi tragedy, and her dealings with Wall Street, as well as the Clinton Foundation. Trump was ultimately able to prevail in the swing states, flipping key states to the Republican line, because he succeeded in defining himself as the agent of change. But that doesn’t tell the whole story. A significant number of voters who opposed Hillary didn’t just disagree with her policies or intended programs. THEY HATED HER. Many voted for Trump, despite considerable misgivings about his qualifications and character, because their hatred for Hillary rendered them utterly incapable of casting their vote for her.

One Wisconsin voter, a lifelong Democrat, explained his reason for voting for Trump in very simple terms: “He wasn’t Hillary.” In the swing states of Wisconsin, Michigan, and Pennsylvania, Trump’s collective plurality over Hillary amounted to approximately 75,000 votes. If one-half of these voters, 37,501, voted for Hillary, she would be the President-Elect. We may never know just how many of these swing voters were propelled to vote as they did more by their hatred for Hillary, than their approval of Trump as a messianic agent of change.

In my estimation, the expressed hatred for Hillary, not just opposition to her positions, reflects the same kind of thinking and dynamic that is found in the alienated child. Many of the people who voted for Trump, or for Jill Stein, or stayed home and didn’t vote, felt constrained by their hatred towards Hillary. Their hatred was intense, entrenched, and disproportionate to the mistakes she made or was perceived to have made, and disproportionate to her supposed character flaws. It took time for this hatred to congeal as it did, but the perfect storm against her candidacy was in place. Alienating behavior came almost daily from all directions, not only from Trump himself, but from right wing media. She was demonized as  being a criminal who should be locked up, despite the absence of any legal verification of such claim. Accusations of her having lied to the families of Benghazi victims about what happened there had no merit. She was endlessly labeled as “crooked Hillary” by Trump who was successful in instilling this characterization into the minds of millions of people. They swallowed it whole, without bothering to do their own critical analysis regarding the evidence or lack of evidence present. The characteristics of the alienated child aptly describe the alienated child voter in the 2016 election. Trump successfully targeted a substantial subgroup of vulnerable voters, who as a group resemble the vulnerable child i.e. economically dependent, anxious about safety and economic threats posed by illegal immigrants, fearful over physical threats posed by anyone perceived to be an agent of ISIS, or troubled by changes in the American landscape. That Hillary was a flawed candidate contributed to the alienation outcome. She exacerbated feelings of distrust towards her whenever she evaded questions or parsed words in attempting to “explain” her motives and actions regarding her handling of emails. That she engaged in counter-rejecting behavior aimed at Trump voters (remember her “deplorables” comment?) certainly didn’t help her cause, either. By the time of the election, there were millions of voters nationally, and perhaps tens of thousands of voters in swing states who passionately hated Hillary, so much like the alienated child, that absolutely nothing positive that might have been said about her or absolutely nothing negative that might have been said about Trump would have changed their mind. Their beliefs were, by that time, enmeshed with those of the alienating agent, Donald Trump, with whom they were in lockstep in their denigration of Hillary. 
​
That voter alienation occurred, and figured substantially in the 2016 election, was no accident. It could happen again and again in future local and national elections, unless the campaign/election process is overhauled. Much has been said and written about the adverse impact that the Citizens United Supreme Court decision has had on the financing of candidates. Big money can skew priorities away from the public good and in the direction of special interests. It can pay for political ads aimed at distorting reality, particularly in the minds of economically and/or emotionally vulnerable citizens. The antidote must come not only from campaign finance reform, but also from effective attempts at promoting critical thinking within the electorate. Educative efforts must start in elementary school and continue through college and beyond. Political pressure and economic incentive should be exerted on media outlets to revert to a more balanced, objective treatment of the news. Those outlets that strive for objectivity and eschew dichotomous argumentation should be lauded and rewarded for their efforts. Let’s revert to having news programs that are not content-controlled by ratings considerations, not functioning primarily as either entertainment, or proselytizing entities. Revert to having a clear demarcation between news and entertainment.
 
Leonard T. Gries, Ph.D.
East Hills, N.Y. 
                          

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VOTING ONE’S CONSCIENCE:  THE COURAGE TO ABSTAIN

11/18/2016

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​     On Monday, December 19, 2016, elections will be held in each of the 50 statehouses to determine who shall be the 45th President of the United States. The only people voting in these elections will be 538 citizens who were previously appointed to be Electors and who pledged to vote for the Presidential and Vice Presidential candidates of the political party that nominated them. With two exceptions, it is a winner-take-all practice by which the candidates with the plurality of the popular vote in each state receive all of the state’s electoral votes. Even where the margin of victory is as little as 1.3% or less of the popular vote, as it was on November 8th in Florida, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin, the victor gets to have all of the Electors, pledged to support him, vote on December 19th. At this writing (11/18/2016), there are 290 Electors prepared to vote in their respective statehouses for Donald J. Trump, as compared with 232 Electors pledged to vote for Hillary R. Clinton. Michigan’s 16 Electors have still not been determined. In order for Mr. Trump to ascend to the presidency, he needs to receive only 270 electoral votes, twenty fewer than are already pledged to vote for him. If for some reason, however, 21 of those 290 Republican Electors choose to withhold their vote for him, then the outcome of the election would be undetermined, until another vote is taken in the U.S. House of Representatives. Indeed, in the early 19th century, both Thomas Jefferson and John Quincy Adams ascended to the presidency only after they were voted in by members of the House.
     During the 20th century, there have been eight Electors who cast their votes for a candidate other than the one each had been pledged to support. Their actions were not illegal, and had no bearing on the outcomes of the elections in question. The term “Faithless Elector” has been applied to them, but conscience rather than faith may have been the determinant of their action. In 2000, a D.C. Gore Elector chose to abstain rather than vote for Gore, who was the first man to win the popular vote but lose the electoral vote since Benjamin Harrison became President in 1886. Was he a “Faithless Elector” or simply a man of conviction who could not in good conscience vote in accordance with his original pledge? In the late 1960’s, Muhammed Ali “voted” his conscience by abstaining or refusing to be inducted into the armed forces, to participate in a war he did not believe to be just. Eventually, millions of Americans came to the same conclusion about the war, but at the time of his decision, it took considerable courage to risk his career and his reputation because of deeply held personal principles. When he passed away earlier this year, Ali was mourned as one of the world’s great leaders of his time. He was beloved at the end!
     In the election of 2016, two famous Republican leaders, beloved by many, voted their conscience when they decided not to vote for the Republican candidate for President. George H.W. Bush and George W. Bush were the last Republicans to occupy the White House, and are the only surviving Republican ex-Presidents. Bush 41 publically announced that he voted Hillary Clinton; Bush 43 publically announced that he abstained from voting for President, although he voted for all of the other Republicans down ticket. “W” had the courage to abstain rather than to perfunctorily vote straight Republican. The only possible motive that he had for so doing is that he was following his conscience. How in good conscience could he vote for a man who loudly and repeatedly declared his intention to violate the Constitution of the United States, and to act without regard to our treaty and other international obligations as well as to long held values and traditions that have defined our country since Washington took the oath of office almost 228 years ago?
     How many of the 290 Republican Electors when first appointed, and how many of the 61 million Trump supporters on or before November 8th may have been fully cognizant of the dangers that their candidate poses for our country? The vast majority of Trump voters were attracted by his powerful messages of demanding fair trade agreements, restoring millions of jobs to middle class America and ensuring that Americans would be protected from the forces of Islamic Jihadist terrorism. Hopefully, only a tiny minority of his backers were responding primarily to the racist, sexist, xenophobic, anti-immigrant, anti-Latino, anti-Semitic elements of his campaign. When the Electors pledged to Trump, and when the voters went to the polls, how many acted out of support for his vow to order his subordinates in the military to commit acts of torture, in clear violation of international law? How many championed his declaration that he’d violate First Amendment rights regarding religion, free speech, and freedom of the press in the quest to “make America great again?” How many really favored his determination to disregard due process in using a federal force to round up millions of undocumented immigrants and summarily deport them? How many Trump voters were mobilized to back him because of his readiness to weaken or destroy NATO unless some member nations paid more dues, or to obliterate the international agreement that successfully contained Iran’s nuclear weapons initiative? How many really want us to walk away from our leadership role in the fight against global warming, with the future of the planet at stake? Overall, Trump voters were older Americans. Clinton voters in the 30 to 44 year old group surpassed Trump voters by 8%; Clinton voters in the 18 to 29 year old group surpassed Trump by 18%. The younger voters seemed to have greater concerns about the future of our country and our planet, whereas the older voters were perhaps more concerned about present day financial and/or safety issues. We do not know what percentage of younger or older voters backed Trump primarily because of his outspoken stance on violating our constitution, treaties, and centuries’ old values.
     On December 19, 2016, America will have a chance to prevent the horrors of having the fabric of our country ripped to shreds by the next administration. If at least 21 (or 37, if Michigan goes for Trump) of the 290 (or 306) Republican Electors vote their conscience and either vote for another candidate or abstain, then Donald Trump would receive less than the 270 electoral votes necessary to be elected President. All it would take would be for this cadre of patriotic,                                 
courageous Americans to look into the eyes of their children, spouses, relatives and close friends, as well as to look in the mirror, and ask themselves whether they must act in behalf of country. They must consider whether they should cast their electoral votes reflexively, without regard to the distinct possibility that our country as we know and love it, our democracy, may be destroyed beyond recognition for years or decades to come. In the immediate aftermath of the election, many hoped that Mr. Trump, the statesman, would emerge at long last, and replace the bombastic, narcissistic, emotionally fixated adolescent, misogynist, bully who was on display throughout the campaign. Many fancifully hoped that he would jettison his worst plans for creating an isolationist, oligarchic, white supremacist, middle class vanishing society once he takes the oath of office. Some of his earliest post-election personnel decisions suggest otherwise. We very well may be facing the greatest threat to the integrity of our democracy in the history of the United States. Up until now, the greatest threat came from within, at the dawn of the Civil War, but at least we had Abraham Lincoln to rely upon to survive.
     If a sufficient number of Republican Electors act courageously on December 19th, it would be left for the 435 members of the House of Representatives to select the 45th President. The Republican led House could elect Trump, if the vote were to be strictly on party lines. Alternatively, it could elect Clinton or Gary Johnson, the Libertarian candidate who garnered the third most votes in the general election. The eyes of the world, not to mention congressional constituents, would be on the 435 Representatives. This vote would be very transparent. Would Representatives reflexively vote along party lines, or would enough vote according to conscience and the good of our country. Those who’d vote Trump would thereby be accepting responsibility for whatever travesty follows. Those Republican Representatives who could not in good conscience vote for Clinton, could still vote for Johnson, someone who has leaned Republican in the past and who has administrative experience as Governor of New Mexico. He might very well be a facilitator in helping many Republican policy initiatives succeed, while allaying the angst that would exist under Trump concerning loss of civil liberties. It would be up to the 100 members of the U.S. Senate to vote for Vice President, be it Pence, Kaine or William Weld, former Governor of Massachusetts.
     Last June, the world was shocked to learn that the citizens of England voted to have their country leave the European Union. In the aftermath of the vote, many who chose Brexit had buyers’ remorse, when they only belatedly learned about the likely realistic negative consequences to England’s economy and to their personal lives. We can’t afford to have the same dynamic play out in the U.S. Twenty-one or thirty-seven Electors are positioned to spare our country of years of turmoil, and save our democracy… but only if they step up and act as courageously as did “The Greatest,” Muhammed Ali.


Leonard T. Gries, Ph.D., East Hills, N.Y.
Author, Gregory of Zimbabwe. Overcoming Child Abuse and the Scandal of Diplomatic Immunity
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    Dr. Len Gries is a Psychologist with over 50 years of experience with child welfare, parenting skills training, forensic evaluation, and trauma assessment. Avid Mets fan. 

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