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A Time for Choosing, a Time for Courage

EIN’s Michigan Fair Elections Coalition has published a statement of reflection after the attempted assassination of former President Trump on Saturday, July 13th, in Butler, PA.

The following statement by Election Integrity network’s Michigan coalition partner fully reflects the concern of EIN’s staff and leadership for former President Trump, the shooting victims, our nation, and its citizens: 

July 14, 2024

By Patrice Johnson, chair, Michigan Fair Elections

As the nation reels from the assassination attempt on former President Trump, one word emerges from the fog of shock and anger: Courage. From the moment a bullet grazed his cheek and ear, Trump made a choice. He could have stayed low and let the Secret Service scurry him out of view to safety. Instead, his thoughts turned to the people to whom he was speaking, so he stood and shouted, “Fight. Fight.”

 When candidate Trump emerged from the protective mash of Secret Service, onlookers across the world witnessed a man unbowed, a leader pumping a fist into the air in communication with the American people. Whether a person leans R or D, we all bleed red, and we all know courage when we see it.

President Trump raises his fist after an assassin's bullet grazed his ear in Butler, PA, July 13, 2024.
President Trump raises his fist after an assassin’s bullet grazed his ear in Butler, PA, July 13, 2024.

This nation was founded on fighters. George Washington was shot a number of times. The horses he rode fell beneath him. Musket balls bored holes through his red military jacket. Still he fought on. Witnesses attest to his bending a knee in long hours of prayer.

We all have moments burned into our memories. We know where we were when the first plane hit the Twin Towers on Sept. 11, 2001. Some of us can picture our elementary school classroom when our teachers told us President John Kennedy had been shot. No doubt our fathers and grandfathers carried images of the Allies landing on the shores of Normandy during World War II to their graves. 

On July 13th, a shot rang ‘round the world, and the image of a bloodied man standing and raising his fist is forever imprinted in our memories.  

Now we brace ourselves for the legacy media’s predictable attempt to exploit the situation and clamor for gun control. Others will cite a lone gunman. RFK blamed the shooting on the divisiveness rifting this nation in two, and he called for unity.

Unity for what?

This nation has come to a crossroads. One direction leads to a globe peppered with gray cinder block buildings bloated with all-powerful, big-tech/big-government demigods. The other path leads to a multi-colored beacon on the hill that celebrates individuals endowed by their creator with an equal right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.

One path leads to mobocracy; the other to a constitutional republic. One path erodes elections until they are but a sham; the other leads to fair and honest elections in which every citizen has a right to cast one ballot per election. One path leads to rule by emotion; the other leads to rational thought and rule of law. One way will end with disarming and disempowering law-abiding citizens; the other preserves the right to bear arms, to assemble, to own property, to raise a family, and worship as people choose.

In her keynote speech at the 1976 Democratic National Convention, Rep. Barbara Jordan said:

Many fear the future. Many are distrustful of their leaders and believe that their voices are never heard. Many seek only to satisfy their private work, wants, to satisfy their private interests. But this is the great danger America faces, that we will cease to be one nation and become instead a collection of interest groups, city against suburb, region against region, individual against individual. Each seeking to satisfy private wants. If that happens, who then will speak for America? Who then will speak for the common good? This is the question which must be answered.

Ronald Reagan, in a landmark speech in 1964 that eventually culminated in his winning the presidency, said we as citizens had come to a time of choosing.

Today, as we stare into storm clouds, roiling with fear, anger, and sadness, we each must face the possibility that we may fall down. The question to answer is whether we will rise up and fight for something greater than ourselves.

Will we raise a fist or go quietly into the night?

Patrice Johnson is the chair of Michigan Fair Elections. You can follow them on “X” at: @mifairelections

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