I was fortunate Thursday morning to connect with one of the nation's top experts on authoritarian regimes, the Yale University historian Timothy Snyder, whose words--especially, "do not obey in advance"--from his essential On Tyranny are frequently quoted here. I wanted to ask him the question on so many people's minds since Tuesday: What has history taught us about how to live now?
Snyder told me the most important thing for the moment is to avoid isolation and be around other people. "They want you to be alone," the historian said of autocratic governments because isolation feeds the sense of powerlessness that allows the regime to do its dirty work unimpeded. "Nobody is going to fix this alone," Snyder said. "That's not how this works."
Second, he suggested: "This is a good time to figure out what you're good at. Define some little human-sized zone, whether it's your library or your garden or your trade union. Take something positive that you know and do it." He also noted that the political feeling of despair in opposing Trump and his MAGA movement doesn't mean you can't work for change on the state and local level, where one can still hash out issues with forward-minded politicians.
Snyder then suggested, with a laugh, what he called "a dumb little idea"--except that it wasn't.
"Take a moment and write down a letter about the things you care about, that you're willing to take a stand about. Write that down, put it in an envelope, and take it out of your desk as we're going through these things" --like when Trump takes office in January, or early in his term.
Those of us who opposed Trump, and who were devastated to learn how many of our fellow citizens want to live under his strongman rule, need time to mourn this week's news. But it's well worth listening to Snyder's words about not just living under tyranny, but someday soon finding reasonable ways to confront it. We are going to need each other, whether it's in the streets or just at the dog park. And you--we--are not alone.