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US election: Kamala Harris didn’t lose, America did – John Pavlovitz

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John Pavlovitz, an American former youth pastor and author, has expressed deep dismay over the outcome of the US presidential election, claiming that Kamala Harris did not lose—the United States did.

Pavlovitz reflected on the collective failure of the nation, stating that by not electing Harris, America failed a wide range of communities, including women and girls, LGBTQ individuals, people of color, Muslims, Jewish people, immigrants, the sick, the elderly, and vulnerable populations both at home and abroad, such as those in Ukraine and Gaza. He also emphasized the harm done to the planet.

In his statement, Pavlovitz mourned the lost opportunity to embrace a leader who embodied hope and the best aspects of humanity, warning that instead of celebrating a new chapter, the nation would be grappling with the consequences of a leadership that, in his view, is led by a “malevolent sociopath” who shuns empathy and the law.

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As a nation, we collectively failed her—and in doing so we failed girls and women, the LGBTQ community, people of color, Muslims, Jewish people, immigrants, the sick, the poor, the elderly, the people of Ukraine, and Gaza, and the planet.

It’s unthinkable, that instead of being able to celebrate a beautiful, hopeful new chapter in the story of this nation with a leader who appealed to the best of our natures—we will instead be holding a postmortem for democracy as we enter our 250th year, stewarded by a malevolent sociopath who despises empathy and shuns the law.

I truly thought we were better than this, that our shared humanity would show up. I thought we would reject this hatred and ugliness once and for all.

I hate being wrong about the majority of the people of this nation.

I don’t know what’s ahead. All I know is that good-hearted human beings are more necessary now than ever. 

We did all that we could to avoid this moment, but now that it’s here we’ll just have to decide who we will be.

There is no way to comprehend or measure how grievous an error this is, but the only thing the decent people of this nation can do is wake up tomorrow and fight like hell for what we still believe is worth the fight, and we will.

I’ll be doing that with whoever has the strength to join me.

I’m mourning the country we could have been and the one we apparently are—but I refuse to give up believing that compassion is the right path, that diversity makes us better, and that love is greater than fear.

 

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