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#;; the last 5 years
becabeale143 · 5 months
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otabekisautistic · 6 months
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i have to do everything myself around here. favorite heartbreaking musical. go.
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LETTERS FROM AN AMERICAN
September 14, 2024
Heather Cox Richardson
Sep 15, 2024
Five years ago, on September 15, 2019, after about a six-week hiatus during the summer, I wrote a Facebook post that started:
“Many thanks to all of you who have reached out to see if I'm okay. I am, indeed (aside from having been on the losing end of an encounter with a yellow jacket this afternoon!). I've been moving, setting up house, and finishing the new book. Am back and ready to write, but now everything seems like such a dumpster fire it's very hard to know where to start. So how about a general overview of how things at the White House look to me, today....” 
I wrote a review of Trump’s apparent mental decline amidst his faltering presidency, stonewalling of investigations of potential criminal activity by him or his associates, stacking of the courts, and attempting to use the power of the government to help his 2020 reelection. 
Then I noted that the chair of the House Intelligence Committee, Representative Adam Schiff (D-CA), had written a letter to the acting director of national intelligence, Joseph Maguire, on Friday, September 13, telling Maguire he knew that a whistleblower had filed a complaint with the inspector general of the intelligence community, who had deemed the complaint “credible” and "urgent.” This meant that the complaint was supposed to be sent on to the House Intelligence Committee. But, rather than sending it to the House as the law required, Maguire had withheld it. Schiff’s letter told Maguire that he’d better hand it over. Schiff speculated that Maguire was covering up evidence of crimes by the president or his closest advisors.
And I added: “None of this would fly in America if the Senate, controlled by Majority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, were not aiding and abetting him.”
“This is the story of a dictator on the rise,” I wrote, “taking control of formerly independent branches of government, and using the power of his office to amass power.”
Readers swamped me with questions. So I wrote another post answering them and trying to explain the news, which began breaking at a breathtaking pace. 
And so these Letters from an American were born.
In the five years since then, the details of the Ukraine scandal—the secret behind the whistleblower complaint in Schiff’s letter—revealed that then-president Trump was running his own private foreign policy to strong-arm Ukraine into helping his reelection campaign. That effort brought to light more of the story of Russian support for Trump’s 2016 campaign, which until Russia’s February 2022 invasion of Ukraine seemed to be in exchange for lifting sanctions the Obama administration imposed against Russia after Russia invaded Ukraine in 2014. 
The February 2022 invasion brought renewed attention to the Mariupol Plan, confirmed by Trump’s 2016 campaign advisor Paul Manafort, that Russia expected a Trump administration to permit Russian president Vladimir Putin to take over eastern Ukraine. 
The Ukraine scandal of 2019 led to Trump’s first impeachment trial for abuse of power and obstruction of Congress, then his acquittal on those charges and his subsequent purge of career government officials, whom he replaced with Trump loyalists. 
Then, on February 7, just two days after Senate Republicans acquitted him, Trump picked up the phone and called veteran journalist Bob Woodward to tell him there was a deadly new virus spreading around the world. It was airborne, he explained, and was five times “more deadly than even your strenuous flus.” “This is deadly stuff,” he said. He would not share that information with other Americans, though, continuing to play down the virus in hopes of protecting the economy.
More than a million of us did not live through the ensuing pandemic.
We have, though, lived through the attempts of the former president to rig the 2020 election, the determination of American voters to make their voices heard, the Black Lives Matter protests after the murder of George Floyd, the election of Democrat Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris, and the subsequent refusal of Trump and his loyalists to accept Biden’s win. 
And we have lived through the unthinkable: an attack on the U.S. Capitol by a mob determined to overrule the results of an election and install their own candidate in the White House. For the first time in our history, the peaceful transfer of power was broken. Republican senators saved Trump again in his second impeachment trial, and rather than disappearing after the inauguration of President Biden, Trump doubled down on the Big Lie that he had been the true winner of the 2020 presidential election. 
We have seen the attempts of Biden and the Democratic-controlled Congress to move America past this dark moment by making coronavirus vaccines widely available and passing landmark legislation to rebuild the economy. The American Rescue Plan, the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, the CHIPS and Science Act, and the Inflation Reduction Act spurred the economy to become the strongest in the world, proving that the tested policy of investing in ordinary Americans worked far better than post-1980 neoliberalism ever did. After Republicans took control of the House in 2023, we saw them paralyze Congress with infighting that led them, for the first time in history, to throw out their own speaker, Kevin McCarthy (R-CA). 
We have watched as the Supreme Court, stacked by Trump with religious extremists, has worked to undermine the proven system in place before 1981. It took away the doctrine that required courts to defer to government agencies’ reasonable regulations and opened the way for big business to challenge those regulations before right-wing judges. It ended affirmative action in colleges and universities, and it overturned the 1973 Roe v. Wade decision recognizing the constitutional right to abortion. 
And then we watched the Supreme Court hand down the stunning decision of July 1, 2024, that overturned the fundamental principle of the United States of America that no one is above the law. In Donald J. Trump v. U.S., the Supreme Court ruled that a president could not be prosecuted for crimes committed as part of his official duties.
We saw the reactionary authoritarianism of the former president’s supporters grow stronger. In Republican-dominated states across the country, legislatures passed laws to suppress Democratic voting and to put the counting of votes into partisan hands. Trump solidified control over the Republican Party and tightened his ties to far-right authoritarians and white supremacists. Republicans nominated him to be their presidential candidate in 2024 to advance policies outlined in Project 2025 that would concentrate power in the president and impose religious nationalism on the country. Trump chose as his running mate religious extremist Ohio senator J.D. Vance, putting in line for the presidency a man whose entire career in elected office consisted of the eighteen months he had served in the Senate.
In that first letter five years ago, I wrote: “So what do those of us who love American democracy do? Make noise. Take up oxygen…. Defend what is great about this nation: its people, and their willingness to innovate, work, and protect each other. Making America great has never been about hatred or destruction or the aggregation of wealth at the very top; it has always been about building good lives for everyone on the principle of self-determination. While we have never been perfect, our democracy is a far better option than the autocratic oligarchy Trump is imposing on us.” 
And we have made noise, and we have taken up oxygen. All across the country, people have stepped up to defend our democracy from those who are open about their plans to destroy it and install a dictator. Democrats and Republicans as well as people previously unaligned, we have reiterated why democracy matters, and in this election where the issue is not policy differences but the very survival of our democracy, we are working to elect Democratic presidential nominee Kamala Harris and her running mate, Minnesota governor Tim Walz.
If you are tired from the last five years, you have earned the right to be.
And yet, you are still here, reading. 
I write these letters because I love America. I am staunchly committed to the principle of human self-determination for people of all races, genders, abilities, and ethnicities, and I believe that American democracy could be the form of government that comes closest to bringing that principle to reality. And I know that achieving that equality depends on a government shaped by fact-based debate rather than by extremist ideology and false narratives. 
And so I write.
But I have come to understand that I am simply the translator for the sentiments shared by millions of people who are finding each other and giving voice to the principles of democracy. Your steadfast interest, curiosity, critical thinking, and especially your kindness—to me and to one another—illustrate that we have not only the power, but also the passion, to reinvent our nation.
To those who read these letters, send tips, proofread, criticize, comment, argue, worry, cheer, award medals (!), and support me and one another: I thank you for bringing me along on this wild, unexpected, exhausting, and exhilarating journey.
LETTERS FROM AN AMERICAN
HEATHER COX RICHARDSON
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squebby · 3 months
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One of the most common Last Five Years takes I hear is that Jamie sucks, and is to blame for the relationship falling apart. There's definitely some extent to which that's true, but I also think it's very reductive to pretend as though Kathy is perfect and Jamie is evil; to me, the whole point of TLFY is that their relationship was fundamentally doomed, and they were both flawed in such a way that their relationship would never really work.
Both of the "new love" songs in the show, Shiksa Goddess and I Can Do Better Than That are demonstrations that, from the beginning, both Kathy and Jamie are in this relationship for the wrong reasons. The first thing we hear Jamie say is that his main interest in Kathy comes from breaking norms, being "the story he should write", and falling in love with "someone like you". In short, Kathy is the right type of person for him, but he never praises anything about her specifically. In I Can Do Better Than That, Kathy does the exact same thing. She sings mostly about types of relationships she's unwilling to have, and praises Jamie for being the right kind of guy, but with no praise about him. Think about the parallels between "you don't have to watch the news / you don't have to learn to tango" and "if you liked to drink blood, that wouldn't matter". The songs have a lot of differences, but they're both entering the relationship for the wrong reasons.
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I don't care what anyone says, The Last 5 Years is actually so good.
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yepthisiskay · 11 months
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I have a list of everything I find that has Jeremy Jordan in it specifically the stuff I’ve listened to or watched with him in it. If there are more musicals please share I need to add more to the playlist !! Also this is for sure not everything because like he is in sooo much
Bonnie and Clyde - Clyde
Death note the musical demo - Light
Newsies - Jack Kelly
Tangled the series - varian
The last 5 years - Jamie Wellerstein
Supergirl - Winn
Smash - Jimmy Olsen
Demo for the greatest showman - Philip
Little shop of horrors - Seymour
Super kitties - octopus guy
TarryTown- Brom
In the light - Johann Faustus
The violet hour - Denny
Waitress - Dr. Pomatter
The flash - Grady
Heathers workshop - Jason Dean(Jd)
Russian Olympics thing - gay Russian Olympian
The great gatsby - Jay gatsby
hazbin hotel - Lucifer Morningstar
A killer party - Jeremy Jordan
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kairithemang0 · 4 months
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Curt thinking about Vampire!Owen vibes
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I can’t believe I’m actually listening to the last 5 years again… this is what I get for MAKING AN AU I GUESS
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theatreism · 2 years
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Then talk to me, Cathy. Talk to me.
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this-is-ali · 8 months
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If I had a nickel for every time Jeremy Jordan kissed someone's foot in a musical, I'd have two nickels, which isn't a lot, but it's weird that it happened twice.
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skaryskeletons · 2 months
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rewatched the last 5 years
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rubeslovesthesmiths · 2 months
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Listening to shiksa goddess rn, I haven’t gotten enough Jeremy lately
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lovejaerim · 10 months
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Choi Jaerim playing these three characters at the same time . . .
Top: the Last Five Years Bottom Left: the Phantom of the Opera Bottom Right: Les Miserables
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becabeale143 · 1 year
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stringcage · 3 months
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No one understands my artistic vision of TL5Y songs on the adansey playlist
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miss-galaxy-turtle · 3 months
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Good news: The Last Five Years is finally gonna be on a Broadway stage!!
Bad news: they cast a fucking goyim as Jamie Wellerstein
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I think there's more diversity this time.
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