By JOHN KANELIS / johnkanelis_92@hotmail.com
I have been grappling with how we should remember what occurred during the first week of this month, when terrorists invaded the Capitol Building.
Then I noticed a blog written by a friend of mine, a former colleague with whom I worked at the Beaumont Enterprise. Jon Talton, in his Rogue Columnist blog, called it “The Sixth of January.”
I read that and thought, “Hey, that has a bit of a ring to it.”
Rogue Columnist: Cold Civil War Turns Hot
It’s kind of like “9/11” has become a colloquial shorthand to which we refer to the attack on Sept. 11, 2001 by terrorists against the United States. When you say “9/11,” people know of what you are referring. I use that term all the time. Readers of this blog know to which I refer.
I am thinking now of using “The Sixth of January” as the new shorthand to describe the events of that hideous attack on our democratic process.
When you mention The Sixth of January, you will identify immediately with the attack that sought to prevent Congress — and Vice President Mike Pence — from ratifying the Electoral College vote that elected Joe Biden and Kamala Harris as the next POTUS and VPOTUS. It was an attack on our democratic process, on our very government … and it was incited by the lame-duck president of the United States, Donald John Trump.
Remember the Alamo. Remember Pearl Harbor. Remember 9/11. Remember the Sixth of January.
Hmm. Yeah, I might go with that.