The Democratic nominee for United States Senate in Maine did not issue a policy critique. He issued a death sentence.
Graham Platner looked at the first human being in history to accumulate a trillion dollars in wealth and wrote, without hesitation or euphemism, that this man must also be the last.
Not a call for higher marginal rates. Not a proposal to close loopholes.
A flat declaration that a particular category of achievement is now intolerable and must be rendered impossible.
Excellence occurred.
Ensure it never occurs again.
This is not the rhetoric of reform.
It is the rhetoric of elimination.
The same impulse that once sent kulaks to the wall for the crime of producing too much grain, that once dragged engineers and intellectuals through struggle sessions for the crime of knowing how to build, now dresses itself in the language of “working Mainers” and “foe of the oligarchy.”
The mask is thinner than its wearers believe.
Beneath it sits the ancient, festering pathology of ressentiment...the inability to tolerate another’s ascent without experiencing it as personal theft. Platner did not stumble into this formulation. He revealed himself.
What follows is not a defense of any single man.
It is a dissection of the worldview that treats visible, world-altering creation as evidence of moral crime.
It is an examination of the psychology that converts personal limitation into political virtue, that transmutes envy into justice, that has, across every century it has been tried, produced only ruin, poverty, and the corpses of those who refused to shrink themselves to fit the approved dimensions.
The sentence is short. Its implications are not.
Read it carefully. Then read what it actually means.
open.substack.com/pub/lhgrey…