Donald J. Trump started a war with Iran without approval from Congress; he has killed without any moral justification - there will be no regime change, no saving the Iranians slated for death due to their protesting against their oppressive regime, but there will be a diminishment of America. The American people lost their heroic illusions during the Vietnam War, but we could say our best angels caused us to see the errors of our ways. We kept up the tug-of-war between our public morality and our power up to Trump. With the arrival of Trump, there arrived the thinking that power made right.
All that came to me from reading The Philosophers and Churchmen Who Fell for Fascism and listening to Is Trump’s VILIFICATION Of Democrats Worse Than Past Presidents?
That essay contains the following:
In that frothy age in France, there were many forks in the road. A person did not wake up one day and decide to collaborate with the Third Reich. There was a slow, almost imperceptible process of decision whereby someone was led one way or another. Of those who counted themselves faithful Christians, many adapted to Vichy, but many others stood against it in favor of a different idea of France—and a different idea of faith.
It is instructive, however, to consider how individuals who began from similar starting points went two separate ways. Some, like the philosophers Jacques Maritain and Étienne Gilson, saw the wickedness of Vichy for what it was, while others, like Bishop Auvity, compromised themselves morally step by step. How to maintain moral clarity and avoid a blind wandering into wickedness is a question of perennial importance. This age in France can tell us something about it.
Think how we should apply this to us, and our times.
The Chuck Todd podcast has no explicitly moral axe to grind, but what else underlies politics and our ability to judge the actions of politicians.
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