Stop the Stupid

“Never again” happens over and over, again.

That is the sad state of humanity. We learn, then we forget.  We are painfully reminded, then we forget once again. Meanwhile, we admonish each other for bringing history to today’s table when we draw historical comparisons. How dare we compare what is happening today to Nazi Germany?! Those were different times! Indeed, they were. But were they different enough?

We are intoxicated by our specialness, of our arrogance that we are immune from the mistakes of history. Of course, we are smarter than our ancestors, except we are not smarter—not even close. Bigger, stronger, wealthier? Yes. But smarter, no. Our arrogance, addled further by our indifference, assures our stupidity. Our fathers and mothers, grandfathers and grandmothers, are screaming at us from their graves. Screaming at us to save what they built for us. To save America.

Our nation is in great peril. Weirdly, our president is the central threat to our country and our freedoms. He is the existential threat to our republic. He is destroying American power. He is the existential threat to the global economy and world order. He is working against America and for our historical adversaries. Most of all, he is working for himself and explicitly not for us. For those of you who believe I am catastrophizing, just take a moment and weigh the balance of Trump’s benevolence against his malevolence; that is, if you can even identify a scintilla of his actions that can be considered benevolent. He is a profoundly cruel, reckless, and narcissistic person. He is the epitome of the dark triad.

Further, if you are among those who believe he has some magical strategy that will somehow flip the many destructive consequences he has created in his first one hundred days to our sudden advantage, you are courting disaster. You should schedule your fitting for a jester’s costume soon. I will endeavor to remain kind to you—even compassionate—and honor your right to your own opinion, even while I find your naïveté profoundly disturbing. I will leave your conscience in your own hands. Mine is clear.

America is filled with wonderful people. But sadly today, most of us are bystanders. Many hope the nightmare of the current administration will somehow be resolved without our having to speak up, let alone stand up. That our institutions of norms and laws will somehow prevail without our active support. This comfortable convenient complacency is certainly not unprecedented. Many adopted the same behaviors before us. 1936 Germany: Maybe Hitler doesn’t mean what he says. 1994 Rwanda: Surely the Hutu extremists will not kill a million of their Tutsi rivals in just one hundred days. 1995 Bosnia: Genocide in Europe can’t happen again. Syria, Myanmar, Ukraine, Israel, Gaza, the list goes on and on. For those who believe yes, but it can’t/won’t happen in America, please reflect on the Trail of Tears, the Civil War, the Tulsa Race Massacre, the Kent State shootings, and the many mass murders we endure in the United States on a weekly basis. All of the victims thought they were smarter than their ancestors, too. They believed what in fact did happen would not happen to them, either. “Blindsided” is the characterization many survivors used, after the fact. Too often in history, “it can’t happen here” has been followed by “thoughts and prayers” and, eventually, “never again, never again.”

The things we can see happening in America today are, unfortunately, probably just the tip of the iceberg. Trump ignoring our courts and rule of law, destroying essential public goods and institutions, pouring tariff fuel on the inflation fire, wrecking critical relationships with allies while green-lighting the exploits of adversaries, will all imperil America and Americans for decades to come. Project 2025 has exceeded my worst fears. While this is all deeply troubling, however, my eye is on the president’s attempt to make our military his own.

Watch what is happening that is being largely ignored by the media. Former Fox News weekender and now Secretary of Defense, Pete Hegseth, is a useful idiot. He is useful as a sideshow—a shiny object—to distract our attention away from what is going on beneath him at the Pentagon. While the media is focused on Hegseth, Trump is replacing our military brass with sycophants designed to achieve complete fealty to himself, and it is nearly complete. His replacements will follow and enforce his orders without consideration of our Constitution and rule of law, let alone the many treaties the United States has throughout the world. For Trump’s bootlickers, he is the law; his orders are their commandments. His pursuit of a military parade to celebrate his birthday in June should not be easily dismissed as a point of egoic amusement. It, too, is a part of the authoritarian process.

Machiavelli would cheer Trump’s understanding of his principal thesis of power: command and control the tools of cruelty and violence. Routinely dispense cruelty with impunity to keep your boot gently but firmly on the neck of the American psyche. As Machiavelli instructed the prince, if you accomplish this, you may do as you wish, including, in Trump’s fantasy, becoming president for life.

I would like you to consider, however, that Trump may well be a gift from God. Certainly not as promoted by fraudulent-Christian White Christian Nationalists; rather, as the agent of destruction we need as a wayward empire to find our way back to the goodness of our basic humanity. Trump may be God’s way of telling us that we suck. Evil can be a gift if we address it with calm resolve in a relentless pursuit of rebirth. As the spiritual teacher Ekhart Tolle suggests, “suffering is a wonderful teacher.” We Americans have squandered the great gifts of our success by engaging the sins of greed, sloth, and pride; especially in the last twenty-five years. Of these charges, the evidence is overwhelming. Perhaps Trump is our way out—our evil savior.

Renewal and redemption—saving ourselves—is a process. I call it the path to hallelujah. It begins in fear and anger, then sadness, then compassion, then hope and, if we do the work, renewal and redemption. The path to hallelujah is the most human of our endeavors; we Americans love a redemption story. In America’s recent collapse from order to disorder, we are in the early stages of fear and anger. The faster we get past this, and then let our sadness dissipate, we can get back on track to a new world. I have no doubt our current administration has zero interest in allowing us to get past our fears, let alone anger. That is their trap in which they would like us to remain ensnared. They incite us daily to keep us disoriented, fearful, and angry. That doesn’t mean we can smile our way out of this mess, but neither does it mean that destructive anger or violence will emancipate us. I am not advocating for weak and woke, I am advocating for clever and whole-hearted.

In the centuries preceding Jesus Christ, Jewish prophets like Moses, Amos, and Ezekiel endeavored to keep society aware of the power of truth and the pitfalls of delusion. Truth is hard, while delusion is easy, which makes delusion much more popular. That reality is why so many prophets throughout human history met their end through exile and/or assassination. From Socrates, to Christ, to Martin Luther King, Jr. their otherwise peaceful and prophetic lives ended prematurely and tragically. As the Franciscan friar and ecumenical teacher, Richard Rohr, illustrates in his new book, The Tears of Things: Prophetic Wisdom for an Age of Outrage, “The prophet’s job was always spotting where the problem really lies: in the accusing ones themselves and in the delusions of the collective.” Like anger, righteousness is a trap as well. It provides an elaborate costume under which we may conceal our own many deceits and conceits while we rot from the inside, out.

My own prophetic charge is thus: it is time to wake up and, with attendant humility, restore the virtues that form a strong character based in both compassion and courage. We must respond wisely to God’s gift of Trump. We must view him as an unfortunate but necessary source of suffering around which to organize and affect our redemption and renewal. Standing idly by will only prolong our misery.

Thank you, God, and President Trump. Now, please Donald, go play lots of golf (if you can find any balls made in America).

By |2025-04-27T13:10:19+00:00April 27th, 2025|Current, General, Recent|0 Comments

The Great Suffering

For the Irish, life is suffering and suffering is life.

In times like these, I am pleased to be blessed with Irish blood that carries antibodies to suffering.  Those of you who know me personally—beyond the words I post here—know that 2020 has been an emotional challenge for me (to say the least).  The trending Twitter hashtag, #IHATE2020 barely begins to address my sentiment.  “Make it stop!” has been my go-to plea as night-terrors penetrate the vulnerability of darkness.  Yet, I know I have it so much better than others who are enduring not just emotional torment, but also suffer physical and financial peril.   Alas, as the Irish proverb goes, “Everything will be alright in the end. If it’s not alright—it’s not the end.”  Sadly, I expect I and we are some distance from the end.  But, there is a way out.

This period of crisis in American history seems to throw us one hand grenade after another.  9/11, the War on Terror, and the Great Recession were plenty.  Unfortunately, we largely met these challenges with deceit and greed, which is probably why we were granted an extra dose of pain.  The current period of Great Suffering that followed, escorted and twisted and amplified by Donald Trump, should provide the requisite shock to force us to reckon with the gradual but certain degradation of American values that took nearly four decades to roost. In 2020, roost turned to ravage.

All of the world’s great religions hold that we should treat each other as we wish to be treated ourselves—the so-called Golden Rule.  However, there is another common tenet of world religions that is equally relevant today: we must fall in order to rise.  As the Franciscan priest, Richard Rohr, argued in Falling Upward, “falling, losing, failing, transgression, and sin” are prerequisites to rebirth—to ascension from despair.  In Christian theology, there can be no resurrection until after crucifixion.  He notes that Buddhism observes this phenomenon perhaps more clearly than Christianity when he wrote, “suffering does not solve any problem mechanically as much as it reveals the constant problem that we are to ourselves, and opens up new spaces within us for learning and loving.”  So, may we please let the learning and loving begin?  Please?!

There are many—too many—days I feel helpless to arrest the descent of America into a swirling cauldron of darkness.  I know many of you feel the same.  However, the marathon of malicious narcissism we have endured over the last four years can be over soon, if we do the work of redemption.  The citizens of what once was the greatest country in the world must rise up by rejecting the sinister policies of our president who seeks to destroy our spirit and unity in favor of stroking his fragile ego and lining his family’s pockets with wealth and power.  Enough is enough.

The way out is this: we must share in each other’s suffering if we have any hope of uniting and expelling the evil that is Donald Trump.  We must accept—even embrace—the suffering of victims of violence, of Covid-19, of economic and social injustice.  Their suffering must become ours if we are to rise.  Burdens must be shared to be overcome.  I have become convinced this is the only way forward to unite our country and achieve redemption and renewal.  We must not just stand up for ourselves, we must stand together by injecting compassion and responsibility back into individualism.  Only then will the powers aligned against us—from within our country—be vanquished.

Oh, and vote, damn it, VOTE!

By |2020-09-08T15:04:19+00:00September 1st, 2020|General|0 Comments
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