The liberty principle for this Freedom Friday is that sometimes war is necessary to bring about peace and prosperity. Hitler and his armies killed millions of Jews before World War II stopped them, and he is just one example of one person seeking more power by taking it from other people.
If Iran
were close to having nuclear power and missiles powerful enough to reach the
United States, no one doubts that they would use that power and those missiles
to render “Death to America,” as they so often shout.
Up
until the present conflict, American presidents have just shrugged their
shoulders and tried to appease the power-hungry Iranians – and thus kicked the
can down the road. Iran probably thought that Donald Trump would continue the same
way. Even some Americans thought that he would. Keith Koffler at The Daily
Signal says that no one should be surprised with what Trump says and does.
One
of the most stunning and yet tediously repetitive features of America’s Donald
Trump Experience is the expectation that President Donald Trump is going to
become someone else. People across the political spectrum seem permanently
immune to the realization that the country has elected a man who says and does
extraordinarily shocking things. With metronomic consistency, they exclaim, “Can
you believe what he said? He’s just completely nuts! Where’s my 25th
Amendment?”
And
then, everyone recovers, reverts to their prevailing view of Trump, and buckles
up for the next outrage, which lands with no less unjustifiable surprise.
But
it seems Trump may have gone just a bit too far, even for conservatives, with
his most recent aggravations of the natural order. Their odiousness, along with
the alleged rancid smell of the Iran war, is causing a slow slinking away from
a president they perceive as gone stinky.
[Koffler
named several “odious” words and actions: (1) the AI image of himself as Jesus
healing the sick, (2) Trump saying Pope Leo XIV is “WEAK on Crime” and “terrible
for Foreign Policy” before telling him to “get his act together, and (3) Trump
saying “a whole civilization might die tonight” rather than “threatening to
bomb Iran.”]
None
of this is great. People have a right to be offended. But they should consider
a few things before withdrawing support for Trump.
Conservatives
during the presidential primaries in 2016 ceded some of the moral high ground
they felt they always held by choosing Trump, a great but imperfect man.
They
had a choice closer to moral perfection in Jeb Bush, but they concluded,
correctly, that these harrowing times demanded something else. America’s
self-destruction seemed too near for a conventional candidate. It was time to
get a little rude and go on offense.
We
got what we asked for. Over the course of two terms, Trump has altered the
course of U.S history, diverting and even reversing leftist agendas that seemed
hopelessly unstoppable.
·
He
revamped the Supreme Court, resulting in myriad decisions favorable to
conservatives, most prominently the demolition of Roe v. Wade, something long
thought a lost cause.
·
He
completely plugged up the massive hole in the border – which presupposes that
there still was a border – ending the ceaseless waves of illegal immigration
into the U.S. that threatened to swamp our culture with something else.
·
He
changed the entire conversation on “diversity, equity, and inclusion,” polite
terms for dropping our Judeo-Christian culture into the Memory Hole and replacing
it with a Marxian, totalitarian dictatorship commanding obedience to dissolute
collectivism and relativism. In high schools, college, and the workplace, woke
equity is now on the defensive.
·
He
defeated the Islamic State caliphate, and he dawned a new age of Arab-Israeli
cooperation with the unprecedented Abraham Accords.
·
He
withdrew from the Paris climate accords and refocused the country back toward
fossil fuels, ensuring Americans’ pockets wouldn’t be picked by European
internationalists while China cheerfully burned through its coal.
These
are pivotal realignments that eclipse ephemeral measures such as a point added
or subtracted to gross domestic products or an increase or decrease in the
crime rate, as important as those things are.
I
would personally add ending—or at least vastly delaying – Iran’s nuclear
ambitions to the list, but that’s exactly what some conservatives don’t agree
with. And that’s the point. It’s a disagreement. An argument. Not grounds for
divorce….
To
repeat, we got what we asked for: Trump.
Let’s
also remember that much of the outrage Trump mobilizes is pure Madison Avenue,
designed preponderantly for effect, manufactured in the vast PR-generating
region of his frontal lobe. He’s selling – propaganda for friends, deception
for enemies.
Unlike
many other presidents, he’s arm to actual human beings whom he has no political
use for. He says hello to the janitor. His exaggerations and insults can be
unpleasant and outrageous, but there’s a humanity and even an honesty within
them.
He
does things I don’t like. But he’s prevented many worse things I don’t like.
Trump
is a towering figure who will be written about for centuries. Sometimes that
indecorous tower – excessively embroidered with Trump gold – reflects sunlight.
Sometimes it casts very dark shadows. It sways a bit with the wind, but in the
end, it has stood for conservative values more resolutely than any of the
smaller edifices, easier on the eye and ear.
We
conservatives made our bargain with Trump long ago. Let’s own it.
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