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Thoughts on Coming Apart and the Coming Great Reset

Turning and turning in the widening gyre

The falcon cannot hear the falconer

Kit Webster

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The Beat Goes On -

The Emperor's New Clothes,

Trump Cranks It Up to 11

and

Ukraine Is Scary

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February 21, 2025​

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Themes and Theses - Why I'm Contemplating Out Loud

 

 

(Initially formulated in the early 90s, following decades of reading history, philosophy, psychology and a lot of contemplation, particularly on the subject of cycles. In the end, this is a relatively straightforward story about human nature and of history rhyming.)

The US will enter a period of crisis in the early 2000s. In the late 90s, I incorporated Strauss' and Howe's terminology of the Fourth Turning (without incorporating their generations paradigm) and agreed with Howe that the end stage of the crisis began with the Great Financial Crisis and would last into the early 2030s. We are not yet to the middle of the end stage of the crisis.

The crisis will be serious and could be existential.

Internal strife will increase, up to and including secession and civil war.

International conflicts will increase as the vacuum created by the weakening of the US is filled by other players.

There will be many threads to the crisis, but the primary thread will be debt, deficits and entitlements. Other factors include, eg, demographics, a loss of meaning and myth and a loss of self-discipline.

Politics will move leftward as citizens look for some refuge from the chaos. The US will become increasingly susceptible to a (man) on a white horse, who can come from either the left or the right.

Inflation, as the most likely way to address debt since austerity is not politically acceptable, will significantly lower standards of living, exacerbating the civil crises.

Eventually, the dollar will be inflated away and lose its reserve status.

Once the old rot is cleared out, and assuming continuity, there will be the basis for the establishment of a new order.

(Added around 2020) The loss of faith by our youth in our founding principles means that the new order will at least partially be based on new principles. As yet, I have no visibility as to what those principles might be.

(Added in the early 00s) While humans are contributing to global warming, policies implemented to address manmade global warming will create a significant energy crisis, probably toward the end of the Fourth Turning.

(Added in 2023) The lowering / elimination of standards in education, the judiciary, law enforcement, the military and other segments of our society will create a population unable to adequately comprehend, do or respond to the challenges of democracy and culture.

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Quotes to Contemplate

Of course, I know Trump has a different leadership and negotiating style. I get that. My confusion stems from trying to figure out which is the negotiating part, and which is just bad policy. - John Mauldin

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The image (of the US) has changed from liberator to great disrupter to landlord seeking rent. - Singapore Minister of Defense

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We are moving from a world of preference to one of constraints. - Grant Williams

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... a clear pattern has emerged: Trump is giving up on the concept of unipolarity, walking away from Europe, and refocusing US foreign policy on the Western Hemisphere. - Doomberg

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> Primary Ideas in This Week's Post

 

The Good Trump is addressing real issues that have been ignored and allowed to fester for decades.

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The Bad Trump is also expanding the borders of his authoritarianism.

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All of these Trump things are transactional - he has no ideology - and he is running roughshod over our institutions.

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He scared the holy shit out of the Western World through Vance's speech in Munich and by sitting down with Putin and telling the rest of the world to buggar off. The impacts of these actions cannot be overstated.

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​Ukraine is probably screwed, although I have viewed that as being inevitable since the war began. The larger issue is Eastern Europe's exposure to Putin.

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It is my guess that Trump is cutting expenses for two reasons: to actually cut the fat out of government, which needs cutting, and to provide the basis for a tax cut. I do not think this is about debt, deficits or inflation.

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The times, they are a changin' - back. Real fur is coming back into fashion.

The Emperor's New Clothes

(I want to preface this article by reiterating that I did not vote for Trump (or Harris) and I do not like Trump.)

"The Emperor's New Clothes" is a fairy tale where a vain emperor, obsessed with fashion, is tricked by two con artists who claim to weave a magical fabric only visible to wise people; everyone in the court, including the emperor, pretends to see the invisible clothes out of fear of appearing foolish, until a young child bravely points out that the emperor is actually naked, exposing the deception and the emperor's vanity. 

Recently, I have been contemplating about the Good Trump and the Bad Trump. He reminds me of the "little girl with the curl" - when she was good, she was very good but when she was bad, she was very bad.

In this piece, Trump is the young child in the story about the emperor's new clothes. He is stating obvious truths that the country has pretended do not exist.

For decades, our country has been in decline in most of its dimensions. We have continued onward, basically ignoring the rot of debt, deficits and entitlements, decline of institutions, rampant corruption, unaddressed riots in the streets, ignoring the rule of law and the fact that Congress essentially no longer functions.

We cannot afford to do all the things we do, including the policing of the world. Many things have to change, and since millions and billions of people are the beneficiaries of the US's largess, millions and billions of people will be upset. Since many of those are just regular people who have organized their lives around receiving some form of largess from the US government, there will be many, real, tragic stories.

Whatever is unsustainable will stop, and it has been my message that the way the US spends money and organizes the world will and must change in any event.

Trump is the first step in that process.

It will be profound, and one result will be a significant lowering of living standards in the US - we took a debt-fueled "prosperity" too far.

Another change is that geopolitics will return to a multi-polar Great Game, in which the major powers move the pieces around on the chessboard.

Again, these things must and will happen in any event. Trump is simply the first young child, and the first to take steps to recognize the nakedness of the US.

It is ironic that in the next contemplation, Trump takes the role of the (very) vain emperor, using the word advisedly, where many of his followers hold their noses and admire his non-existent clothes. 

That's the Bad Trump.

Trump Dials It Up To 11

Trump is on a roll, and the narcissist is full of himself.

He made a post on Truth Social, "LONG LIVE THE KING."

He also quoted Napoleon in a post, "He who saves his country does not violate any laws."

Not good, not appropriate.

Disturbing.

He also thought out loud about his "reelection campaign."

His agreement with New York City Mayor Adams was almost certainly a corrupt bargain and a clear misstep. The wound will not be fatal, but a wound it is.

Trump loves to wreak havoc and to play games, and he always overstates demands and positions in all capital letters. It is very difficult to figure out what is going on.

However, I have found that there is very often method in his madness. He weaves multiple story lines by switching rapidly from one to another, dropping bread crumbs.

​Follow the bread crumbs.

Ben Hunt Nails It Again

Trumpism is an embrace of America as a Great Power and a rejection of America as a Good Power, in all its forms, both domestic and internationally. More than that, it is an ideological embrace of America as a Great Power, that this is everything America should be, and an ideological rejection of America as a Good Power, that this is something America should never be.

To be clear, I don’t mean “good” in the sense of doling out foreign aid and research grants lavishly and stupidly and for my pet social activist causes. I mean “good” in the sense of policy goals beyond realpolitik. I mean “good” in the sense of what the Framers of the Constitution called a more perfect Union, where ideas like liberty and justice for all aren’t just side effects of being the biggest bully on the block, but are the direct goals of public policy even at the cost of “efficiency”.

Also to be clear, I don’t think Trumpism is evil. It’s the pursuit of great power for great power’s sake … good and evil have nothing to do with it. But I absolutely think it is a tragedy, because the pursuit of great power for great power’s sake transforms every American policy, both foreign and domestic, into a protection racket of one form or another. Moreover, the prosecution of our laws and the conduct of our foreign policy, both squarely within the Constitutional purview of the President, are now married with the media and technology resources of the richest men in the world. 

Ukraine - Very Scary

It has been my view since the war started that Russia would prevail for four, principal reasons:

1. The war is one of attrition and Russia has more bodies to throw at it.

2. America almost always gets war weary.

3. We cannot physically sustain a war for an extended period of time.

4. We cannot afford it.

Enter Trump, who wants to save money wherever he can, and is looking for a disarmament treaty with both Russia and China. 

Time to bring the war to an end as part of a grand bargain.

Only, the Russian threat to Europe is still there and there must be various mechanisms to ensure that Russia stays quiet for a while. Almost certainly Russia will reassert itself in the future, but, maybe with some breathing room, Europe can find a way to defend itself.

The primary way I have seen this ending is for Ukraine to be screwed. It will both have been heavily damaged and will likely lose additional territory. If Trump can get Russia back to its old occupation borders, that will be a win.

I did not see Trump locking Europe out of the discussions, but that is consistent with Trump's determination that Europe begin to fend for itself. Part of the US's withdrawal from parts of its military commitments.

He scared the total shit out of the entire Western World - I think the technical term is, rug pull. They have not taken the steps necessary to protect themselves and have allocated money that would have gone to defense primarily to social programs. Wrenching changes coming.

We are back to great powers carving up the world as part of a resurrection of the Great Game, now that the US does not rule the world.

There is a real danger that Trump withdraws from Eastern Europe and creates a power vacuum that Putin will fill. 

It is always difficult to tell what is really on Trump's mind, but this would profoundly rearrange the world order and strengthen Putin.

Very scary.

Also, think about how things change if (bread crumb warning) Trump gets the mineral deal with Ukraine.

Nothing to do but watch with fingers crossed.

Markets

Updated Charts

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> No change in outlook

> Just spit-balling here, but it appears to me that Trump is cutting expenses so he can have a tax decrease. This is not, I think, much about the debt and deficit, or inflation.

> BTW, a $5,000 payment to each household is over $650 billion, so either that's not gonna happen, or it will be very deficit-y, not to mention inflationary.

> (Yawn) Another government shutdown looming - March 14.

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So, You Say You Want A Revolution?

> Fun fact, Trump was sworn in one month ago, yesterday

> Very nice article by Roger Pielke, Jr at the bottom of this post. Follow Roger at The Honest Broker on Substack.

> Trump - "I always abide by the courts, and then I'll have to appeal it."

> The empire strikes back - including litigation as far as the eye can see.

- A Judge on Thursday blocked parts of two executive orders issued by President Trump banning or restricting various forms of 'gender-affirming care' - or as one of the executive orders is titled "Protecting Children from Chemical and Surgical Mutilation." US District Judge Brendan Hurson of Baltimore ruled that a group of transgender teens and LGBTQ organizations that sued were likely to prevail on all of their claims that the EOs are without authority and amount to illegal and unconstitutional discrimination.

"Stopping care in the middle of receiving it, any care, really, casts doubt on whether in fact the goals are to protect the recipients of the care," said Hurson.

- A judge ruled that DOGE can keep accessing student data.

- The New York Times reported Monday that four of New York City’s deputy mayors—top officials in the city government—would resign following embattled Mayor Eric Adams’ apparent offer to help the Trump administration with immigration enforcement in exchange for the dismissal of the federal corruption case against him.

- A judge declined to grant a request by 14 state attorneys general to temporarily bar Elon Musk and his associates from accessing data at seven federal agencies and moving forward with their efforts to slash the government work force.

- Civil rights groups sued the Trump administration over cuts to diversity programs.

>  NY Governor Kathy Hochul is considering removing Adams from office. Separately - Al Sharpton arrives at Gov. Hochul’s Manhattan office for a meeting on the possible removal of Mayor Eric Adams.

> Conspiracy theorists will be pleased - Trump Administration Considers Auditing Fort Knox Gold Reserves Amid Strategic Asset Reserve Plans.

> What could go wrong? (Trump quoting Napoleon.)

> The administration asked the Supreme Court on Sunday to clear the way for the president to fire the leader of an independent agency that investigates whistleblower reports filed by government workers — the first time President Donald Trump has appealed to the justices for help in his efforts to remake and seize greater control of the federal bureaucracy.

Hampton Dellinger, the head of the Office of Special Counsel, sued the Trump administration after he was fired in a one-sentence email this month. Dellinger said his termination was illegal because it violated a law that shields leaders of independent agencies from removal by the president, “except in cases of neglect of duty, malfeasance or inefficiency.”

> I think this is right - from the Financial Times - If JD Vance hoped to persuade his audience in Munich, rather than simply insult it, he failed. Indeed, his speech backfired spectacularly, convincing many listeners that America itself is now a threat to Europe ... (Kit) I actually think it scared the shit out of them and I think that was Vance's intention all along.

> This is not surprising. Bureaucracies tend to incompetence and taking the minimum possible amount of action. Trends are taken to their extremes. Musk will find a lot of this kind of thing and cleaning out the cobwebs is a good thing. According to Musk this is the number of people by age in the Social Security database whose Death flag is set to false - ie, they are still alive. This is not a sign of misspending, it is a sign of incompetence. The good news is that there are only around 98,000 actual recipients over age 99. My guess is that any fraud will be found around false Social Security numbers, including illegals. Next might be payment to dead people.

> French President Emmanuel Macron convened an emergency meeting in Paris of European leaders on Monday to discuss Ukraine. Neither Europe nor Ukraine were invited to Tuesday’s talks in Riyadh with the US and Russia – and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky was not even formally advised discussions were taking place.

> The US State Department last week scrubbed a statement from its website that said it doesn’t support Taiwan’s independence.

> A team member from Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency will be granted access to sensitive taxpayer data at the Internal Revenue Service.

> Long story short, I misguidedly had an opinion on Substack. In one of the replies I discovered that MDS, Musk Derangement Syndrome, is a thing.

> The Mexican Senate has approved the entry of United States Special Forces into Mexico starting this week.

> Trump signed an executive order expanding access to in vitro fertilization.

> Secretary of State Marco Rubio indicated that the United States and Russia have agreed to restaff their respective embassies.

> Trump Says Ukraine ‘Should Have Never Started It’ in Comments About War With Russia.

> Trump signed a sweeping executive order bringing independent agencies under the control of the White House — an action that would greatly expand his power but is likely to attract significant legal challenges.

It represents Trump’s latest attempt to consolidate power beyond boundaries other presidents have observed and to test the so-called unitary executive theory, which states that the president has the sole authority over the executive branch. 

> An anti-Trump podcast outpaced The Joe Rogan Experience by a large number of downloads and views over the past month, according to podcast ranker Podscribe. The MeidasTouch Podcast grew its reach by 101 percent in the past month, raking in 56 million downloads and views across audio platforms and YouTube, data as of Feb. 18 showed. Joe Rogan’s show came in second place with 48.6 million downloads and views, down by 32 percent over the past month.

> Trump issued an executive order aimed at stopping federal funds from reaching recipients who are in the United States illegally.

> BBC: Trump Calls Zelensky ‘Dictator’ as Rift Between Two Leaders Deepens

​> Trump knows whether the gold in Fort Knox is there and he most likely would not be going there if it were not there.

> The National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA), requires the federal government to consider the environmental consequences before approving infrastructure projects ranging from roads and bridges to oil and gas pipelines to solar farms.

But NEPA is a fairly sparse law, and for decades, the federal government has relied on White House and agency regulations to spell out how to go about doing those environmental assessments. 

This week, the Trump administration rescinded all White House regulations directing the implementation of the law, including some that go back to 1978.

At the same time, in a memo sent to agencies, White House official Katherine Scarlett directed agencies to “continue to follow their existing practices and procedures” for the time being. 

However, the memo also directed agencies to revise their processes for taking on these reviews over the course of the next 12 months. 

> Trump is preparing to sign an order this week to absorb the independent US Postal Service into his administration.

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Short Takes

> An absolutely huge number of trends changed in 1971 for some unknown reason.

> The times, they are a changing - back - At the Manhattan Vintage show this month, sellers filled racks with fox, mink and Mongolian furs. For years, wearing fur was considered taboo but the tide is turning — especially if the wearer asserts that the piece is “vintage.”

> Something's gotta give - California’s insurance commissioner on Feb. 14 turned down a request by insurer State Farm for an emergency interim rate hike of 22 percent for home insurance, amid a flood of damage claims due to the devastating Los Angeles fires.

> The Federal Aviation Administration is still struggling to control air traffic with 30-year-old equipment dependent upon vacuum tubes.  The Department of Veterans Affairs, Department of Justice, Social Security Administration, U.S. Treasury, IRS, State Department, and NASA, are still utilizing COBOL on their computer systems, with some also using Fortran in legacy applications. I programmed in Fortran and COBOL in the 1960s - neither has been used in new applications in decades. It turns out that updating computer systems with large amounts of legacy data does actually border on the impossible, and is clearly impossible when a bureaucracy sets out to do it. (The problem is that decades of data needs to be scrubbed and normalized. Perhaps AI will be up to it, but then the challenge will be to get the bureaucracy out of the way.)

> We are regressing. Ancient writings contained neither capitalization nor punctuation. Back to the future and to ee cummings! - The Guardian, or rather, the guardian - 

For many members of gen Z, lowercase writing is not just a style preference but a cultural marker, reflecting their values and attitudes to tradition. Influential artists such as Billie Eilish, 23, have reinforced this aesthetic, using lowercase in song or album titles such as don’t smile at me or my future.

Brands are taking notice. Spotify’s curated playlists, such as chill vibes and teen beats, embrace lowercase to signal informality, while haircare company amika, which has a millennial and gen Z following, has done the same with its packaging to create a soft, approachable image.

“Capital letters can feel stern or abrupt,” says Caitlin Jardine, a social media manager at marketing agency Ellis Digital. A “calm, friendly” tone resonates more with gen Z’s values. This, after all, is a generation that grew up online, where the line between formal and informal communication is often blurred. “Lowercase writing is a way to reject the authority and rigidity associated with traditional grammar,” says Jardine. “It fosters an atmosphere of inclusivity and emotional connection.”

These are the same people who are intimidated by talking on the phone.

We have gone from words are violence to capital letters are violence.

Although, Beth noticed that Ellis Digital kept the capital letters in their name.

Can't wait to see how far they actually take this.

> The asteroid passing by Earth in 2032 - chance of collision now 3.1% up from 2.6%. Oops, it was then lowered to 1.5%. Inspires confidence, yes? Actually, plotting the precise course of an object like this which is subject to multiple gravitational forces is extraordinarily difficult.

> Politicians remain undefeated for weirdness - Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass told a local Fox News affiliate she’s investigating why she was allowed to go on a trip to Ghana days before wildfires swept her city, eventually killing 29 people. 

Miscellany

From The Bee, referring to Germany's crackdown on free speech

The Dilemmas of Democracy

Two questions for U.S. government officials as President Trump pushes boundaries

 

Roger Pielke Jr.

Feb 17, 2025

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In his classic 1960 book, The Semisovereign People, political scientist E.E. Schattschneider identified a dilemma of democracy: All of us are ignorant about most things, making each of us unsuitable to govern — yet we also have a belief that everyone should be allowed to participate in governance, with our political leaders chosen from among the ignorant.

A challenge arises, Schattschneider explains, because our ignorance is unavoidable (emphasis in original):

There is no escape from the problem of ignorance, because nobody knows enough to run the government. Presidents, senators, governors, judges, professors, doctors of philosophy, editors and the like are only a little less ignorant than the rest of us. Even an expert is a person who choses to be ignorant about many things so that he may know all about one.

Our modern society could not function without specialized experts doing jobs that only specialized experts can do, from captains of nuclear submarines to air traffic controllers to public health researchers. Expertise is also not the same thing as being credentialed or skilled — a parent going to the grocery store is plenty expert enough in their own household to know if the price of eggs is too high.

Effective democratic governance requires a division of responsibility among different types of experts. Schattschneider explained:

Democracy is like nearly everything else we do; it is a form of collaboration of ignorant people and experts.

I didn’t always realize it, but I have spent my entire career focused on this collaboration among ignorant people and experts. A successful collaboration — resolving Schattschneider’s dilemma — is necessary not just for democracy to work, but for all in our society to thrive individually and collectively due to the fruits of democracy.

Schattschneider explains that just like you don’t need to be an automotive engineer to buy a car or an obstetrician to have a baby, democracy depends on collaboration:

Our survival depends on our ability to judge things by their results and our ability to establish relations of confidence and responsibility so that we can take advantage of what other people know.

This brings us to Donald Trump, Elon Musk, and DOGE.

In a brilliant essay in The New Atlantis by Yuval Levin of AEI on the Trump administration’s dramatic reduction in allowable indirect costs by universities with research grants from the National Institutes of Health (NIH), Levin observes:

The response was predictably swift and intense. Scientists and advocates accused the administration of betraying patients and surrendering America’s leading position in biotechnology and medical research. Trump allies, from Elon Musk on down, answered them by calling elite universities spoiled, corrupt, and profligate.

Everyone involved knew their roles in this drama by heart, and fell right into them with gusto.

Partisan politics aside, Levin identifies a much “deeper problem” in play:

Lost in the rush on all sides to play right into one another’s crudest clichés was an opportunity to actually govern a little better. On this front, as on many others, Donald Trump’s election has created real opportunities for advancing needed change. But the new administration seems intent on squandering those opportunities because it does not see itself as responsible for the federal government. Eager to demonstrate how corrupt our institutions have become rather than to facilitate their improvement, it is opting for lawless and performative iconoclasm over the more mundane but potentially transformative work of governance.

In Schattschneider’s terminology, the Trump administration is refusing to take responsibility for governance, seemingly to diminish confidence in government. From a Schattschneider-ian perspective, such an agenda is profoundly anti-democratic.

Levin explains that with respect to NIH grant reform, the Trump administration could have chosen not to move fast and break things, but chosen instead to move with consideration and actually fix things:

If they wanted to, Trump’s NIH officials could have told grant recipients that these procedures would be reviewed this year and they should prepare for a change. They could have put in place a gradual adjustment in the direction of flat indirect-cost rates over several years, to let institutions adjust or propose a plausible set rate. They could have invited ideas from the field about how overhead could be funded differently. They could have made clear that they want to strengthen NIH’s ability to support promising research and that rethinking indirect-cost rates could free up funds for direct research spending. That’s how administrators who value the steadiness and effectiveness of the institutions they administer would go about such a change.

But that is not how the Trump administration has gone about it. Rather than pursue this idea as a way to improve the institution they’re administering, they have chosen to pursue it as a way to attack that institution — ridiculing its existing practice and practitioners, announcing a dramatic policy change on a Friday evening that is set to take effect the following Monday, and presenting the move in a way intended to maximize surprise and invite stiff opposition.

 

We the People . . .

In the United States, the rules of collaboration between ignorant people and experts are set forth in the U.S. Constitution. Levin, in his recent book, American Covenant, explains that the Constitution is more than just a legal framework:

. . . it is also an institutional framework; a policymaking framework; a political framework in the highest sense of the political; and, finally, a framework for union and solidarity.

Self-government of the sort envisioned by the founding fathers requires a shared sense of political myth, to use a concept introduced in 1950 by Harold Lasswell and Abraham Kaplan. Political myth refers to “the pattern of the basic political symbols current in a society.” The U.S. Constitution is a document, of course, but it also symbolizes our our shared commitment to living and governing together as United States citizens first and foremost.

In an interview with Ezra Klein, Levin explains that continued respect for the Constitution is far more important than any substantive policy changes that the Trump administration may push through:

My biggest fear is the administration deciding not to abide by court orders. What they’re doing so far is legitimate. Whether you agree with it or not, it’s operating within the system.

A court said no, and they pulled it back. And they’re going to try again, and they’ll push and pull. That’s how our system works. It’s fine that it makes people uneasy. And a lot of what they’re pushing makes people uneasy for substantive ideological reasons. That’s how politics works.

But when the boundaries of the system itself are under threat, it’s important to think in constitutional terms. It’s not about the politics, but it’s about the constitutional structure that keeps things in order.

This brings us to a second dilemma of democracy. Respect for the Constitution certainly means that no one of us — whether a president or a regular person — will ever get everything we want in terms of policy. It also means that no faction, whether MAGA or Greenpeace, will ever get what they want, either. The dilemma is that participation in democratic governance means accepting that you will at times come out on the losing end of political conflicts.

The late philosopher and pragmatist Richard Rorty put this dilemma bluntly in 1998:

In democratic countries you get things done by compromising your principles in order to form alliances with groups about whom you have grave doubts.

It is no hyperbole to observe that how today’s elected and appointed officials choose to resolve the two dilemmas of democracy will profoundly shape the future of governance in the United States.

To these government officials I’d ask two questions that follow from the two dilemmas:

  • Do you wish to take responsibility for collaborating with your fellow citizens in governance, recognizing the division of responsibility necessary among different types of expertise?

  • Do you commit to governing that collaboration under the framework of the U.S. Constitution?

If the answer to either of these questions is “No” then that would signal a departure from the pragmatic form of democratic governance characteristic to the United States over almost 250 years. Of course, the answers need not be explicit — In response to Trump administration efforts to push the limits of executive power, Congress and the courts need to take responsibility for doing their jobs as co-equal branches of government under the U.S. Constitution. Actions speak louder than words.

Last word for today goes to Jonah Goldberg at The Dispatch, where he pointed out last week that his optimism about respecting Constitutional boundaries is tempered by:

. . . the hypocrisy and cynicism of Trump enablers—who have spent decades talking about how much they love the Constitution and who decried the tyranny or lawlessness of Democratic presidents when they exceeded their authority—who are now falling over themselves to celebrate Trump’s embrace of arbitrary power. I can also harsh my mellow by contemplating all of the progressives who cheered Obama and Biden’s pen-and-phone unilateralism, and decried constitutional restraints as undemocratic relics, suddenly fretting over the threat to constitutional checks and balances.

The point of all this is that the fight for the rule of law is never permanently lost, so long as people are willing to learn from their mistakes, get up off the floor, and fight for its restoration.

Comments welcomed! My usual caution applies — This post in not an invitation to insult those politicians you don’t like or cheer on those that you do. I invite your answers to the two questions posed above.

This website is updated after market close each Friday and whenever there is significant news.

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