Is Our Country Beyond Saving?
"... Humpty Dumpty had a great fall; all the King's horses, and all the King's men cannot put Humpty Dumpty back together again..."

Is Our Country Beyond Saving?

We've all heard the oft-quoted frog-in-boiling-water metaphor intended to illustrate the idea that changes that happen gradually may go unnoticed until it is too late. It claims that frogs cannot sense a slow change in the temperature of the water around them and will slowly cook to death, but if you plunge them into a pot of boiling water they will immediately jump out. This is a complete myth. Frogs can sense changes in water temperature and will get out; however, if you throw a frog into a pot of boiling water he will most assuredly not jump out, but die a gruesome death. When it comes to the soft totalitarianism coming to a boil in our nation, would that we were more like frogs!

On June 3rd of this year, Victor Davis Hanson — among other noteworthy things, a distinguished professor at the Hoover Institution, Stanford University — did those in my generation a huge favor by pithily chronicling some of the rising water temperature readings taken of late on our watch (a global warming of a different sort, if you will!). His article, The Destructive Generation — Proving America’s Weakest Link, is quoted at length below:


American Greatness

Governor Ronald Reagan, in his 1967 inaugural address, famously remarked, “Freedom is a fragile thing and it’s never more than one generation away from extinction.”

Reagan today might have expanded on his theme by declaring that civilization itself is both fragile and can be lost by a generation that recklessly spends its inheritance while neither appreciating nor replenishing it — if not ridiculing those who sacrificed so much to provide it.

Such is the noxious epitaph of the Baby Boomer generation that is now passing after a half-century of preeminence and whose Jacobin agendas have nearly wrecked the nation they inherited.

In contrast to them, eighty years ago this week, the Allied powers of World War II —chiefly the United States, the United Kingdom, and Canada — landed on five Normandy beaches to begin what Gen. Dwight Eisenhower, supreme commander of the Allied expeditionary forces, would call the great “crusade” to liberate Western Europe from four years of brutal Nazi occupation.

The plan was to land within a few hours and in stormy weather well over 150,000 Americans, British, and Canadians on the Atlantic Coast beaches of France, where they were to charge directly into the fire of tens of thousands of enemy troops. They were to charge uphill in the sand while being fired upon by entrenched German troops occupying the hills above. From there, the beachhead was to serve as the launching pad for two million more troops, who were to somehow drive eastward through France and into Germany to end the war and the devastation the Third Reich had inflicted on the world.

All that was accomplished in the ensuing 11 months. That can-do American generation assumed that impoverished teenagers emerging from the Great Depression, with equipment often inferior to their seasoned German enemies, would, over the ensuing months, surely prove able to route Waffen SS veterans. Many of them were hastily transferred from the murderous Eastern Front, such as the nihilist 2nd SS Panzer Division?das Reich?(“The Empire”). No matter, the Americans did the impossible in less than a year — from the Normandy beaches to well across the Rhine River.

That same generation went on to save South Korea, build an anti-totalitarian world order, defeat Soviet communism, and pass on to the Baby Boomer generation the strongest economy, military, and political system in history, or, to paraphrase the poet Horace, “monuments more lasting than bronze.” Or so we, the inheritors, thought.

And what are the now septuagenarian and octogenarian?children of the veterans of Omaha Beach and Iwo Jima leaving as their own legacy?

The self-infatuated and do-your-own-thing generation that gave us the Sixties and the counterculture has left the country $36 trillion in debt, now borrowing?$1 trillion nearly every three months. Worse, there is not just no plan to balance budgets, much less to reduce the debt, but also no intention to stop or even worry about?the borrowing of some $10 billion a day.

The U.S. military is almost unrecognizable to that of just a few decades ago. It was humiliated in Kabul. In surrealistic fashion, it abandoned some $50 billion in lethal weaponry to the Taliban — along with our NATO allies, American contractors, and loyal Afghans. And our supreme command labeled that rout a brilliant retreat. Meanwhile, the military suffers from depleted inventory of key munitions while being short 45,000 annual recruits.

The Pentagon is torn by internal dissension over DEI, woke, anti-meritocratic promotions, and a politicized officer class — well, apart from now also being outmanned and outgunned by the Chinese. Many of the world’s key maritime corridors — the Red Sea, the Straits of Hormuz, the Black Sea, and the South China sea — are apparently beyond our navy’s ability to ensure the world safe transit.

For perceived cheap political advantage, the Baby Boomers destroyed the southern border, most recently allowing in nearly 10 million unaudited illegal aliens. With the disappearance of our national sovereignty, so too was lost the once-cherished idea of a melting pot of legal immigrants arriving in America longing to assimilate, to integrate in self-reliant fashion, and to show gratitude for the chance of something far better than what they left.

The country’s major cities are increasingly medieval, with a million homeless camped on fetid streets. Criminals terrorize the law-abiding. They assume their violence will be contextualized away by vacuous “critical legal” or “critical race” or “critical penal” theories. This generation releases violent felons to prey on the weak and sheds hardly a tear as police officers are shot unnoticed at the rate of nearly one a day.

America’s once great universities — such as Harvard, Yale, Princeton, Stanford, and MIT — are now into their fourth year of abolishing much of their prior standards. The youth who sought to wreck them from the outside in the 1960s now succeed in finishing the job as elders on the inside. These bankrupt campuses now adjudicate admissions and hiring by race, tribe and gender and then wonder why their students are entitled, ignorant, and arrogant yet unable to meet the very standards that the universities once insisted were critical to ensuring their preeminence.

Worse, the more elite the campuses, the more they became hotbeds of unapologetic anti-Semitism, gratuitous violence, and hatred for the country’s very institutions that guarantee their own freedom of action and speech. Who taught them and allowed them to think that as they illegally occupied buildings, defaced and defiled monuments, and shouted Jew hatred, they were absurdly entitled to free food deliveries and amnesties?

A rapacious higher education welcomed in profitable anti-American students and billions of dollars in hostile foreign cash from those who mock the laws of their host and feel a covetous America can be bought for 10 cents on the dollar. And as we learned after October 7, they were mostly correct.

Abroad, our nomenklatura opportunistically demonizes a democratic Israel trying to fight a terrorist Hamas that slaughtered 1,200 mostly unarmed citizens at a time of peace in the most grotesque fashion of the 21st century.

Yet our elite cannot distinguish killers from our democratic allies. Hamas deliberately drafted their own citizens to serve as shields to protect the terrorists safely ensconced in the tunnels below — on the sick assurance that Israel would surely try to avoid killing civilian shields whom the cynical Hamas apparat deliberately exposed to protect itself.

America hectors its most loyal ally in a way it does not its chief enemies, communist China and theocratic Iran. Not content with hiding its role in birthing the gain-in-function COVID-19 virus, now with impunity China helps kill 100,000 Americans a year through the export of fentanyl. It sends nearly 30,000 adult males into the US illegally. It relies on the espionage abilities of its students and visitors — and apparently exempt spy balloons — to ensure the People’s Liberation Army’s technological parity with the U.S.

But the greatest baleful legacy of this fading generation is the weaponization of the government against its own perceived American citizen enemies. That bastardization of institutions extends now to the very destruction of the once-hallowed tradition of American jurisprudence.

The degeneration was not just that our government and its political ancillaries cooked up the Russian collusion hoax that warped the 2016 campaign and crippled a presidency — but that, to this day, its unapologetic architects remain smug that they pulled it off and would do it again.

Ditto the efforts of “intelligence authorities” to delude the American people about “Russian disinformation” and the Hunter Biden laptop. The Sixties generation’s new normal is to impeach a president twice, to try him as a private citizen, and to seek to remove him from state ballots.

All that was now characteristic of a generation that learned in the 1960s that if it did not get its way, it would wreck what it could not control. So, it was logical that it sought to pack the court, to end the filibuster, to destroy the Electoral College — and to corrupt the law to achieve political ends. Or as the Sixties generation taught us, “by any means necessary” — an arrogant affirmation of Machiavelli’s dictum that “the ends justify the means.”

Now we are left with a final toxic gift from this generation: the destruction of jurisprudence, a system designed not to easily protect the popular and admired but those often pilloried in the public square, the unorthodox, eccentric, and unliked.

Even Trump’s antagonists know that had Donald Trump been a man of the left, or had he not run again for president, he would never have been charged, much less convicted, of felonies or been punished with nearly a half-billion dollars in legal fees and fines.

We all accept that the charges brought against him by a vindictive and left-wing Letitia James, Alvin Bragg, Fani Willis and Jack Smith — all compromised by either past politicized prosecutorial failures or boasts of getting Trump — have never before been brought against any prior political figure or indeed any average citizen. They were instead invented to target a single political enemy. So what hallowed law, what constitutional norm, what ancient custom, or what Bill or Rights has the fading left not destroyed in order to erase Donald Trump from the political scene?

There is now no distinction between state and federal law. Once a prosecutor targets an enemy, he can flip back and forth between such statutes to find the necessary legal gimmick to destroy his target.

Statutes of limitations are no more as errant prosecutors and political operatives in the legislature can change laws to dredge up supposed crimes of years past, to destroy their political enemies, by employing veritable bills of attainder.

The very notion of an exculpatory hung jury depends on who is to be hung.

Judges can overtly contribute to the political opponents of the accused before them. Their children can profit in the tens of millions by selling to politicos their relationship to the very judge who holds the fate of their political opponents in his hands.

In sum, the First Amendment guaranteeing the right of the defendant to free speech is now not applicable. Asymmetrical gag orders are.

The Fourth Amendment is now torn to shreds by those who boast of “saving democracy.” When the FBI, on orders from a hostile administration, storms into the home of the leading presidential candidate and ex-president’s home, armed to the teeth, treats a civil dispute as a violent felony, and then doctors the evidence it finds, then constitutional insurance against “unreasonable searches and seizures” becomes a bitter joke for generations.

The Fifth Amendment’s protection that no person “shall be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law” has been destroyed when an ex-president cannot summon expert legal witnesses to testify on his behalf and when he cannot bring in evidence that contradicts his accusers. There is no due process when one ex-president is indicted for the very crimes his exempted successor has committed.

The Sixth Amendment’s various assurances are now kaput. No one believes that Trump was tried “by an impartial jury of the State” — not when prosecutors deliberately indicted him in a city where 85 percent of the population voted against him and are by design of a different political party.

No longer will an American have the innate right “to be informed of the nature and cause of the accusation; to be confronted with the witnesses against him; to have compulsory process for obtaining witnesses in his favor” when Donald Trump was never informed by prosecutor Alvin Bragg of the felony for which he was charged, with little advance idea of all the hostile prosecutorial witnesses to be called, and with no right to call in experts to refute the prosecution’s bizarre notion of campaign finance violations.

The Seventh Amendment is likewise now on the ash heap of history. The publicity-seeking judge Arthur Engoron, a political antagonist of Trump, warped the law in order to serve as judge, jury, and executioner of Trump’s fate, without recourse to a jury of even his biased New York peers.

The Eighth Amendment will offer assurance no longer to the American people that “excessive bail shall not be required, nor excessive fines imposed, nor cruel and unusual punishments inflicted.”

Donald Trump was fined $83.3 million in the E. Jean Carroll case for an alleged assault of three decades past, brought by partisan manipulative waiving of the statute of limitations, with the politicized accuser having no idea of the year the assault took place, with her accusations arising only decades later when Trump became a political candidate, with her own employers insisting she was fired for reasons having nothing to do with Donald Trump, and with her narrative eerily matching a TV show plot rather than any provable facts of the case.

By what logic was Trump fined $175 million for supposedly inflated asset valuation to obtain a loan that was repaid with interest to banks that had no complaint? Since when does the state seek to inflict such “unusual” punishments for a crime that never before had existed and never will again henceforth?

In sum, our departing weak-link generation leaves us this final Parthian shot — that when a toxic ideology so alienates the people who are rising up to prevent its continuance, then the desperate architects of such disasters can dismantle the rule of law to destroy its critics.

And so, a single generation has broken apart the great chain of American civilizational continuance. But if this weak-link generation thinks the evil that they wrought is their last word, they should remember the warning of a great historian:

“Indeed men too often take upon themselves in the prosecution of their revenge to set the example of doing away with those general laws to which all alike can look for salvation in adversity,?instead of allowing them to subsist against the day of danger when their aid may be required.” – Thucydides 3.84.3


Hanson's article provides but a small glimpse of the tip of an iceberg; however, it is enough to paint a very bleak picture — one that should sober every reader. Unlike a real frog who would not tolerate gradual changes in the water temperature surrounding it, many of us have knowingly tolerated a plethora of gradual changes that serve to undermine our once-great Republic. Still others of us have shamelessly championed the toxic ideologies that are cooking our nation before our very eyes. Surely it is fair to generalize that "we the people" are all culpable to varying degrees, ranging from small to gargantuan. In keeping with the Humpty Dumpty nursery rhyme of old, our nation has taken a great fall. Like it or not, it is far beyond being put back together again by political or jurisprudent apparatuses. Good as those things might be in a healthy society, they are powerless to address the sickness that lurks beneath the surface of this iceberg. Placing one's hope in these things is tantamount to a fool's errand. Yet, hope can still be had, though it stems not from political or jurisprudent reform, per se, but from what most would least expect and many would deride!

What is that source of hope, you ask? Our only hope is a return to that which made this the greatest nation on earth — the very thing that is so despised by the cultural elites, radical left and liberal media in our day: Biblical Christianity. I say "Biblical" because so much of what gets labeled 'Christian' today is anything but that. The truth is that every ill in our society today can be traced to a weakened church that has capitulated to its antithesis: secularism. Broadly speaking, the salt has lost its savor. DeTocqueville rightly noted that the source of America's greatness was its churches, not its businesses, schools or political institutions. Our country is but a reflection of our churches — as the pulpit goes, so goes the nation.

The Russian dissident, Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, exhorted those plagued by the brutal totalitarianism of his day to "live not by lies." This is the clarion call behind articles like the one published by Hanson above, yet it has special significance to the Church. Many professing Christians in this country are living by lies and lack the spiritual backbone to stem the secular tide of post modernism. As Dorothy Sayers fittingly quipped in her day, "We have very efficiently pared the claws of the Lion of Judah, certified Him 'meek and mild,' and recommended Him as a fitting household pet for pale curates and pious old ladies."?Others in our day have labeled such people "evanjellyfish." No, our nation cannot be saved unless and until God's people wake up, abandon liberal, man-centered churches, and insist on pastors who are not afraid to preach a hot Gospel. Given that the church in America stands in just as great a need of reformation as did the church in the 16th century, it is little wonder that our country is so broken. It pleased God to bring about sweeping reform in His church then in what we now know as the Protestant Reformation. Out of that mighty movement of God a Biblical theology was recovered — the same theology that undergirded the founding of America, the greatest nation in the history of the world.

God has promised to never abandon His church, so there is hope for her. "If my people who are called by my name humble themselves, and pray and seek my face and turn from their wicked ways, then I will hear from heaven and will forgive their sin and heal their land" (2 Chronicles 7:14). As Matthew Henry comments concerning this Scripture and its application to the Church, "pardoning mercy makes way for healing mercy." And because of that — and only that — there is hope for our nation. That said, it is a hope that pales in significance when compared to the hope of eternal life which cannot be assailed by rulers, authorities, cosmic powers or spiritual forces of evil in the heavenly places (Ephesians 6:12).

Friend, where is your hope?

Benjamin Mulch

Every great endeavor fully funded.

5 个月

Thank you Bill Cooper. I will say as a Millennial in defense of the Boomer, that the last few years have begun to clearly define the battle lines compared to the general neutrality of the decades before (yes, I can remember the 2000's); a development I attribute to the wise Boomers. It is helpful (and not always clear) to a young man to know which way to point his weapon and which his back, this post being a fine example.

Bill you said it perfectly. His many times are we going to watch the decline of our country, then turn off the TV in disgust thinking that out of sight it will go away? Action is needed, now, by all of us who want to take the nation in a better direction, one built on the rule of law and order and common sense. We can pray, vote and support the only candidate that gets it. God bless you brother.

回复
David Hyde-Volpe

Principal Security Engineer / CTO at The Vizius Group

5 个月

Excellent article Bill. Thank you sir.

Thanks for these words Bill - my Dad was among those brave young men who landed on Omaha Beach that day. Needless to say, my siblings and I are walking miracles and are both grateful and thankful for the sacrifices made by those troops. May God always remind us of our rich heritage and that freedom is never free.

回复
Tom Moore

Investment Advisor, Capital Investment Companies

5 个月

Excellent piece Bill. I am also a big fan of VDH.

回复

要查看或添加评论,请登录

Bill Cooper的更多文章

  • Can I Sin With My Vote?

    Can I Sin With My Vote?

    Almost 4 years ago today I wrote an article to encourage my daughter in the face of so many in her generation climbing…

  • Are the Inmates Running the Asylum?

    Are the Inmates Running the Asylum?

    Why This Article? A truncated picture of the graphic associated with this article was recently posted by a high profile…

    3 条评论
  • Good vs. Bad Employee Turnover

    Good vs. Bad Employee Turnover

    Introduction Not all employee turnover is bad, or unhealthy. The financial impact of bad turnover is often hidden, but…

    17 条评论
  • COVID-19: A Crisis Management Call To Arms

    COVID-19: A Crisis Management Call To Arms

    It doesn’t take an epidemiologist to see that those most at risk with Covid-19 are the elderly with pre-existing…

    5 条评论
  • An Aversion to 'Yes Men:' Having the Character to Challenge

    An Aversion to 'Yes Men:' Having the Character to Challenge

    In my current role I have gotten to know a lot of executives. One such person (let's call him "Joe" to protect the…

    7 条评论
  • None Of Us Is Smarter Than All Of Us

    None Of Us Is Smarter Than All Of Us

    I'll never forget my first big ah hah moment as a first-year business school student. We all participated in a survival…

    3 条评论
  • Mergers, Acquisitions and Satchmo's Paradox: A Word To The Wise

    Mergers, Acquisitions and Satchmo's Paradox: A Word To The Wise

    Peter Drucker is famously noted for saying “culture eats strategy for breakfast” and it is my belief that strategy…

  • What Do High Performance Driving Instruction and Executive Coaching Have In Common?

    What Do High Performance Driving Instruction and Executive Coaching Have In Common?

    Relax And Take A Deep Breath Just the thought of going around a road course at speeds in excess of 120 mph can be…

    4 条评论
  • Work/Death Balance?

    Work/Death Balance?

    The CEO of Saddleback Leather Company, Dave Munson, is one of my heroes. If I were to lookup the word 'authentic' in…

  • The Essence of Great Leadership

    The Essence of Great Leadership

    American Generalship: Character is Everything: The Art of Command by Edgar F. Puryear Jr.

    4 条评论

社区洞察

其他会员也浏览了