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July 1, 2022

With the approval ratings of Congress and President Biden dropping to historic lows and the number of Americans reporting that the country is heading in the wrong direction spiking to record highs, now would be an ideal time for elected officials in Washington, D.C. to assess honestly their job performances.  Are they causing Americans more harm than good?  Have they prioritized or abandoned their constituents’ top concerns?  Has their obsession with the events of January 6, 2021 done anything to alleviate today’s skyrocketing inflation making food and fuel unaffordable?  Has pushing the contentious issue of “transgenderism” in classrooms, businesses, and women’s sports helped unite or divide the American people?  Has runaway illegal immigration at the Southern border made Americans more or less safe?  These are all good questions for any “public servant” seeking honest self-reflection.

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Alas, “honesty” and “capacity for self-reflection” are not qualities usually attributed to politicians.  Consistently high numbers of Americans believe that elected officials put their own interests ahead of the country’s, and a record number of Americans believe that the United States has “poor moral values.”  The idea of a “moral politician” in D.C. would strike most Americans as laughable.

If we do not have “moral politicians” in charge, then what kind of people “represent” us?  Eighteenth-century German philosopher Immanuel Kant provides a good answer when he distinguishes the moral politician from the unscrupulous, power-hungry politician in Appendix 1 of his treatise, “Perpetual Peace.”  Whereas the former seeks to protect the natural rights of citizens and pursues policies that promote objective and universal moral truths, the latter rejects the inviolability of individual rights and subjectively twists moral-sounding principles to justify the pursuit of raw power.  In practice, Kant argues, immoral politicians manipulate citizens in three well known ways: 

1. They act first and then make excuses.

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Does that sound familiar?  That’s the Democrats’ notorious “never let a crisis go to waste” mantra.

Did the American people ever get a chance to vote on mask or vaccine mandates?  Were they permitted an opportunity to weigh their personal risks of dying from COVID-19 against the severe economic costs of losing their jobs while large sectors of the nation’s economy remained locked down?  Did parents have a choice as to whether their children’s schools would be closed and their educations forestalled?  Of course not.

Without even the pretense of consulting American citizens or respecting their constitutional rights, bureaucrats and elected officials closed churches, broke up protests, urged social media companies to censor dissenting points of view, and coerced Americans to take an experimental vaccine before it had undergone normal long-term testing.

All these imperious actions were done for “our own good” and to “save lives” because “we’re all in this together.”  Yet two-plus years of health mandates have given officials extraordinary powers to control Americans’ lives and livelihoods at the expense of Americans’ free will.  At a time when politicians warn incessantly about the dangers to “democracy,” life in the United States has hardly been “democratic.” 

2. When they cause harm, they blame others.

America’s economy is on the brink of recession.  Inflation is through the roof.  Americans are struggling with the worst price increases in their lifetimes at the gas pump and in the supermarket.  Parents are desperate to find baby formula.