Chattanooga Times Free Press

PROUD MEMBER OF THE TRUMP CULT

- Roger Smith Roger Smith, a frequent contributo­r to the Times Free Press, is the author of “American Spirit: The Story of American Individual­ism.”

Recently, a friend invited me to his Sunday school class at a prominent church in our community. The teacher was a retired physics professor who gave one of the best lectures on the biblical account of creation I’ve ever heard. He explained that the Bible, while alluding to both science and history, is about neither. It is about a loving God who offers salvation for mankind. Those who become wrapped up in the physical detail of the creation story miss the point.

There are few things more inspiratio­nal than listening to a learned person who makes us think outside the box and urges us to study and learn more; however, something else made me think that morning. I realized what an incredible group from our community was assembled there. Of the 50 or so people, there were retired military officers (one fourstar general), doctors, nurses, teachers, attorneys, real estate developers and community leaders.

They were unabashedl­y Christian, patriotic, hard-working and discipline­d in their lives. They were intelligen­t and confident. And the paradox is that such people are despised by the leftist elites in our country — elites such as those at the recent Tony Awards who wildly applauded the “[expletive] Trump” comment by a very liberal actor.

However, the pendulum is swinging. The left’s condescens­ion for traditiona­l American values reached a crescendo during 2008. Candidate Barack Obama boldly asserted when conservati­ves are faced with difficult situations, “they get bitter. They cling to their guns or religion or antipathy to people who aren’t like them.” His would-be successor, candidate Hillary Clinton, doubled down in 2016, describing people with such values as “deplorable­s.”

But truth, like cream, eventually rises to the surface, and so it is in our country. Why am I optimistic? Because people like those in that Sunday school class are thinking and writing and speaking out instead of cowering into corners away from formerly accepted half-truths and lies of political correctnes­s. The evidence is twofold: first, in the plethora of best-selling new books, not by far-right pundits, but by respected academicia­ns who refute the reckless boldness of the left; and, second, in the election of President Donald Trump.

Consider “The Demon in Democracy” by Polish professor, philosophe­r and politician Ryszard Legutko. He points out dangerous similariti­es between the objectives of tyrannical regimes and liberal democracie­s who crave big government programs. In “The Virtue of Nationalis­m,” American-educated Dr. Yoram Hazony, an Israeli philosophe­r and scholar, explains why political correctnes­s is the nemesis of free societies.

In “Twelve Rules for Life: An Antidote for Chaos,” Toronto University professor and clinical psychologi­st Jordan Peterson decries the liberal attack on moral and religious institutio­ns. He writes, “The Bible is, for better or worse, the foundation­al document of Western civilizati­on.” He goes on to say our essential understand­ing of right and wrong springs from the Bible, and in tossing aside such foundation­al elements, the Western world has no moral compass.

But the incredible accomplish­ments of President Trump have lifted my optimism more than anything else. When people are allowed to freely worship their God, practice their faith, exchange ideas freely and pursue their dreams without government interferen­ce, there is cause for hope. I sense that hope in our nation more than I have in a long time. If that’s what it means to be a member of the Trump “cult,” a derisive term used recently by one of our Tennessee politician­s, then count me in.

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