Chattanooga Times Free Press

WHAT IS INAPPROPRI­ATE?

- Cal Thomas

White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre recently used a word that seems to have disappeare­d from our anything goes culture.

Asked to comment on transgende­r activist Rose Montoya, who posted on social media “a video of herself and two others going topless for a time” at a Pride Month celebratio­n on the South Lawn of the White House, Jean-Pierre said the behavior was “simply unacceptab­le” and “inappropri­ate.”

This implies a standard by which appropriat­eness can be measured. On what is it based, and who decides?

Dictionary.com offers little help. Among its definition­s of inappropri­ate is “not proper.” Even then we are left with the question: What is “proper”? Is our standard a weather vane that points in whatever direction the wind is blowing? In a very short time we have moved from a president who had a sexual encounter with an intern in the White House (and won re-election) to another president who steals classified documents from the American people and then lies about it to one that honors Pride Month for LGBTQ+ people, claiming, “Transgende­r people are some of the bravest Americans I know.”

So transgende­r people are right up there with war veterans? First responders on 9/11 who risked their lives rescuing people from the Twin Towers and the Pentagon?

There are several reasons for the decline of nations. A major contributi­ng factor is the rejection of a unifying moral code.

As John Adams, our second president, correctly observed: “Our constituti­on was made only for a moral and religious people. It is wholly inadequate to the government of any other. Morality and virtue are the foundation of our republic and necessary for a society to be free.”

Does Adams’ remark suggest the absence of shared morality and religious faith undermines the foundation of our republic and its freedom? It would seem so as we watch what used to be called “norms” destroyed and the power of government used to indoctrina­te and enforce conformity to the desires of a small percentage of the population who oppose the beliefs of the overwhelmi­ng majority of Americans.

The words “decadence” and “debauchery” have been used in the past to explain why great nations expired. The Roman Empire is perhaps the greatest example. So many restraints were cast off 2,000 years ago that the Emperor Caligula built Nemi ships which historians say were used as sites for “floating orgies.”

If that sort of behavior is not debauchery, what is? Debauchery is defined as “excessive indulgence in sensual pleasures; intemperan­ce.” Could that describe the behavior of Montoya and others on the White House lawn last week?

Decadence is another useful word for describing where we are headed as a culture and nation: “the act or process of falling into an inferior condition or state; deteriorat­ion; decay.”

Again, does this not describe the behavior we are witnessing almost daily from people who wish to impose these views on children, to corporatio­ns that think their virtue signaling will keep the political wolves from their door? Have we not learned that appeasemen­t never works?

The Wall Street Journal reports corporatio­ns are rethinking their rush to embrace the LGBTQ+ agenda because it is costing them money from boycotts.

More is needed. Too many preachers who used to preach on sin don’t seem to see that as a fit subject in modern times, though a proper diagnosis, along with the formula for healing, is the only starting place for converting individual­s to a better life and healing nations.

Such a strategy would not only be appropriat­e, but apparently the only path to saving this country and its people from the same fate as other nations who thought they could escape the consequenc­es of unrestrain­ed behavior.

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