Chicago Sun-Times

Contrary to what Fox News says, Trump’s the real threat to civilizati­on

- MONA CHAREN @monacharen­EPPC Mona Charen is a senior fellow at the Ethics and Public Policy Center.

This election “is no longer about Donald Trump’s tweeting,” conservati­ve historian Victor Davis Hanson told Fox News host Tucker Carlson the other night.

Nor, he said, is it about “a lockdown, the virus, the economy [or] foreign policy. It’s an existentia­l question . . . and I’m going to vote for civilizati­on.”

Ah, the conservati­ve warning of barbarians at the gate. It’s a hardy perennial. I recognize it because, as a conservati­ve myself, I’m in sympathy with it — to a point.

In “The Righteous Mind,” Jonathan Haidt observed that both progressiv­es and conservati­ves are motivated by morality, but their hierarchie­s are different. Progressiv­es tend to value care, especially for victims of oppression, while conservati­ves cherish order and sanctity. Conservati­ves are hypersensi­tive to threats to order.

This is neither good nor bad, it’s just a fact. Order is no small virtue in a polity and progressiv­es shouldn’t discount it. Arguably, it’s the foundation for other virtues progressiv­es treasure such as fairness.

The conservati­ve battle cry in response to the dreadful news of the last three months is to point to the mobs toppling statues as evidence that safety and security are threatened (just as they claimed in 2018 that the caravan from Central America would upend American civilizati­on).

Sean Hannity warns that if Donald Trump is defeated, then “America will become unrecogniz­able.” Laura Ingraham described the Democratic agenda as hoping “to pull down our whole culture: the American founding, western civilizati­on and everything that sprang from it.”

Mobs are never attractive, whether in the streets or on cable opinion shows, and they are not exactly discrimina­ting in their iconoclasm. In addition to statues of Confederat­e generals and slave traders, other monuments targeted have included those of Hans Christian Heg, an abolitioni­st who died fighting for the Union at the battle of Chickamaug­a in 1863, and Ulysses Grant, who defeated the Confederac­y.

Disorder in the streets is an engraved invitation to a right-wing backlash. But there are two reasons that the current conservati­ve appeal to law and order is several tones flat.

The first is that while there has been some rioting and looting, the vast majority of protests have been peaceful and the trajectory is toward less, not more, violence. The second problem with the call to defend the gates of civilizati­on is this: Donald Trump is the barbarian.

An orderly society is not one that performati­vely hugs the American flag but one that upholds the rule of law for which it stands. Throughout his administra­tion, Trump has demonstrat­ed contempt for law.

He has violated campaign finance laws by paying off a porn star, flouted legal subpoenas from Congress and other duly constitute­d authoritie­s looking into administra­tion actions, abused Article II power by dangling pardons to former associates facing criminal trials, unlawfully diverted Defense Department funds to begin building a border wall, wrongly fired numerous inspectors general and encouraged police to rough up arrestees — among uncountabl­e other violations.

He has attempted to strongarm an ally to invent lies about his domestic opposition and begged for other foreign leaders to help his election prospects. His attorney general is diligently attempting to reward his friends and punish his (perceived) enemies — exactly what happens in corrupt dictatorsh­ips.

In addition to respect for the law, a thriving civilizati­on requires a certain minimum level of integrity and honor in its people, particular­ly in its leaders. This president is not just the most dishonest person ever to darken 1600 Pennsylvan­ia Ave., he and his enablers have made war on the very concept of truth. They do this not just by lying but by lying when there are videotapes. They demand that, knowing the truth, you assent to their lies as obeisance to power.

The annihilati­on of truth permits the cultivatio­n of group hatreds. Trump’s followers are led to despise supposedly criminal immigrants, “disloyal” Republican­s, ungrateful allies, the press, the courts and the “deep state.” Election results are to be distrusted — and elections are to be thwarted where they cannot be fairly won. Any unflatteri­ng portrayal is “fake news.” Conspiracy theories that any competent fifth grader can detect as bogus grace the president’s Twitter feed.

One of the most admirable features of our civilizati­on is our dedication to human dignity. While imperfectl­y implemente­d, our basic commitment to human rights around the globe has been an aspiration shared by Democrats and Republican­s. But with a barbarian in the Oval Office, we are now “falling in love” with Kim Jong Un, praising Rodrigo Duterte for extrajudic­ial murders, defending Vladimir Putin by suggesting that we are just as guilty of murdering our enemies as he and giving the green light to China to build concentrat­ion camps for a million innocent Uighurs.

So a statue or two may unjustly bite the dust, but the greater threat to law and order and, yes, civilizati­on, is the guy at the Resolute Desk.

AN ORDERLY SOCIETY IS NOT ONE THAT PERFORMATI­VELY HUGS THE AMERICAN FLAG BUT ONE THAT UPHOLDS THE RULE OF LAW FOR WHICH IT STANDS. THROUGHOUT HIS ADMINISTRA­TION, TRUMP HAS DEMONSTRAT­ED CONTEMPT FOR LAW.

 ?? AP FILES ?? President Donald Trump hugs the American flag before speaking in March 2019 at the Conservati­ve Political Action Conference.
AP FILES President Donald Trump hugs the American flag before speaking in March 2019 at the Conservati­ve Political Action Conference.
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