The Scottish Mail on Sunday

Reason must triumph over emotion or we risk our very own Trump

- Peter Hitchens Follow Peter on Twitter @clarkemica­h

THE likely next President of the USA has his mugshot taken as he faces racketeeri­ng charges. He doesn’t care. He is not ashamed to be put through a procedure designed to humiliate him. The current President of Russia makes little effort to pretend that he had nothing to do with the violent death of his enemy. He, too, does not care.

By 2025, it is quite possible that both these men will have control over huge nuclear arsenals. One of them already does.

We seem to be entering a time of troubles quite unlike anything in the modern era. Something similar gripped Europe in the middle 1930s, when reason flew away and did not return for many years. Can we do anything about it?

Oddly enough, I think we can and the key to it is to stop being swayed by crude emotion, especially in matters of politics.

It suited us all (me included) to believe that the Cold War was a simple conflict between good and evil. And so we rejoiced when Moscow’s Evil Empire fell.

Few made any serious effort to work out what to do next and I believe the Western democracie­s, especially the USA, failed terribly.

Look at Poland, ruined by Communism in 1989, then wisely rescued, subsidised and helped, so that it is now a wealthy, reasonably free and democratic country. Why could we not have achieved the same in Russia? It would have been a bigger job but it would still have cost us far less than the current mess is costing us and will cost us.

Was it perhaps because certain people in the West still felt bitterly towards Russia and wanted that country to remain weak and poor?

It is a possible explanatio­n. And I do not just mean money when I mention the cost. There are now credible suggestion­s that 70,000 Ukrainian young men, sons, brothers, husbands, fathers, have been killed in the war in that country, which I believe was totally avoidable. The real figure is a secret. Still more have been wounded, maimed and disfigured.

If you care (and I do, for it was not their choice) similar numbers of Russians and their families have suffered in the same way.

Even now, we look at this emotionall­y rather than reasonably. Any attempt to discuss bringing this war to an end with a lasting compromise is dismissed as little short of treason.

What if the war, which is always in danger of bursting beyond its current limits, pulls us down into the pit of conflict, loss, corruption and national poverty which now engulfs Ukraine?

Our politics are not that stable. Both our big parties are increasing­ly despised by people who were once their loyal voters. Powerful, passionate resentment­s are growing in our midst.

We may sneer at American supporters of the oaf, Donald Trump. But if we continue down our current path of debt, inflation and feeble government, with deepening war added to the mix, are we sure that we may not find and elect our own Trump before long? I am not.

 ?? ?? PLOT: The kidnappers – as portrayed in exterior Night – dressed as airline pilots. Below, a scene from the Tv drama
PLOT: The kidnappers – as portrayed in exterior Night – dressed as airline pilots. Below, a scene from the Tv drama
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