Red
Well-Known Member
OK, but this paragraph spoke volumes for myself. I’m a baby boomer, if that means anything re how I feel, which he captures perfectly in this paragraph:David Brooks is a hack.
“Until January 20, 2025, I didn’t realize how much of my very identity was built on this faith in my country’s goodness—on the idea that we Americans are partners in a grand and heroic enterprise, that our daily lives are ennobled by service to that cause. Since January 20, as I have watched America behave vilely—toward our friends in Canada and Mexico, toward our friends in Europe, toward the heroes in Ukraine and President Volodymyr Zelensky in the Oval Office—I’ve had trouble describing the anguish I’ve experienced. Grief? Shock? Like I’m living through some sort of hallucination? Maybe the best description for what I’m feeling is moral shame: To watch the loss of your nation’s honor is embarrassing and painful”.
That paragraph matches my own feelings. 100%. Some, in my generation, feel that everything changed in the United States on 11/22/63, when JFK was killed. I can understand that. The “death of Camelot” did seem like a an inflection point that ended idealism in the American experiment. Still does for many who were alive at that time. Vietnam and Watergate drove me away from being an engaged citizen. For decades. But, Trump’s appearance resulted in the feelings and attitude described in the above paragraph by Brooks.
He may be a hack, but his feelings match my own, perfectly, in what he’s saying, and I appreciate him for that truth. What he is saying is the very loss I feel, and millions of other Americans, of that I am certain. Trump made me realize I still cared. I didn’t realize how much I still gave a damn. And what I care about is the loss of what Brooks nails in the above paragraph. I know what that feels like. And, for any American who does know these feelings, it’s a tremendous loss. Call him what you want, he nailed how all this affected myself.
