← Previous Post:

 

“An experienced and worldly person might … say, quite wisely, that it will not do to talk so much about vice, because it makes one hate [people]. We become misanthropic if we contemplate dishonesty, infidelity, and cruelty… Better, perhaps, to change the topic. Who, after all, can bear the nag and the scold?”

No one, certainly. And yet the rise to great public positions in our once great republic of Donald Trump, Lawrence Summers, Marc Tessier-Lavigne, and other nasty pieces of work, forces the question of personal viciousness and the survival of liberal democracy. If Matt Ford is right that

At its core, Trumpism is a permission structure for evil. It is the abolition of ethical norms and the erasure of moral authority… Trumpism is not really about immigration, or inflation, or trade, or draining the swamp, or building the wall—it is ultimately about the dark thrill of abusing those whom its adherents consider to be inferiors, either directly or by proxy.

then we need to return, at the very least, to Judith Shklar’s Ordinary Vices and its meticulous anatomy of what’s worst in us, as we try to forge American civic life despite it.

Margaret Soltan, November 23, 2025 8:33AM
Posted in: just plain gross

Trackback URL for this post:
https://www.margaretsoltan.com/wp-trackback.php?p=82133

Comment on this Entry

Latest UD posts at IHE

Archives

Categories