Again, Living in History

  • How America has become a dangerous nation;
  • How Christian Nationalists really do want to destroy their political enemies;
  • What that poll about MAGA supporting Trump 100% really means;
  • Brief items about the Supreme Court, a quote from Kurt Andersen about Trump’s stupidity, how Trump voted by mail even though he thinks mail-in voting is cheating, how Trump fans think he is right about everything, how ICE at airports is about owning the libs, and how Stephen Miller doesn’t want to educated undocumented children.
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This isn’t about Trump or MAGA per se. I suspect most people don’t realize how we’re all witnessing historic shifts in American and world politics in the past few years. What many of us are not noticing will be written up in future history books.

NY Times, opinion by Carlos Lozada, today: America Has Become a Dangerous Nation [gift link]

We had a good run — some eight decades or so — but it is clear by now that the United States has ceased to be the leader of the free world. A successor for that post has not been named, and it appears unlikely that the European Union, or NATO, or whatever constitutes “the West” these days will promote from within. The job might even be eliminated, one more reduction in force courtesy of President Trump.

Rather than leading the free world, the United States is striding across the globe seemingly free of restraint, forethought or strategy, exerting its power because it can. In a matter of months, the Trump administration has captured Venezuela’s president and tossed him into jail in Brooklyn and has pummeled Iran’s theocratic leadership in a war that is ricocheting across the Middle East and upending the global economy; now the president says he will have “the honor of taking Cuba” next. Trump in his second term is like Michael Corleone in “The Godfather,” settling all the family business.

Very long piece; gift link provided. A couple more samples.

The United States wants the benefits of hegemony, but without accepting the responsibilities — ensuring collective security, promoting economic openness, nurturing vital alliances — that come with it. Trump doesn’t care to be a superpower; he just likes to wield superpowers. He wants to operate in the world constrained only by “my own morality” and “my own mind,” as he told The Times recently.

Lozada recalls a similar transition: “when we were shifting from a Cold War stalemate to a period of unrivaled U.S. primacy”.

In this light, Trump’s fixation on how America is getting “ripped off” by the rest of the world — whether through trade deficits, the loss of manufacturing plants, or insufficient military spending by NATO members — is not just the mantra of a real-estate guy obsessed with negotiating a better deal. It is also the resentment that dominant powers always have toward weaker ones, as Robert Gilpin, an international relations theorist, explained in “War and Change in World Politics,” his classic 1981 study of what makes hegemons come and go.

… For Trump, the problem with leading the free world is that the free world gets a free ride.

Skipping a lot. The essay concludes:

We are not entering a post-American world, one in which the United States recedes from the stage or stops wielding its military might. Far from it. But we may be entering a post-America world, one in which the meaning of America, the principles and values the country has long stood for — sometimes in reality, sometimes in aspiration — are fading. And the loss of that America may prove just as damaging, and far more lasting, than any harm Donald Trump’s excursions can inflict.

And this last thought certainly echoes my repeated comments that modern conservatives, especially MAGA, are less and less interested in the principles upon which the US was founded, than they are in protecting themselves and oppressing others.

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For example. They really do want to destroy non-Christians. None of this Constitutional nonsense for them.

Right Wing Watch, Kyle Mantyla, 23 Mar 2026: By Any Means Necessary: Christian Nationalists Call For The Destruction Of Their Political Enemies

Last week, Christian nationalists Joshua Haymes and Brooks Potteiger urged their fellow right-wing Christians to pray “imprecatory psalms” against James Talarico, the Democratic nominee for the U.S. Senate from Texas.

Talarico is a Presbyterian seminarian who has openly cited his Christian faith in support of his progressive political positions, much to the outrage right-wing Christian nationalists.

Potteiger, who was the pastor at the church attended by Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth in Nashville, Tennessee, and will soon take over the Washington, DC church founded by Christian nationalist Doug Wilson, warned that Talarico is “a wolf” who is working to “distort what Christianity is in order to lead people away from Christ, toward the teaching of demons.”

As such, Potteiger and Haymes encouraged the use of “imprecatory psalms” against Talarico, which are prayers asking God to pour out his destruction upon one’s enemies.

“I pray that God kills him,” Haymes declared. “Ultimately, that means killing his heart and raising him up to new life in Christ … If it would not be within God’s will to do so, stop him by any means necessary.”

And that’s just the first example. Anything not part of their fundamentalist religious ideology is “evil” and must be destroyed. (And other religions, like Islam, think other things are evil and must be destroyed. This is why religion is dangerous.)

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Asking the question yet again.

Washington Post, opinion by Jim Geraghty, today: There’s a reason for MAGA’s 100% support of Trump, subtitled “MAGA is standing by Trump and his war, with help from a polling fault.”

Conservative journalist Christopher Caldwell, hitherto a strong supporter of Donald Trump, is so deeply disappointed with the president’s decision to launch a war against the Iranian regime that he concluded in the Spectator: “The attack on Iran is so wildly inconsistent with the wishes of his own base, so diametrically opposed to their reading of the national interest, that it is likely to mark the end of Trumpism as a project.”

And so on. Let’s jump down and see the writer identifies a reason for that poll (even if that result wasn’t really 100%).

Well, here’s what he finds. Basically: those who disapproved of Trump way back when stopped calling themselves MAGA, or even Republican, and so aren’t being counted in polls like this.

If you’re a Trump supporter who is upset or wary about the Iran war or the resulting impact on gas prices … maybe you’re not as inclined to identify as MAGA to a pollster lately.

That’s why we shouldn’t expect to find many MAGA supporters expressing their opposition to Trump’s decisions on Iran or much else. When people in this demographic disagree strongly enough, eventually they just stop calling themselves MAGA.

There is no “Trumpism” without Trump, and thus it is difficult to buy into Caldwell’s argument that the president is betraying some clear preexisting set of values. To the extent “Trumpism” as a philosophy exists, a core tenet appears to be: “Always trust the guy in charge, because he knows what he is doing and is playing seven-level chess.”

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Briefly noted.

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Morality Wars

  • Trump declares Democrats as the greatest enemy of America;
  • Trump demands election rigging plan be approved “for Jesus”;
  • Why do MAGA keep supporting Trump? Perhaps some kind of selective, “vertical”, morality;
  • How Trump has cultivated the ugliest passions within the GOP;
  • Robert Reich predicts Trump will surrender but call it a victory.
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Widely reported today.

Mediaite, 22 Mar 2026: Trump Declares ‘The Death of Iran’ — Then Brands Democratic Party America’s ‘Greatest Enemy’ in Stunning Post

“Now with the death of Iran, the greatest enemy America has is the Radical Left, Highly Incompetent, Democrat Party!” Trump wrote.

So he’s declaring half the country to be the enemy of “America” — which he implicitly defines as MAGA and his supporters. Doesn’t he realize that, at least nominally, he’s supposed to be the president of the entire United States? Apparently not. Or is he declaring a civil war?

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Here is Trump pandering to his people.

Mirror, Mikey Smith in Washington DC, today: Donald Trump demands election rigging plan be approved ‘for Jesus’ in deranged rant.

Subtitle: Giving a speech in Memphis, Tennessee, Trump said he was going to order Republicans to withhold funding from the Department of Homeland Security until the Senate passes his bill to pass the so-called “SAVE America Act”

The reason Democrats don’t support the SAVE act, aside from the difficulties it imposes on people the Republicans would rather not vote, is that Republicans refuse to include provisions requiring ICE agents to follow the Constitution. Maybe the Democrats should ask why can’t they follow the Constitution for Jesus?

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How can MAGA claim to be Christian while supporting Trump? A long answer.

HuffPost, Caroline Bologna, 21 Mar 2026: ‘Vertical Morality’ Might Describe Why MAGA Christians Seem So Unchristian, subtitled “This framework reveals why some MAGA-aligned Christians act in ways that contradict Jesus’ teachings.”

For many Americans, the gap between Christian teachings and MAGA politics is baffling. How can people profess faith in Jesus ― who preached love, mercy and care for the oppressed ― while supporting policies that punish immigrants, demonize LGBTQ people and glorify cruelty?

The key to understanding this apparent contradiction might lie in something called “vertical morality.”

This ethical framework measures righteousness not by goodness to others, but by something more simplistic.

Defining things, quoting activist Rachel Klinger Cain.

“Vertical morality is just how I describe what’s called ‘divine command theory’ in metaethics,” she said. “I’m a teacher, so I’m always looking for ways to make complicated concepts a little more simple. It’s basically the idea that morality comes from authority above, which is what I was taught when I was raised within conservative Christianity.”

Vertical morality stands in contrast to the concept of horizontal morality, another term Klinger Cain has broken down in her videos.

“Horizontal morality prioritizes the well-being of our neighbors, communities and personal relationships,” Ajoy explained. “We act in ways that cause the least amount of harm to those around us, regardless of beliefs. Someone with vertical morality may help someone in need because they believe that’s what God wants them to do, versus someone with horizontal morality may help that same person for the benefit of the person that needs help.”

Other key bits:

“Evangelicals are taught that all morality comes from God and therefore true goodness can only be spread by obeying God, even if it harms people around us,” Ajoy said. “This isn’t necessarily a bad thing if pleasing God manifests by following the teachings of Jesus ― loving our neighbors, loving our enemies, promoting peace and taking care of the poor, the widow, the immigrant and standing up for the marginalized. It becomes dangerous when Christians weaponize this vertical morality for power, which is exactly what we’re seeing with the Christian nationalism in the Trump administration.”

In the current era, conservative Christian nationalists see anyone on their political team as good and on God’s side, while those who oppose them as evil and satanic.

“What’s interesting is that Jesus taught a compassionate, flexible, grace-filled view of what it means to live a life loving God,” Levings noted. “But today’s conservative Christianity is less influenced by Jesus and more by the Old Testament and Paul.”

Exactly the point I’ve made over and over. And, this attitude:

“It predates Jesus, and it’s disinterested in evidence, science, progress, research, experience or the inclusion of other worldviews,” Levings said. “Theonomy is part of the Reformed theology that’s been growing in the evangelical movement for the past 30 years.”

And from author April Ajoy:

“The problem with MAGA Christians is that they promote policies that often go against the teachings of Jesus,” Ajoy said. “They justify it by promoting a view of God that is vengeful. They demonize all immigrants as criminals, all queer people as predators, all leftists as violent and all Democrats as satanic ― with no evidence to back these claims. And because they believe in a literal hell and a God-ordained calling to make the nation Christian, they justify cruelty in the name of ‘tough love.’”

Quite a long article, hitting familiar themes, from immigrants to the Ku Klux Klan. It’s about hierarchy. Morals come from God. Believers next. And unbelievers on some lower plane. Simplistic, tribal.

Of course, morality does not come from God; it evolved over hundreds of thousands of years because it enabled those to accomplish more, to cooperate, to develop larger towns and civilizations, greater trade networks and contacts with the outer world, than the xenophobic, superstitious tribalists who never did. The deeper explanation, which the article does not recognize, is that the motives of these vertical moralists reflect base human nature, while the horizontal moralists reflect a mature human nature, analogous to the many ways this span has been described. Deep in their guts, conservatives are more comfortable with the OT than with whatever Jesus said, which some now dismiss as being too “woke.”

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And again.

The Atlantic, Peter Wehner, 23 Mar 2026: How Trump Killed Conservatism, subtitled “The president has cultivated and encouraged the ugliest passions within the GOP, dousing the embers of hate with kerosene.”

The “Make America Great Again” movement is the beating heart of the GOP, the dominant political party in America—which makes MAGA the most important political movement in the world. And that is why some recent developments within the MAGA movement are so disquieting.

Going on with examples from today’s young Republicans.

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Robert Reich predicts.

Robert Reich, today: Why He’ll Surrender Soon, subtitled “But he’ll call it a great victory”

No one knows what Trump is going to do from minute to minute, least of all Trump. But it’s looking ever more likely he’ll be exiting Iran within days, declaring his “excursion” into it (as he’s termed his war) a major victory — and then changing the subject.

Because he’s done this kind of thing before. And his supporters will believe that he actually accomplished something, because he told them so.

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Skiffy Flix: It Came from Outer Space

Returning to our ongoing series.

It Came from Outer Space is a 1953 film directed by Jack Arnold (who did some similar movies in the same era) and based on a story treatment by Ray Bradbury (not a published short story). Despite the poster above, the DVD I watched was in black and white, and there was no 3-D effect (I wonder how they did a 3-D effect in black and white).

This film has similarities with others skiffy films of its era, yet it has certain charms, and it ends much more positively that most of those others.

Here’s the Wikipedia entry for this film.

Summary of plot:
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What It Means to Think That God Is On Your Side

  • Concerning Hegseth, Trump, and Rubio;
  • Also, how do religious sects decide when to reinterpret their scriptures?
  • Items about 100% approval, teleportation, church/state separation, and uncounted COVID deaths;
  • FBers compare reactions to Charlie Kirk’s death to Trump’s reaction to Robert Mueller’s death;
  • And David Brin notes a similar comparison between Cesar Chavez and the people the right defends.
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Everyone thinks God is on their side. Don’t they realize this?

NY Times, 20 Mar 2026: Hegseth Invokes Divine Purpose to Justify Military Might, subtitled “Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth has imbued U.S. military actions with a Christian moral underpinning that suggests they are divinely sanctioned.”
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Ziya Tong; THE REALITY BUBBLE

Subtitled: Blind Spots, Hidden Truths, and the Dangerous Illusions that Shape Our World
(Penguin Canada: Allen Lane, 2019, 366pp, including 15pp of acknowledgements and index.)

This is a pleasant enough book by a Canadian journalist. Her broad point is that there are many things about the world that most of us are unaware of, living as we do in a “reality bubble.” One way this is true is that many things are the way they are by convention, not because we live by some unalterable rules. Example: time zones. (This aligns with a key theme of science fiction: things might well be different in ways that wouldn’t occur to most people.) Another way this is true is that some things that we’re unaware of are just about the complexity of life. No one can, or necessarily needs to, understand all the details of where our food comes from. And a third way is more fundamental, that reality really does constrain what we perceive and what we don’t. Example of the electromagnetic spectrum and how humans perceive only a small fraction of it. There are lots of examples along all three of these themes… But they strike me as separate themes, analogous only in the broadest sense. So this is sort of a three-books-in-one. This is understandable, perhaps, in that the author is a journalist, for TV and radio, and presumably has been open to topics of all sorts that would be suitable science-oriented programming. (Also, very broadly, it aligns with similar works by Gladwell, Freakonomics, etc etc. But not in a hard science way.)
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Misconceptions about Science and Predictions

  • How Jeffrey Epstein, obsessed with eugenics, was wrong;
  • How Paul Ehrlich was not a villain, even though his predictions failed;
  • John Pavlovitz wonders why anyone still supports Trump; I have another idea;
  • Tom Nichols on no Plan B; the disappearing Charlie Kirk banner;
  • Rufus Wainwright’s “Go Or Go Ahead”.
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Evolution is the scientific topic about which even people who don’t reject it utterly still have more misconceptions about than any other branch of science. (Going back to Lamarckism, or the inheritance of acquired characteristics, that people like Lysenko and Stalin so much wanted to be true it became Soviet doctrine for decades.) I think it must reflect the teleological mode of most human thinking.

Slate, Susanne Paola Antonetta, 19 Mar 2026: Jeffrey Epstein, Eugenics Supremacist, subtitled “The files reveal his obsession with genetics. But genes don’t work the way he thought.”
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Donald Hoffman: THE CASE AGAINST REALITY

Subtitle: Why evolution hid the truth from our eyes
(Norton, 2019, 250pp, plus color plates, including 45pp acknowledgements, notes, and index.)

This is the first of three books I read in January, all with ostensibly similar themes, but actually quite different from one another in their perspectives and ultimate intents.

This one, for example, isn’t about evolution per se, as the subtitle suggests; it’s about how humans don’t perceive “true” reality, but only perceive reality in the sense of what is necessary for humans to survive and reproduce. OK, fine. I’ve made the same general point before. But he goes farther: he suggests that when we’re not looking at the moon, for example, the moon doesn’t exist. This goes back to certain philosophers, and sounds fatuous, and can only be true in the sense that humanity’s *conception* of what the moon is – filtered through our senses and our priorities for survival – ceases to exist when we’re not looking at it. It can’t mean that the physical object, the moon, that triggered our perceptions in the first place, ceases to exist. Yet he doesn’t want to spell this out; he leaves us with the impression that the actual moon ceases to exist when we’re not looking at it. Which I think is fatuous, and solipsistic.

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Latter Day Skiffy Flix: STTNG: Encounter at Farpoint

A couple evenings ago I rewatched the pilot episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation, called “Encounter at Farpoint,” for the first time since I watched it as the series premiere back in 1987.

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Increasing Willful Ignorance and Intolerance

  • How energy independence, which even Fox News once thought could avoid the quandary we now face in the Strait or Hormuz, is now regarded as a scam by the likes of JD Vance;
  • How Trump and MAGA are all for religious freedom… for Christians, but definitely not for Muslims;
  • While MAGA Christians want to repeal the 19th amendment and be much more intolerant toward ‘Satanic’ nonbelievers;
  • The White House Cage Match, and a Newsmax Host’s eagerness to punch people: are conservatives prone to settling disputes with violence? (Also yesterday’s item about guns);
  • The kids are all right, say new studies, better than previous generations, and the various psychological reasons many people believe otherwise.
– – –

We have only conservatives to blame.

Media Matters, Allison Fisher, 18 Mar 2026: Fox personalities used to claim that energy independence would shield the US from potential retaliatory action by Iran — such as closing the Strait of Hormuz, subtitled “As gas prices rise, the network has scarcely invoked the concept of ‘energy independence,’ mentioning it a fraction as often as it did during the start of the Russia-Ukraine war”

Hmm, why would that be? Perhaps because the current administration thinks energy independence is a scam.
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The War, the Economy, and Religion

  • Yet more commentators on the stupidity of this war with Iran, from Adam Lee, Suzanne Maloney, and Susan B. Glasser;
  • How the economies under Biden and Trump aren’t that much different;
  • Brief items about why conservatives need guns, Christian Nationalists who admit they mean to impose their morality on everyone, how the transgender plague is driven by demons, hurricanes, tricks, and Christian theology;
  • And two examples of the first lesson of comparative religion, for conservatives.
– – –

Adam Lee on the war.

OnlySky, Adam Lee, 18 Mar 2026: The colossal stupidity of war with Iran, subtitled “An unwinnable war without a goal and with consequences for the world.”

If anyone still doubted that Donald Trump will be remembered as the worst president of all time, he’s doing his best to eliminate that doubt.

Last month, America and Israel launched a surprise attack on Iran, assassinating Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and senior Iranian military officials. (We also accidentally bombed a school, killing over a hundred children.)

This is all the more hypocritical because isolationism used to be one of Trump’s defining policy stances. As a candidate, he railed against politicians whom he said would get us bogged down in wars:

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