I don’t want to feel angry. I don’t want to feel hopeless about the future of my country. I don’t want to feel despair about the future of the people around me.
I’ve been trying so hard to focus on thinking and writing about the ways in which principled and decent Americans can stop their society from collapsing — on the ways in which individuals can build something that’s healthy and functional even in the face of the horrible things going on around us.
But there are times when I feel as though things have gone so far that even the people who need to hear that can’t hear, because the raging cacophony of the dysfunctional culture makes it impossible for them to hear.
This is why so many socially conservative people have unwisely turned to political power as a way to create the society they want. They see cultural forces that are destroying the traditional values which gave us things that were worth conserving. They see those forces replacing those things with ideas and ways of life which are irrational and destructive and evil.
What social conservatives don’t understand, though, is that giving in to the desire to seize political power — even in the service of stopping this destructive evil — corrupts them so badly that they end up betraying the values they originally claimed to hold.

THE McELROY ZOO: Meet Thomas, the aloof loner of my menagerie
THE McELROY ZOO: Meet Oliver, the furball who taught me to love cats
Goodbye, Amelia (2000-2013)
There’s hatred, evil and injustice, but this is the ‘real’ America, too
If you participate in sham of voting, you’re responsible for what it creates
Mom finds 28 reasons to put phone down, pay more attention to sons
Shared misery: Nobody can have air conditioning unless everyone can