There was a time — not so long ago — when Americans at least pretended to care deeply about character. We argued about politics, yes, but we also insisted that the people entrusted with power possess some basic moral grounding.
Honesty mattered. Decency mattered. The idea that private conduct revealed public truth was widely understood.
Somewhere along the way, that expectation collapsed.
What replaced it was not a better philosophy or deeper compassion. It was tribalism. We began to judge leaders less by who they were and more by which side they claimed to serve. If they fought for our preferred policies, many of us decided their personal conduct was irrelevant, exaggerated or maliciously invented by opponents. Character became negotiable. Loyalty did not.
The continuing public reckoning surrounding Jeffrey Epstein is not, at its core, a political story. That is precisely why it is so revealing. Epstein moved easily among the wealthy and powerful for years. He was not an obscure figure. He was a convicted sex offender with a reputation that, at minimum, raised profound questions about his moral fitness for decent society.
Yet he was welcomed with open arms — by other men and women of equally low character.

It often takes approach of death to wake us from a dead-end life
A haunting question: ‘Where is love now, out here in the dark?’
Folks all around are waiting for someone to say, ‘Hello in there’
Future reality starts in what we believe inside about who we are
If there are exceptions to free speech, it’s not really free speech, is it?
Economic and moral ignorance is at root of fast food worker walkout
Barbarians with evil ideas taking our entire culture off deadly cliff
Your motivations tell me more about you than your actions do