An Ethics Quote of the Week From President Trump, and an Ethics Hero Award for Steve Witherspoon (Yes, That Steve Witherspoon!)

I went to bed last night having decided that the first post here today would be about President Trump’s blunt, characteristic, in-your-face reaction to the death of Robert Mueller, who led the cynical and destructive Axis of Unethical Conduct effort to cripple Trump’s first term with a contrived, partisan plot based on false accusations that he and his campaign “colluded” with Russia to defeat Hillary Clinton in the 2016 election. The quote, an ethics quote because of the natural debate it fosters, an unethical quote because it intentionally breaches societal norms that dictate being respectful of the dead in the immediate aftermath of their deaths and a President should always model the best behavior for the public, and an ethical quote because it is true, was..

“Robert Mueller just died. Good, I’m glad he’s dead. He can no longer hurt innocent people!”

It’s not a close call whether this was an ethical thing to state in public, which Trump did on Truth Social. It wasn’t, and isn’t for many reasons. It is gratuitously cruel to Mueller’s family for POTUS to say such a thing immediately after their loved one’s death. It accomplishes nothing but relieve Trump of some of his apparently inexhaustable back-up of bile. It makes the Trump Deranged hate him even more than they already do, which qualifies as deliberately being divisive, something else leaders should never do. And it accomplishes nothing positive. Such an act does, however, take another step in making this Ethics Alarms 2015 post look as wise and prophetic as it was.

“See? I’m smart! I’m not dumb like everybody says!”

Before I sat down to compose a post that would have essentially said what I did in far fewer words above, I decided to check whether Ann Althouse, the red-pilled Madison Wisconsin retired law professor/bloggress had posted on the quote for her followers. She had, briefly. But what did I discover in the comments to her post was that the topic had provoked none other than our own Steve Witherspoon into not only doing battle with the vocal Trump Deranged and Mueller defenders (in truth defenders of the anti-Trump plot Mueller knowingly participated in) but being allowed to do so by Althouse!

Ann carefully moderates her commenters, and seldom allows an extended back-and-forth between commenters, a policy that Ethics Alarms, obviously, does not embrace. Steve (who was frequently derided on EA along with Steve-O-in NJ by self-banned Ethics Alarms troll “A Friend”) was measured, fair, polite, balanced, ethical and relentless as he was swarmed by Trump-Deranged attackers like the “The Birds” going after Tippy Hedren in the attic. Unlike Tippy however, Steve knew what he was getting into.

He was courageous, and he was right. Meanwhile, his adversaries’ comments were weak and illogical; the main defense of Mueller was that he was a decorated Vietnam veteran. This is rationalization #21, Ethics Accounting, or “I’ve earned this”/ “I made up for that,” as regular readers here know.

Here’s the full transcript of Steve’s interactions regarding Trump’s quote. I will have occasional asides in brackets.

3 thoughts on “An Ethics Quote of the Week From President Trump, and an Ethics Hero Award for Steve Witherspoon (Yes, That Steve Witherspoon!)

  1. Thanks for supplying the blow-by-blow in its entirety.

    Steve sent me the link earlier, but bailed early on because I believed AllAmericanJock’s moronic imbecility might be contagious.

    Addicts before and after | TDS | image tagged in addicts before and after,memes,rachel maddow,trump derangement syndrome | made w/ Imgflip meme maker

    PWS

    • Will add that this isn’t anything I haven’t seen before.

      I’ve enjoyed Steve meticulously vivisecting unsuspecting local Lefties for over a decade; they never know what hit ’em!

      PWS

  2. How do you remember public figures who led lives that are ethically complicated?

    Mueller’s life was ethically complicated. As a Marine platoon leader in Vietnam, Mueller was shot and later returned to lead his platoon after his recovery. He received a Bronze Star for valor, a Purple Heart, 2 Navy/Marine Commendation medals, Republican of Vietnam Cross of Valor, and numerous other medals. After serving his country as FBI Director he was appointed by the DOJ as Special Council overseeing the investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 Presidential elections, and became a participant in a clown show that greatly hurt his reputation and overshadowed his previous career and service to the country.

    Trump’s reaction to his death was honest and truthful, but lacked class. I like Charles de Gaulle’s reaction to the death of Marshall Pétain a lot better by declaring that his life was “successively banal, then glorious, then deplorable, but never mediocre”. Marshall Pétain was a man with a complicated life; he was one of the great heroes in World War I, but he collaborated with the Nazis in World War II, after which he was spared the death penalty and was sentenced to life in prison.

    One of the left’s heroes, Cesar Chavez, had an ethically complicated life as we found out last week. Left wing city and state governments waste no time in removing all references to Cesar Chavez from the public space by removing statues, and renaming streets. Somehow I believe that this reaction has more to do with his anti-illegal immigration stance than the allegations of sexual abuse.

    Charlie Kirk’s death created strong and opposite reactions. He is lionized by Christian conservatives the MAGA right because of his political and moral stance, and reviled by the left who cheered on his death and destroyed impromptu memorials erected in his honor. To the hard left nothing is complicated; if you are not with them you are as evil as Adolf Hitler, and no positive memory is allowed to you.

    There is a saying “Don’t speak ill of the dead”. This rule has the benefit of respecting the feelings of the deceased’s relatives and close friends. However it also has been said that the biggest lies are told during eulogies. All our lives are ethically complicated. Nobody is perfect. All have sinned. Honesty requires that we remember the good but also mention the bad. And that is where I think Trump fails, as he only mentions the bad; Trump is a man with narcissist tendencies who is unable to forgive and look past his own personal experiences.

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