Politicians won’t restore American values — ‘we the people’ will

You know American democracy is in trouble when The New York Times is running prominent op-eds encouraging America to embrace a monarchy. Gosh, of all the things I thought I’d never read, asking the United States to revisit deposing George III more than 230 years ago was probably at the top of the list.

{mosads}Then there is the Iranian government deciding to broadcast the three American presidential elections live to their people as a way of displaying the moral decay in the United States. Who would have believed that a country that so strongly censors any American message would choose to pipe in our debates unrestricted as a way of telling their people, “You think Iran is bad, but just look at these nutcases.”

To be sure, it’s not as bad as all that. But how did we get to this place, the single most embarrassing presidential election of our lifetime?

It all comes down to the one thing: values. Values, and their erosion in American discourse.

Over the last few presidential cycles, I have long lamented how the American values debate was centered around abortion, gay marriage, and contraception.

In a fascinating twist, not one of those three issues has played a significant role in this election. Yet the continual focus on these topics over the last two decades through repeated election cycles meant that America had no serious discussion about substantive values that might renew the republic.

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For example, there has been little to no discussion about the decline of the family, the rise of divorce, the increasing sexualization of women, what values should be brought to bear on the discussion of immigration, how we should respond to evil governments that brutalize their people, growing narcissism and self-focus among our youth, what defines success, and whether honesty should come before the lust for power.

The depraved election that we have endured is not a function of the erosion of the United States, per se. America is still a majestic and mighty nation, undoubtedly the greatest country on earth. But it is, also, a function of the almost complete dearth of a serious values discussion.

I’m not sure that anything really substantive has been highlighted in this election. Instead, we have focused for months on an email server, Trump’s interactions with women, Trump’s online insults, and the never-ending controversy surrounding the Clinton Foundation.

To be sure, the candidates did, at times, address serious policy differences like over Obamacare, immigration, and foreign policy. But these have been small lights in an otherwise dark constellation. 

The decline of substantive public discourse is also a function of the demise of religion in America. Or should I say religious influence.

To be sure, America remains one of the most religious nations on earth and the most religious in the Western world. But where have we seen its influence in this election?

Has a single religious figure of note weighed in authoritatively on the behavior of the two candidates?

No. Evangelical Christians in general are behind Trump because they fear the appointment of liberal Supreme Court justices and mainline Protestants, I presume, are behind Clinton because they often cannot distinguish between their own social activist values and Democratic talking points.

As for the Jewish community, we’ve been torn by a critical dilemma. Trumps seems better for Israel in that he opposes the genocidal Iran deal, supports Israeli settlements, and opposes a two-state solution in which a Palestinian state will quickly be overtaken by Hamas, with its sworn objective being the annihilation of the Jewish people. But is his behavior in accordance with Jewish values?

As for Hillary, she says she’ll have a better relationship with Israel than President Obama but does little to differentiate herself from Obama’s policies and was indeed the architect of many of those policies, most notably the heinous Iran deal which will forever live in American foreign policy infamy.

Looming over this election is the specter of Syria and how little anyone cares about the near-genocide of Arabs that has taken place on President Obama’s watch. I believe that history will judge him harshly for his omission. But right now, Americans seem too enthralled with the vast entertainment provided by this circus-like election to care.

America was, and must once again be, a serious nation responsible, ultimately, for setting global moral standards.

Yes, we don’t want to police the world but no, we don’t want to be like every other nation, either. We don’t deny we’re the most powerful nation on earth with the best values. We value personal freedom, human rights, human dignity, and human liberty.

It’s to our eternal discredit that those defining American attributes have been so little in conversation in this election.

No British, or American king, for that matter, is going to save us. And brutal dictatorships like Iran are certainly not the answer either.

Rather, America has always known that power must lie with the people because it is they, not the elites, who can be trusted to safeguard human liberty.

I have no doubt that from the shards of this bizarre presidential election American democracy will be reborn. I also have little doubt that the renewal of American values will not come from some American messiah figure — from the right or the left — but from everyday Americans who slowly restore the republic to the decency, substance, and seriousness it has always represented. 

Boteach, “America’s Rabbi,” whom The Washington Post calls “the most famous Rabbi in America” is the international best-selling author of 31 books, including the recently published “The Israel Warrior.” The winner of the London Times Preacher of the Year competition, he is the Founder of The World Values Network, one of America’s premier organizations defending Israel in national media. Follow him on Twitter @RabbiShmuley.


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