WHY MORAL CREDIBILITY IS THE HEART OF THE MATTER
Before I go into the basis for that assertion, let me explain why I believe that quality is so essential in our next leader.
In the first installment of this series –at
www.nonesoblind.org/blog/?p=461
— I argued that the job of the next president is to teach the American
people the meaning of the dark period we have just been through, and to
repair the damage that this Bushite regime has done to America and to
the world.
But let us be clear: the nature of the damage done is essentially
moral. This is not like taking a car to the body-shop after a
collision. All the various dimensions of the task I delineated in that
first installment –the making of peace, the fortifying of the
Constitution and the rule of law, the re-establishment of
truth-telling– have to do with the battle of good against evil. And,
accordingly, the true and deep meaning of this Bushite era is that evil
forces managed to take over the United States of America. (For a
discussion of the nature of goodness as the forces that create
Wholeness, and of evil as the forces that tear down the structures of
Wholeness, see “The Concept of Evil,” at
www.nonesoblind.org/blog/?p=91.)
Moral credibility is the absolutely essential quality that America
needs in a leader to address the challenge of this still very dangerous
era of our history.
WHAT GIVES GORE MORAL CREDIBILITY
When it comes to Gore, one could start with his “good Boy Scout”
quality. Something of a limitation in some circumstances –Americans
like their heroes to have more of the rascal and the rogue in them– in
the post-Bush era, Gore’s palpable sense of responsibility and duty
should be a powerful strength. The more that Americans come to
understand how utterly unwilling these Bushites have been to
acknowledge or obey any order that would contain their lust for power,
the more will their confidence be inspired by a leader who would help a
little old lady across the street even if it gained him nothing.
In the eyes of most Americans, Gore’s conduct at the very end of the
post-election struggle of 2000 did him great credit, and rightly so.
Once the Supreme Court had handed down its disgraceful, entirely
politicized decision, Gore he showed his nobility by accepting the out
graciously, while also acknowledging his considerable disappointment.
He did this even though he doubtless felt he’d been robbed, which in
important ways he had been, because he knew there was no way left
within the system to fight that outcome, and thus to continue fighting
would be to injure the system.
(In retrospect, it appears that what was at stake was large enough to
warrant straining the system. But that was not clear then—certainly not
to me, and more importantly not to very many of the American people.
And it is doubtful that anything good would have been accomplished in
exchange for going beyond the law to wage that struggle.)
In the context of this Bushite era, where the rule of law has been
under such assault by the fascists in power, this recollection Gore’s
respect for the system –demonstrated under the most difficult of
circumstances– would bolster his moral credibility if he steps back
onto to the political stage.
In addition, on two or three occasions in the past couple of years,
Gore has spoken out with moral clarity and powerful moral passion
against the depredations of this Bushite regime. It is these statements
that have caused many in America to sense that there’s been growth in
the man. And even if most of America has not yet paid that much
attention to that new-found power in Gore’s moral voice, these
important public talks give evidence of a capacity that was not much in
evidence in 2000.
And what matters most, it should be noted, is not the image most
Americans have of him from a dimly remembered past, but the image they
would quickly have of him if he steps out onto the public stage and
quickly demonstrates that the old image does not fit.
But far more decisive in the picture of Gore’s moral credibility is the
deeper, soul-level commitment he has shown to addressing one important
aspect of the world’s present great distress.
THE SIGNIFICANCE OF SUCH DEEP DEVOTION