Stand Firm, Think Big
“If there must be trouble, let it be in my day, that my child may have peace.”
- Thomas Paine
That the man who recently declared war on his own country – or at least the urban part of it – did not win the 2025 Nobel Peace Prize should not have come as a surprise. The Trump administration was displeased, of course: "President Trump will continue making peace deals, ending wars, and saving lives,” posted a White House spokesman. “He has the heart of a humanitarian, and there will never be anyone like him who can move mountains with the sheer force of his will. The Nobel Committee proved they place politics over peace." But is the man who wants to rename the Defense Department the Department of War and who told the secretary of that department to “use some of these dangerous cities as training grounds for our military National Guard, but military, because we're going into Chicago very soon” really a man of peace? And is the 19-second video showing a gold-crowned Trump in a fighter jet dropping feces on peaceful protesters how the Nobel committee wants to present itself? We have sunk to a new low.
Mockery isn’t humor. It’s cruelty dressed up for a cheap laugh. It’s the weapon of a bully, and this bully flaunts it. “The Trump gang’s compulsion to debase and cheapen almost everything they touch is far more than a matter of style,” Michelle Goldberg recently wrote. But “what’s curious,” she notes, “is not Trump’s eagerness to degrade us, but his uncontrollable urge to defile himself and his office.” And, I would add, our country.
And, on some level I cannot explain, it’s working. Despite all the polls showing how unpopular Trump and his policies are, he remains unrestrained. That is due in no small part to his dismantling of the institutions that have stabilized our political system for 250 years – from a free press to independent courts, from our trust in elections to our reliance on now-gutted government programs. One result is the accelerating erosion of belief in either the government or in democracy itself, especially among the young, and most especially among young men. “Now, less than one-third of Americans under 30 trust the government,” noted researcher Christina Iruela Lane. “Only 16% believe democracy is working well for young people.”
In their book, Rural Versus Urban, Suzanne Mettler and Trevor Brown found that, on something called the “feeling thermometer,” white rural Americans rate Blacks at 70 (of 100), Hispanic Americans at 67, gay men at 57, illegal immigrants at 39, and Democrats at 14, even though rural and urban Americans “barely disagree” on policy issues. “We are bitterly divided,” Mettler told Ezra Klein. “And the divide is over partisanship.”
That the two major parties in our two-party system agree on many of the same policies but viscerally despise each other is not a good place for the country to be – especially as the president unrelentingly stokes that hatred to keep us divided. Are we on the brink of a crisis comparable to the Civil War? Do the destruction of our institutions and the erosion of public trust prefigure a slide into fascism?
So often I hear these days that people are not interested in ideas, that we must think small. Did Thomas Jefferson think small in Philadelphia in 1776? Or Lincoln at Gettysburg in 1863. Or MLK on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial a century later? As in those times, we are called once again to define the country we want America to be and to resist the one we are in danger of becoming.
That requires us to stand firm, to listen closely, to organize locally, and to think big.