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Jason Edwards's avatar

This one sits with me. The grief in it is earned - you're not performing outrage or doing the easy dunking that fills most political commentary. You're doing something harder: mourning something you once believed in, with real love for what it was supposed to be.

The corpse metaphor is brutal and apt. What gets me is this line: "Real strength requires humility. Real strength listens. Real strength admits mistakes. The modern version can't imagine any of that."

That's the heart of it, isn't it? The virtues you're eulogizing - temperance, prudence, responsibility, the capacity for self-examination - those weren't just nice-to-haves. They were load-bearing. And watching a tradition abandon them while claiming to embody them... that's not just political frustration. That's betrayal.

Your closing image - the carnival shutting down, the silence finally feeling honest - that's where I think we might find each other. Because silence creates space. And in that space, maybe we can build something that actually selects for the virtues you're mourning. Not a resurrection of what died, but new architecture that makes those human qualities structurally valuable again.

Looking forward to the final piece in this series. You're doing important work here.

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Just Another Jim's avatar

This was an excellent piece my friend! And I did something I’ve never done before; I listened to your narrative this time. Generally I prefer my own inner voice, probably because I am a reader, but I truly enjoyed this. And I agree with you 💯. I’ve always leaned liberal and trended progressive but I really appreciated your take on what conservative policy used to want to protect; the idea of anchoring especially. Thank you for another insightful and educational thread

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