By Jonah Goldberg
Wednesday, September 24, 2025
The only thing I wrote over the last 10 days, other than
emails and tweets, was my Los Angeles Times column in which I made a
really basic point: Two wrongs don’t make a right.
I was writing in the context of the new right’s newfound
hostility to freedom of speech. Or to be slightly fairer, in the context of the
new right’s hostility to consistency on free speech issues. The Trump
administration came into office vowing to “restore” freedom of speech. Trump
even issued a grandiose executive
order along those lines. But since Charlie Kirk’s murder, consistency is
not a top priority. Some in MAGA world passionately dispute this.
After all, very few people like to think they are
unprincipled. It’s a natural human tendency to look for exceptions to your
principles that allow you to cling to the idea that you are still principled.
In praise of line-drawing.
I don’t mean to cast this as a wholly negative thing.
This tendency can be the very essence of serious thinking. The basic gist of
Edmund Burke’s philosophy can be summarized as understanding where your
principles need to give way to other considerations.
For instance, most Americans believe in democracy. But
even the most serious small-d democrats understand that democracy is not an
all-purpose solution. We don’t elect members of the Supreme Court. Instead, we
understand that it’s better to elect the people who select the members of the
court, providing a little insulation from popular passions and the temptation
for potential jurists to pander to them. Our whole constitutional system is
based on the idea of using democratic (or republican) mechanisms where
appropriate but not where inappropriate.
Such distinctions are everywhere once you think about it
for a minute.
I don’t know many people who oppose parental rights. But
I also don’t know many people who believe that parental rights are absolute.
You can’t kill or physically abuse your kids. The vast majority of arguments
about parental rights are about edge cases where other principles take over.
Most businesspeople care a great deal about making a
profit. But there are some things they won’t do—even if legal—to maximize their
profits. That doesn’t make them socialists, it makes them morally mature people
who value other considerations beyond the bottom line.
To put it most broadly, nearly everyone believes in
freedom as an abstract good, but we spend most of our time arguing about where
to draw the lines around freedom. The law in general, and criminal law in
particular, amounts to a giant, ongoing, exercise in delineating what we are not
free to do. Believing in the necessity of law doesn’t make one
anti-freedom, it marks you as someone who thinks seriously about freedom.
Order is a principle, too. And it doesn’t take a Ph.D. in
logic or political philosophy to understand that freedom and order can be in
tension. Freedom without order is anarchy. Order without freedom is oppression.
Finding the middle path is arguably the central project of the Western
tradition.
Last point on this: Not everything is a contest between
competing abstract principles. Sometimes mere reality is a limiting principle
unto itself. Burke would call this “prudence.” The principled socialist may
think everyone deserves free health care, housing, and employment. But, as
Margaret Thatcher put it, “The trouble with socialism is that eventually you
run out of other people’s money.” So, the sober-minded socialist (rare, but
they do exist) prioritizes what they believe the country can afford. The principled
free marketer disdains taxation, but understands whatever amount of government
we’re going to have will have to be paid for, so we have to have some amount of
taxation. Government is about trade-offs and choices forced on us by reality.
The Kimmel interlude.
In the aftermath of Jimmy Kimmel’s suspension, many Trump
defenders insisted that they weren’t being inconsistent. When it appeared that
Kimmel had been fired, they insisted that Federal Communications Commission
Chairman Brendan Carr’s threats—“we can do this the easy way or the hard
way”—were immaterial. Kimmel’s stupid comments were simply a last straw for his
employers to make an overdue business decision.
Then his employers decided to lift his suspension and put
Kimmel back on air. Trump was
not happy. He declared, in part, that Kimmel “is yet another arm of the DNC
and, to the best of my knowledge, that would be a major Illegal Campaign
Contribution. I think we’re going to test ABC out on this. Let’s see how we
do.”
In the words of former
Rep. Justin Amash, “Trump torpedoed every White House surrogate who claimed the
administration wasn’t attempting to coerce Disney/ABC.”
This whole thing was a small—but important—example of how
Trump’s personal agendas create problems for people who simultaneously want to
claim they are deeply principled and want to defend Donald Trump. The opponents
of lawfare who defend Trump’s weaponization of the government; the opponents of
foreign entanglements who contort to defend the plan to turn Gaza into a
seaside resort; the devotees of depoliticized science who have to white-knuckle
it through every utterance by Robert F. Kennedy Jr.; the defenders of free
market capitalism left to explain how the government taking a stake in Intel
and U.S. Steel is consistent with their principles: the list goes on.
I am perfectly comfortable saying that most of the
defenders of all these things have principles, what they lack is consistency
rightly understood. Principled consistency involves taking principled positions
even when they yield results you do not like. If you revere the Constitution
when the Constitution ratifies your desires but reject the Constitution when it
doesn’t, you don’t actually revere the Constitution. Of course, you may think
you revere it. But the proper reply to this stated conviction—absent some
compelling argument based on another principle or reality-based prudence—is
“you’re wrong.”
You can replace “the Constitution” with all sorts of
other commitments—from Christianity to capitalism—and it works the same way.
And you know what? To some extent, that’s fine. We’re all
wrong about some things. We all make self-interested compromises with reality.
We all have blind spots that make perfect consistency an impossible standard.
The founders anticipated this. They understood that the
wrongness, the self-interest, and the blind spots were inextricable from
politics. They called this faction. Some factions might be committed to free
commerce, but not for their industry or region. Some factions might claim to be
for religious freedom—but not for those people.
That’s why they created a system based on disagreement,
on argument, on elections, and checks and balances. The idea being that the
worst aspects of faction would be canceled out by the need to contend with
other factions. Too much self-dealing and special treatment would create a
coalition of other factions to countermand it. And if—or when—that didn’t
always work out, the courts and the Bill of Rights would serve as a backstop.
In this sense, I am glad for the hypocrisy of the
fair-weather friends of constitutional principles. Better to have people
claiming to be principled than to have the power-hungry give up the pretense
and claim the principles have no purchase on them at all. Hypocrisy pays
tribute to principle by clarifying the standard being betrayed. I have a much
bigger problem with those on the new right and old left who reject the
principles entirely. There is way, way too much of that out there.
(Think of it this way: I think Trump’s effort to steal
the 2020 election was criminally sinister and his schemes on January 6 were
outright villainous. But the dupes on January 6 largely believed that the
election was stolen and they were fighting to preserve democracy. They were
wrong and their leaders lied to them. But it would be worse if the goons
storming the Capitol knew the truth and did it anyway. If they said, “Democracy
is for suckers” and “the Constitution is garbage,” their honesty would not detract
from their villainy, it would enhance and compound it. I’d rather live in a
country where the bad actors are at least lying to themselves about their noble
purposes.)
Regardless, our system has an answer to those who will
only use principles when convenient. In my
latest Times column I wrote about those conservatives who laudably
criticized Trump’s hostility to free speech on the grounds that the precedent
could be used against them when Democrats are back in power. My problem with
this argument isn’t that it is wrong—it’s obviously correct—but that it
violates the two-wrongs-don’t-make-a-right rule. If you believe that state
coercion against free speech is wrong, you should reject coercion even when you
dislike the speech in question, in much the same way you should denounce political
violence against your enemies just as much as you should denounce it against
your allies (Greg
Lukianoff wrote an excellent column on the same point).
Since my column, many right-wingers have been crowing
about Google’s admission that it was pressured by the Biden administration to
censor critics of COVID policy on the internet. See! They did it first!
They’re all hypocrites about free speech! That’s perfectly fair criticism.
But if you think that coercion by government was wrong, that doesn’t make
Trump’s coercion right.
James Harrington was a once-prominent but now mostly
forgotten political thinker. His primary influence was on people who would
later influence other people you might have heard of. But he was one of the
founders of the republican tradition that formed the foundation of the
Constitution.
He had a great illustration about how a proper republican
system—an “empire of laws and not of men”—is based on the self-interest of
different factions. In The
Commonwealth of Oceana he describes two little girls deciding how to
divide a cake. They decide that one girl will get to cut the cake, but the
other girl gets to pick her slice first. If the first girl tries to cut herself
the larger slice, the other girl will pick that slice. The cutter’s
self-interest, or gluttony, is circumscribed by the other girl’s self-interest
or gluttony. It would be better if the girls were imbued with a principled
devotion to fairness and sharing, but that is not always the way with
children—or voters.
I’ve been saying for years that perhaps the greatest
driver of our political dysfunction is that we elect people and parties who act
as if they will never be out of power and so they do not care about the moral
hazard of their decisions. Trump is a continuation and intensification of this
trend, not a break with it. He wants to wield the knife and have the first
piece of cake. Indeed, he thinks that’s the point of having the knife.
You can defend giving him the knife. You can even defend
his desire to have his cake and eat it too. But such defenses have little to do
with prudence or principle.
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