By George Packer
Friday, October 17, 2025
When leaders of Young Republican groups around the
country exchange texts that say “I love Hitler”; that joke about gas chambers
and rape, approve of slavery, sneer about “watermelon people” and monkeys in
zoos, and throw around words like faggot and retarded, they
aren’t just exposing their own anti-Semitism, racism, homophobia, and misogyny.
To see only the varieties of bigotry with which we’re painfully familiar is to
miss the depth of MAGA’s moral collapse. Professing love
for Hitler is more than anti-Semitic—it’s antihuman.
It’s a proud refusal to be bound by the most basic standard of goodness, a
deliberate expression of contempt for everything decent. The texts degrade all
of us.
And they’re hardly surprising. Cruelty and humiliation
have become the Trump administration’s common currency. With permission from
President Donald Trump’s coarse rhetoric and vows of hatred, Elon Musk’s Nazi
salute, Tucker Carlson’s flirtation
with Holocaust denial, and Stephen Miller’s rage-filled
threats, the young loyalists who wrote the texts were speaking the language
of the people they admire most. Nor was it surprising when, the day after Politico
revealed the texts’ existence, the image of an American flag altered into the
shape of a swastika appeared on the cubicle wall behind a staffer in the Capitol Hill office
of a MAGA congressman. In that culture, the rehabilitation of the man who
stands for the worst in humanity was inevitable.
Having been given permission from the country’s most
powerful person, the Young Republicans received forgiveness from its
second-most-powerful. Vice President J. D. Vance refused to condemn their
words, explaining:
“I really don’t want us to grow up in a country where a kid telling a stupid
joke—telling a very offensive, stupid joke—is cause to ruin their lives.” But
the authors of the texts have already grown up—they’re men in their 20s and
30s, climbing the rungs of Republican Party ladders in Kansas, Arizona,
Vermont, and New York, firm in the belief that the viler their language, the
higher they’ll go. One is already an officeholder.
For Vance, ethical judgment has become a pure matter of
partisanship, to the point of overcoming his most personal bonds. When a DOGE
member was revealed to have posted “You could not pay me to marry outside of my
ethnicity” and “Normalize Indian hate,” Vance—married to an Indian American—scoffed at the ensuing outrage and demanded that the offender be
rehired. But when private citizens anywhere said something ugly about Charlie
Kirk, the vice president went
after their livelihood. Once morality is rotted out by partisan relativism,
the floor gives way and the fall into nihilism is swift.
The abandonment of a universal morality isn’t just
philosophically wrong—it’s politically stupid. Any successful opposition to
Trump has to begin with a lucid understanding of what’s at stake: not just past
and present harms done to the marginalized, but everything that Americans once
believed they cared about, including the values that were co-opted by the right
before MAGA abandoned them—respect for law and custom, patriotism, family ties,
common decency. To some liberals and progressives these values came to sound
old-fashioned, corny, even dangerous. But anyone frightened by the country’s
downward spiral has to believe that our society still shares them, and can
still respond to them if someone makes the appeal.
If the Young Republicans’ texts are seen merely as
attacks on the groups they name, then they become the problem of Black and gay
people, Jews, and women. But the texts represent a larger atrocity, one that
has befallen all of America. Once you base moral judgments on group identity
and political convenience, it becomes possible for people on the left to be
anti-racist and anti-Semitic, and for people on the right to embrace Muslim
haters in Israel and Jew haters in Germany. If moral values aren’t simple and
universal—if they require a facility with the language of graduate seminars and
single-issue activism—they won’t move the immobilized, alienated, numb
Americans who still haven’t given up on their country’s promise. The
dehumanization of any group dehumanizes everyone. There will never be an end to
learning this lesson.
No comments:
Post a Comment