

The fact is that truth-telling and confession, while difficult, are good for the soul.

By Dr. Kelly Denton-Borhaug
Professor of Religion
Executive Director, InFocus Centers of Investigation
Moravian University
Recent episodes of purposeful and accidental truth-telling brought to my mind the latest verbal lapse by George W. Bush, the president who hustled this country into war in Afghanistan and Iraq after the 9/11 attacks. He clearly hadnโt planned to make a public confession about his own warmongering in Iraq when he gave a speech in Texas this spring. Still, asked to decry Russian president Vladimir Putinโs unjustified invasion of Ukraine, Bush inadvertently and all too truthfully placed his own presidential war-making in exactly the same boat. The words spilled out of his mouth as he described โthe decision of one man to launch a wholly unjustified invasion of Iraq โ I mean of Ukraine.โ
Initially, he seemed shocked that he had blurted that out and tried to back off his slip by shrugging and muttering, โIraq, too,โ as if it were a joke. Some in his audience even laughed. But his initial attempt to sideline his comment only deepened the hole he was in. Then he tried another ploy. He suggested that his slip could be forgiven or excused because of his age, 75, and that his invasion and the destruction of Iraq could now be forgiven because of his cognitive decline. All in all, it was a first-class mess.
An Earlier Pathetic Attempt at Comedy
I remember another of Bushโs attempted jokes that got an immediate laugh from his audience, but soon fell seriously flat. It was in 2004. The Iraq War was underway and the president was at the yearly dinner of the Radio and Television Correspondents Association, a black-tie event attended by both journalists and politicians.
After various comedy sketches, then-President Bush rose to present a short meant-to-be humorous slideshow featuring himself supposedly looking for the nonexistent weapons of mass destruction (WMD) in Saddam Husseinโs Iraq. Remember that, in the lead-up to war there, Americans were hammered with fearful and deceptive political messaging, emphasizing that only an invasion could stop that countryโs ruler, Saddam Hussein, from having WMD. (None were ever found, of course.) At that dinner, Bush showed photos of himself supposedly searching for those devastating weapons in the Oval Office beneath a cushion on the couch and under the desk. โNo weapons under there! Maybe theyโre here!โ said the smiling president repeatedly in a sing-song voice, as if engaged in a childโs game. Horrifyingly enough, many in that audience of journalists did indeed laugh.
I was offended then, just as I was by Bushโs recent slip and his sorry attempts to minimize and excuse his responsibility for the blood on his hands, the massive death toll from his invasion, and so much additional destruction and suffering. According to The Costs of War project, more than 207,000 Iraqi civilians were killed in that nightmare, while the number who died from the indirect violence of that war was far higher, given the damage done to the Iraqi health care system and the rest of that devastated countryโs infrastructure. More than 20 years later, people are still dying needlessly. And I also mourn the more than 7,000 U.S. servicemembers who died in the post-9/11 war zones Bush created, as well as the many more who were wounded.
I canโt help but wonder if George Bush doesnโt feel at least a little of this himself. Otherwise, why would he have made such a slip? Or maybe it wasnโt a slip at all, but an inadvertent confession.
That his telling gaffe about Iraq and Ukraine received so little attention certainly reveals something about our mediaโs ongoing uneasiness with Bushโs wars and perhaps the conflicted feelings of our citizenry as well when it comes to what they did (and didnโt do) during the Iraq War. How many who were initially enthusiastic about the Afghan and Iraq wars would now, like their former president, admit we were wrong? How many people who supported those conflicts have taken what happened to heart and are thinking more deeply about an American propensity for war and the war culture that goes with it? Like George W. Bush, too few, Iโm afraid.
Worshipping Lies
This past July 24th, the New York Times featured โI was wrongโ op-ed pieces by a number of its columnists. The editors defined โbeing wrongโ as โincorrect predictions and bad advice,โ as well as โbeing off the mark.โ Of course, one of the definitions of the Greek word for โsinโ (amartia) in the New Testament is โmissing the mark.โ Fascinating.
I would have taken the editorsโ definitions further though. Saying โI was wrongโ means more than โrethinking our positions on all kinds of issues,โ as the Times suggested. Often, the problem isnโt simply that people lack the best, most up-to-date information or data. Only by digging into ethics and social psychology will we better understand why people deceive not just others but even themselves with lies, slippery rationalizations, or comedic attempts at distraction to cover up deeper dynamics that have to do with privilege and power, or what religious traditions sometimes call โworshipping false idols.โ
Moral psychologist Albert Bandera has explored some of the diverse mechanisms people rely on to morally disengage and excuse inhumane conduct. They shift their rhetoric and thinking to redefine and even rename what they are doing, โsanitizingโ language (and their acts) in the process. In this way, they often shift responsibility onto someone else, minimize any damaging consequences for themselves, and dehumanize the victims of the violence theyโve let loose.
But there are other examples of moral disengagement that are even harder to understand. In such cases, people make decisions and act in ways that even undercut their own self-interest and values. For me, one of the saddest recent examples is Stephen Ayres, a witness at the House select committeeโs January 6th hearings this summer. He had been part of the Trumpist mob that stormed the Capitol. A family man who, until then, owned a house and had a job with a cabinet company, Ayres came across in those hearings as a lost soul who couldnโt fully comprehend how he had willingly injured himself and his family by idolizing Donald Trump and his election lies.
His arrest for participating in the insurrection resulted in the loss of almost everything he had. With his wife sitting behind him, he testified about having to sell his house, losing his job, and struggling to come to terms with his actions. โI wish I had done my own research,โ he said, trying to explain how he could have been so easily deceived by Trumpist lies regarding the 2020 presidential election.
Clearly, the social media bubble he slipped into that captivated and compelled him to head for Washington had given his life new meaning and an otherwise missing sense of excitement. He hadnโt planned to enter the Capitol building that day but was swept away by the moment. โBasically, we were just following what [Trump] said,โ Ayres testified. In handing over his critical thinking to right-wing social media and a president intent on hanging onto power at any cost, he unwittingly also handed over his capacity for moral deliberation and, in the end, his very life.
Liz Cheneyโs Struggle for Moral Clarity
In recent weeks, Liz Cheney, vice-chairperson of the January 6th committee, was questioned about a past moral choice of hers by Leslie Stahl in a 60 Minutes interview โ specifically, how years ago she threw her lesbian sister and family under the bus for political purposes. It was a time when Cheney was struggling to get elected in conservative Wyoming. That meant coming out as anti-LGBTQ. Now, she says, โI was wrongโ to have condemned her sister then.
Listening to her, I wanted to hear more about such moral grappling and how, in these years, her convictions had or hadnโt changed when it came to people, religion, family, political life, power, and the role her father played as George W. Bushโs vice president in those godforsaken wars in Afghanistan and Iraq. Unfortunately, Stahl didnโt push her further.
I disagree with Liz Cheney on almost every policy position sheโs taken in these years. Nonetheless, I find myself grateful for her rejection of Donald Trumpโs mad election claims and her determined, even steely, leadership of the January 6th committee hearings. Cheney eventually discovered her moral bearings on her sisterโs sexual orientation and family life. Now, I wonder if that past moral struggle influenced her decision to throw political expediency to the wind regarding her own House seat in a Wyoming primary that she might lose on August 16th. After all, by resisting the Trumpian tide, sheโs become one of the few Republicans willing to do some serious truth-telling.
Today, Cheney finds herself in another league from most of her partyโs leaders and power players. In the state where I live, Pennsylvania, Republicans are coalescing behind the candidacy of Doug Mastriano for governor. Candidate Mastriano not only wants to arm school employees, but according to my local newspaper, he even organized buses for January 6th, now โrubs shoulders with QAnon conspiracy theorists,โ and until recently had an active social media account at Gab, a site well-known for its white supremacist and anti-semitic rhetoric.
Mastriano continues to spread Trumpโs lies about the 2020 election, is a Christian nationalist, and believes in an abortion ban without exceptions, and the list goes on and on. Nonetheless, Republicans like Andy Reilly, a member of the state GOP national committee, rationalize their support for Mastriano by saying things like, โWhen you play team sports, you learn what being part of a team meansโฆ Our team voted for him in the primary.โ
Lying to Others and Oneself
What enables such self-deception? According to journalist Mark Leibovich, author of Thank You for Your Servitude: Donald Trumpโs Washington and the Price of Submission, what โmade Trump possibleโ even after the January 6th insurrection was โrationalization followed by capitulation and then full surrender.โ Reviewing Leibovichโs book, Geoffrey Kabaservice added this: โThe routine was always numbingly the same, and so was the sad truth at the heart of it. They all knew better.โ In other words, โknowing betterโ doesnโt assure anyone of doing the right thing. Instead, too many Americans were swayed by โgreed, ambition, opportunism, fear, and fascination of Trump as a pure and feral rascal.โ
Tim Miller, author of Why We Did It: Travelogue from the Republican Road to Hell, adds โhubris, ambition, idiocy, desperation, and self-deceptionโ to the mix of reasons why so many politicians do what they do. โHow do people justify going along?โ he asks. But he, too, played that game once upon a time. A Republican gay man with a husband, he rationalized helping the GOP pass anti-LGBTQ legislation by โcompartmentalizingโ his personal life from his professional one. As he now says, โBeing around power, being addicted to power,โ along with the insatiable compulsion to โbe in the room where it happens,โ is a recipe that leads people to act self-deceptively, while deceiving others.
Itโs like placing scales over your own eyes and those of others, to blind as many people as possible, yourself included, to the immorality of your acts. And some lie even more to themselves, claiming that they can resist the worst tendencies of destructive power-mongering. They say, โWe need to have good people in the roomโ to stop the worst from happening, even as they capitulate to power players and justify what should never be justified.
Many of us are waiting to hear an โI was wrongโ from so many politicians (though I canโt imagine Donald Trump ever succumbing to honesty), including most of the Republican leadership. Just for starters, Iโd like to hear โI was wrongโ regarding Muslim bans, the demonization of immigrants, the refusal to seriously address gun violence, the denial of womenโs human rights, the gerrymandering and weakening of voting rights, religious nativism, and sidling up to white supremacy, not to speak of the supposed โstealโ of the 2020 election. But given the likelihood that people in power will lie to themselves and others, Iโm not holding my breath.
Telling the Truth about U.S. Military Spending
What Iโm also waiting for is an โI was wrongโ from both Democratic and Republican politicians in Washington who, year after year, support ever more outlandish military budgets, despite so many other existential crises in our country and on the planet, despite the death-dealing costs of war to the servicemembers Americans claim to highly esteem, and despite the fact that our violence abroad simply hasnโt worked.
Remember that the United States spends more than half of its entire discretionary federal budget on militarization and war, a tally greater than the military budgets of the next nine highest-spending countries combined. Tragically, it doesnโt appear that this will change any time soon.
According to an analysis by the anti-corruption group Public Citizen , in 2022, the congressional armed services committees only added to the already gigantic military budget the Biden administration requested for 2023. The House added another $37.5 billion, while the Senate added $45 billion. Our leaders refuse to learn from the last decades of unremitting war. Instead, power and privilege continue to hold sway.
As the same report explained, after military-industrial-complex corporations donated $10 million to congressional armed services committee members, โthe Department of Defense received a potential $45 billion spending increase.โ This was in addition to the presidentโs $813 billion recommendation. The report concluded, โThe defense contractors will have clinched a return on its $10 million investment of nearly 450,000%.โ
Itโs discouraging to see how deception and rationalization so regularly undermine truth and moral courage. Itโs also sobering to witness individuals who willingly lie to themselves and, in doing so, subvert their own and othersโ wellbeing. But Iโm also encouraged by times when, as with Liz Cheney on that committee, some of us demonstrate what it means to dig deeply for moral clarity against the prevailing headwinds of moral disengagement, disinformation, power, and privilege.
The fact is that truth-telling and confession, while difficult, are good for the soul. I wish for more and hope it will be enough. God knows, all of us and this beleaguered planet truly need it.
Published by Common Dreams, 08.16.2022, under the terms of a Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported license.


