On June 9th, 1954 Joseph Welch asked Joseph McCarthy “have you no sense of decency?” Today many of us are asking that same question.
But like kindness and compassion – words often used here in our studio – talking about decency can sound like a polite way of pointing out poor manners. So it was what Welch said just before that resonates:
“Until this moment, Senator, I think I never really gauged your cruelty or your recklessness."
Those are not words anyone would want ascribed to their actions, yet every day we are witnessing a new level from leadership that seems to relish both. It is cruel to withhold treatments from sick people. It is reckless to bully friends and allies. And it is both reckless and cruel to put small businesses employing millions of Americans across the country at risk with an ill-conceived trade war.
“No one deserves this. No one. Regardless of who they voted for.” (Beth Benike, Founder of Busy Baby, U.S. Army Veteran)
And yet here we are, watching decisions being made that hurt the people our government is meant to serve. Executive orders are signed that strip away constitutional protections, funding is slashed from programs that feed and heal, and tariffs are imposed that punish not global giants like Apple, but local retailers, farmers and small manufacturers just trying to make ends meet.
And now the The One, Big, Beautiful Bill has been passed in the House of Representatives that would transfer $1.1 trillion from those who can't afford food and medical care to the wealthiest among us while exploding the national debt. As legislation goes, it is the definition of cruel and reckless.
Decency isn’t just about being polite. It's about the policies we support, the causes we lift up, and the leaders we hold accountable. It’s rejecting cruelty and standing with those whose voices are drowned out, whose livelihoods are threatened, and whose basic dignity is at stake.
Seventy years ago Joseph Welch showed how talking about decency can be a powerful stance against cruelty and recklessness.
Time to follow his lead, speak up, and call our representatives.
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6 comments
Thank you, Ted and Patsy, for this courageous, powerful, inspiring statement of the awful truth that has beset our country. May we continue to feel your warmth and community as we toil in our respective patches to purge the present horror, bringing sanity and yes, decency, back to our government. Bless you!
Thanks for these comments – as mentioned the the following “You Belong Here” post, we aim not to be political on this blog. But there comes a time when we all need to speak up in every way possible. Welch’s words about cruelty and recklessness fit the moment, and as helpless as we often feel, we refuse to be hopeless.
Ted and Patsy
Thank you for speaking up.
Thank you for speaking out. I’m feeling helpless and hopeless right now. Something needs to fuel the resistance. Maybe this will provide a spark.
Thank you for using your customer list to inspire us to take action in any way we can to defeat the cruel, evil, ruthless, undemocratic, and nation destroying plans of the current presidency and his far too many Republic senators and representatives sycophants. May each of us find ways to oppose those who are determined to impose a fascist government on our gloriously multi-cultural, multi-religious (or none), multi-racial, multi-gendered, etc. country of immigrants. Except. for the Indigenous people so badly treated, EVERYONE here is an immigrant or descended from immigrants.