
By David W. Virtue, DD
March 4, 2025
In what looks to be a case of Dé·jà vu, a second Episcopal bishop, has publicly slammed Donald Trump following a “disgraceful display by our Mafioso-in-Chief” in a verbally tough exchange between the president and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy.
The first was Washington Bishop Marianne Budde who rebuked Donald Trump from the pulpit of Washington National Cathedral over his immigration and other policies. Outraged by her comments, Trump asked her to apologize. She refused.
This time it is the Episcopal Bishop of Los Angeles, John Taylor, who opined that seeing Putin's boys bully a besieged freedom fighter in the Oval Office was humiliating for every American.
“Surely this crosses the line, even for the diehards. Are there really no Republicans out there who have the courage to stand up and say: All Americans should be deeply ashamed of what he has done in our name, and deeply ashamed of how he did it. No?”
Taylor, the former director of the Nixon Presidential Library, said, “Seeing Putin's boys bully a besieged freedom fighter in the Oval Office was humiliating for every American.”
“Musk can fire the White House speechwriters, too, because there's the Trump Doctrine for you. If Ukraine wants to be part of negotiations to end Russia's criminal war, it has to pay in the form of a share of its mineral rights. Since President Zelensky was allegedly rude today, Trump has threatened to cut off military aid and let more Ukrainians die.”
According to Taylor, today's incident was far more than it appeared. “Trump and his mini-me Vance wrote the latest chapter in the biography of the United States as a world power. Periodically we have to decide what values we think our country should uphold in the world.”
“Readers should not assume that everyone disagrees with Trump. Millions of Americans opposed the U.S. entering World War II to help Europe against Hitler, history's greatest evildoer. Some were Nazi sympathizers. Others just thought it was none of our business. Most leaders were internationalists in the Cold War, and Americans by and large went along. We rebuilt Japan and Germany and avoided war with the Soviets. We also bred cynicism by leaving bloody footprints from Chile to Vietnam, sometimes meaning well, sometimes not. George W. Bush's massive overreaction to the Sept. 11 attacks, leading to hundreds of thousands of deaths in Iraq and Afghanistan without making the U.S. safer, gave foreign policy itself a bad name, enabling Trump to sound like a peacenik by attacking our endless wars.”
Taylor took a swipe at some of America’s other cherished gods; “Notwithstanding the heretical teachings of Christian nationalists and apostolic reformists, God doesn't love us more than other people. We're not chosen or anointed. We've had moments of glory and deep disgrace. It has taken more than a quarter of a millennium to come anywhere near letting freedom ring for everyone.”
“A decent and indeed a Christian foreign policy would look out for our interests while promoting global security, encouraging economic and political liberalism where we can, addressing suffering through a generous foreign aid budget befitting the richest nation in the world, and leading on climate change mitigation and innovation. This is how a good nation counts its blessings. That's how we say thank you to God and sorry to those we hurt along the way.”
Taylor said he disagreed with some who argue that the U.S. always acts on behalf of its strategic and economic interests while just claiming we're for justice and democracy. “I must disagree. Too many Americans have died fighting for other nations' freedom and sovereignty. But Trump has swept those values aside in favor of pure self-interest. Those who insist the U.S. has always been out for number one are carefully watching us every one during Trump's days of shame. We're finding out how much sadism and cruelty the American people will tolerate — and so far, we've tolerated quite a bit.”
Taylor believes Trump is obviously paying Zelensky back for refusing to cooperate with dirty tricks against Joe Biden in the 2016 election. “That is as deep as this individual's strategic vision goes. The rest of his foreign policy is equally thoughtless and toxic. Besides selling out Ukraine, his most significant move was depriving sick, starving people of foreign aid.”
“Zelensky's first calls after his Trump beat down were to European leaders. One possible future is western Europe supporting Ukraine and deterring Russian conventional aggression on its own. Should that happen, Trump would say it was his idea all along. But China would reckon it as an invitation to conquer Taiwan. Its people deserve to be free, but according to Trump's rulebook, if they can't defend themselves, they're out of luck.”
“The alliances Trump is ripping apart like an angry kindergartner help keep the peace and limit the spread of the most dangerous weapons. Without them, aggressors will gobble up weaker nations. Non-nuclear powers will join the club faster than you can say enriched uranium. If the American people acquiesce in Trump's disgraceful behavior, his abandonment of the weakest among us, our country will end up as exactly what its harshest critics have always said: Out just for itself and its economic interests, or in this case Trump's.”
Taylor concludes his riff by saying that the Trump Doctrine will go on to light up a hundred wars. “If the U.S. ever needs its friends again, no one will answer the phone. We'll be as lonely as Trump when he turns out the lights.”
On the last point he might be right.
END