It has frankly become difficult to endure the presidential campaign of 2016 without fearing that one detects symptoms of a democracy, even a civilization, in decline. But maybe that's an overdramatization — a specialty of folks my age.
Fact is, our best hope may be that the disgraceful spectacle before us is only, or anyhow partly, a generational aberration — the latest achievement in social turmoil of my baby boom cohort, from which both Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton hail, along with much of today's institutional leadership.
The '60s generation's careless disdain for sundry traditional standards and boundaries, its signature blend of moral vanity and moral squalor, and its insatiable taste for the apocalyptic have become the ethos of the age.
Perhaps much of the era's feverish folly will wane with the boomers. If so, the key to steering America's political virtues through a dark passage may be to focus on upholding its most indispensable ideals. And that means safeguarding, above all, the rule of law.
This is why Trump's much-discussed vow during the second debate that as president he would unleash a special prosecutor to put Clinton in jail betrays his unfitness not just for the presidency but for any public office more vividly than any Trumpian outrage that preceded it — which is saying a lot.
The essence of a just and decent government is not that it holds elections, but that it claims no power to act coercively against any person — except in accordance with laws that are made in advance, that apply to all, and that are impartially and impersonally enforced.
That is the rule of law, the foundation of legitimate authority. For a political candidate to stand on a debate stage and threaten to use the power to prosecute to settle a political score is simply abhorrent to everything that ever made America "great."
Yet as in so many typical errors of our era, Trump's contempt for the rule of law is extreme — but far from the only kind on display. Politicians near and far have discarded devotion to neutral and independent justice. In the same second debate, Hillary Clinton renewed her commitment to what she has elsewhere called "a bunch of litmus tests" for judges she might appoint to the Supreme Court — that is, specific rulings that she will be seeking from judges she selects.