Steve Schmidt is a former Republican Party political operative and was the co-founder of the Lincoln Project. Nowadays, Schmidt writes a Substack blog, which he titles, "The Warning."
On March 16th, Schmidt's blog posting was focused on Pete Hegseth, pictured above. Schmidt says Hegseth's appointment as the head of our Defense Department (which Hegseth calls our "War Department") is a proof of our "national degeneracy." The link I just provided should take you to Schmidt's March 16th blog posting, in which he makes that claim. Here's another link, which will take you to a video of Schmidt discussing Hegseth, and specificallty Hegseth's efforts to strip Senator Mark Kelley of his armed forces pension.
I absolutely agree with Schmidt that Hegseth should never have been appointed to head the Defense Department, and that he has proven inadequate to the job - and that he is not only an embarrassment but is actually a danger to the nation. Hegseth should be removed from his post - and removed forthwith. I do not believe, however, that the fact of Hegseth's appointment indicates our "national degeneracy." The "nation" includes all of us, and and all we do. When we start believing that the "nation" is degenerate, we start thinking, even without realizing it, that we are not really capable of doing the right thing, and of governing ourselves in a way that we can be proud of.
In fact, though, we are capable of doing the right thing - changing what's wrong, and doing the right things, instead of doing the wrong things. I want our social and political commentators to encourage us to do that - to make the changes we need to make. Calling out our own, supposed, "national degeneracy" is not my idea of the best way of inspiring the kinds of actions we need to take. As I have pointed out in one of my earlier blog postings, selecting Donald Trump as our president was a terrible mistake. One consequence of that mistake has been the appointment of Pete Hegseth.
I think we need to understand what's happened without stigmatizing our entire nation and stipulating to our "national degeneracy." Let me, in other words, endorse something that Robert Reich said in a March 19, 2026, column that ran in The Guardian: "Dear allies of America, please don’t confuse our president with us."
Instead of identifying a supposed "national degeneracy," let's correct our mistake(s)! Let's not suggest to ourselves, by the labels we use, that we have lost the capacity to do that! We haven't!
















