Trump Is Destroying a Core American Value. The World Will Notice.
By Michael Posner
Mr. Posner is a lawyer and human rights advocate who was assistant secretary of state for democracy, human rights and labor from 2009-2013.
'In the late 1980s, Joseph Nye, the Harvard political scientist who died this month, developed the concept of soft power. His central premise, that the United States enhances its global influence by promoting values like human rights and democracy, has guided U.S. foreign policy for decades across both Republican and Democratic administrations.
Donald Trump has made clear that he fundamentally rejects this vision. As president, he has ordered a sweeping overhaul of the State Department that will cripple its capacity to promote American values abroad. At the center of this effort are drastic cuts to the Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights and Labor the State Departments core institution for advancing soft power, which I led under President Barack Obama. Unless Congress intervenes, the debasement of the bureaus role will impair Americas ability to challenge authoritarianism, support democratic movements and provide independent analysis to inform U.S. foreign policy. The long-term result will be a United States that is weaker, less principled and increasingly sidelined as authoritarian powers like Russia and China offer their own transactional models of global engagement.
The Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights and Labor was created with bipartisan congressional support in 1977, a time when lawmakers sought greater influence over foreign policy in the aftermath of the Vietnam War and Americas support for authoritarian regimes in countries like Chile and South Korea. President Jimmy Carters religious convictions and deep commitment to human rights gave the fledgling bureau early momentum. Still, its purpose was always practical: to ensure U.S. foreign aid and trade decisions were informed by credible assessments of human rights conditions around the world. Thats why every year, the bureau prepares congressionally mandated human rights reports. . .
In 2020, Joe Nye poignantly wrote, human rights should not be framed as pitting values against U.S. national interests, because values are part of Americas national interest.
We may learn more this week about when the administration plans to carry out its overhaul, as Mr. Rubio is slated to testify before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. Lawmakers from both parties need to stand up to him and demand that the State Department continue to support the Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights and Labor, which is an essential engine of soft power in U.S. foreign policy. It is in our long-term national interest that they stop it from burning out.'
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/05/18/opinion/trump-soft-power-state.html

Aristus
(70,112 posts)Optimism.
For decades, we Americans were lauded, and often castigated, for our boundless optimism and belief in a better future for ourselves, our nation, and the world. People all over the world, if asked to describe the American character positively in one word, that word was usually optimistic.
We certainly had reason to be optimistic back in the 90's. A booming economy, a thriving pop culture scene, and a President who was highly-intelligent, academically accomplished, and attuned to the needs of the populace made the decade an exciting time to be both alive and politically aware.
sElection 2000, a corrupt Supreme Court, September 11th, and the feckless Bush/Cheney regime put paid to all of that. The Republican Party's cynical grab for authoritarian power in the wake of the attacks, followed by the longest wars in American history, waged for control of oil resources, but thinly disguised as a "War on Terror" robbed our country of hope that things could be righted again, and that we could back off from our stroll into totalitarianism.
The election of Barack Obama did restore some hope that we were our old selves again. But the very fact of his election, a black man in the highest elected office in the nation, caused all of the various groups of people who thrived on oppression, repression, and heaping retrograde political policy on minorities and vulnerable populations to double-down on their hatreds and desire for unlimited power. Their program to do just that led to the elevation of the most revoltingly, abysmally unqualified semi-human ever to set foot in the halls of government.
The American people are meaner, nastier, more bitter, and less hopeful than they were thirty years ago. The deliberate program of reducing every shred of civilization from our country will finally yank away whatever vestiges of optimism we once had.
We have joined the League Of Ordinary Nations.