Dwain Northey (Gen X)

Ah, the 1990s—a simpler time, when America’s greatest moral crisis was a consensual Oval Office blowjob. Back then, the Christian Right and their congressional disciples clutched their pearls so tightly it’s a wonder there’s any oxygen left in the Bible Belt. Bill Clinton, they declared, was a disgrace to the nation, an immoral serpent slithering through the halls of power. The moral guardians of America—those pious champions of virtue—set out to cleanse the republic from the horrors of improper definition of sexual activity.
It wasn’t about the economy booming, or peace in Northern Ireland, or balanced budgets. No, the fate of civilization hinged on whether oral sex “counted.” Whole think tanks and church pulpits were suddenly devoted to parsing the metaphysics of “is.” Never before had the English language been so scrutinized by the self-righteous.
Fast-forward three decades, and the choir of chastity has gone strangely silent. Their harps are broken, their hymnals misplaced. The new high priest of the Republican temple—Donald John “Delusional Don” Trump—can be found in the pages of the Epstein files, yet not a whisper of outrage graces the airwaves of the evangelical empire. The same crowd that once proclaimed America’s very soul was at stake over Clinton’s indiscretion now shrugs at sex trafficking.
Apparently, morality has a party affiliation.
Because if you’re a Democrat who lies about an affair, you’re Satan in a suit. But if you’re a Republican who may have taken private flights on Epstein’s “Lolita Express,” well, praise the Lord and pass the campaign donations! Suddenly, forgiveness flows like holy water at a baptismal buffet. The same folks who demanded repentance from Clinton are now performing theological gymnastics to justify silence.
Remember when “character mattered”? When “family values” were the sacred cornerstone of conservatism? Funny how quickly “Thou shalt not commit adultery” turned into “Thou shalt not get caught—unless you’re a Democrat.”
The moral watchdogs of the 1990s have become the lapdogs of the 2020s, curled up comfortably at the feet of a man whose “grab them by the” philosophy seems to have replaced the Sermon on the Mount as Republican scripture. These are the same self-proclaimed defenders of children who now conveniently avert their gaze from an international child trafficking ring—because it might implicate their golden calf in a red tie.
The hypocrisy is almost poetic. In the 90s, it was “What kind of example does this set for our children?” Now it’s “Fake news, witch hunt, move on!” The once-purest of the pure have traded their moral high ground for Mar-a-Lago membership cards.
If Bill Clinton’s sin was a private indiscretion wrapped in shame and lies, Donald Trump’s sin is public depravity wrapped in arrogance and applause—and yet somehow, only one was deemed impeachable by the moral majority.
So here we are, America. The same people who thought the republic would fall because of one blue dress now can’t be bothered to open the Epstein files, which might reveal the true rot at the core of their power. Apparently, sanctity is situational, purity is partisan, and righteousness depends on your voter registration.
Welcome to the modern gospel of hypocrisy—where salvation is sold by the slogan, truth is optional, and the definition of “sin” is as flexible as ever.









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