There was a time in America when we didn’t agree on everything, but we generally agreed on something important: there was such a thing as right and wrong.
Today, that consensus is evaporating.
Ideas and behaviors once considered fringe, immoral, or simply inappropriate are increasingly celebrated, promoted, and institutionalized. Meanwhile, those who express reservations—or hold traditional views—often find themselves ridiculed, ostracized, or accused of intolerance. The message is increasingly clear: conform or be condemned.
This isn’t just happening in Washington, Hollywood, or on college campuses. It is happening here in the Hudson Valley.
We see it in our schools, where parents increasingly find themselves at odds with administrators over what children are being taught about race, gender, and identity. We see it in debates over biological sex and women’s sports. We see it when public officials dismiss concerns about public safety, homelessness, or the consequences of addiction as if acknowledging a problem is somehow more offensive than solving it.
We see it in our politics, where ideological purity often matters more than practical results. In Albany, lawmakers debate ever-expanding social programs while New York loses residents to states with lower taxes and fewer regulations. Locally, communities struggle with housing affordability, soaring utility costs, and the question of who gets to shape the character of our towns.
We see it in the growing divide between ordinary citizens and the institutions that are supposed to serve them.
Look around.
We live in a nation where mass shootings have become so commonplace that they barely dominate the news cycle for more than a few days. Political leaders eagerly embrace entertainment and cultural trends that previous generations would have viewed quite differently. Schools and libraries increasingly see their mission not simply as educating children, but as shaping their social and political consciousness.
Closer to home, Hudson Valley residents debate whether cell phones belong in classrooms, whether local governments should cooperate with federal immigration authorities, whether massive data centers should reshape rural communities, and whether faith-based values still have a place in the public square.
These are not merely policy disagreements.
They are signs of a deeper struggle over what kind of society we want to be.
History offers a cautionary tale.
Great nations rarely collapse overnight. More often, they weaken slowly. Fiscal irresponsibility erodes prosperity. Cultural fragmentation undermines unity. Institutions lose credibility. Citizens lose faith in one another—and eventually in themselves.
America’s national debt now stretches into the trillions. Trust in government, media, higher education, and even organized religion has plummeted. Here in New York, many residents wonder whether their leaders are listening at all.
A house built on a shaky foundation may stand for a while.
But cracks eventually appear.
The same is true of a nation.
Houses require maintenance. Cars require service. Our bodies require care. So too does a republic.
That doesn’t mean we must return to some imagined golden age or reject every social change. But it does mean asking difficult questions about the values we are passing on to our children, the institutions we are building, and the culture we are creating.
Because history is not inevitable.
The judgment of history is not reserved for empires long gone. It is rendered in real time, by generations that either preserve what is worth keeping or abandon it without understanding what has been lost.
The Hudson Valley is not immune to these forces. Neither is America.
Our future will depend not only on our economy or military strength, but on whether we can once again agree that some things are true, some things are good, and some things are worth defending.
That conversation is overdue.
And it should start right here at home.
