4.10.2026 – genius to corrupt

genius to corrupt
others – inevitably
became part of it

Adapted from the book, by Albert Speer: His Battle With Truth by Gitta Sereny (Knopf: New York, 1995) where Ms. Sereny writes in the introduction:

Hitler’s genius in part was to corrupt others, but the evidence I have collected suggests that with extraordinary skill he deliberately protected those closest to him — who from 1933 on included Speer — from any awareness which could have disturbed them or the harmony of their relationship with him.

But corruption is insidious.

Speer, in the course of his growing relationship with Hitler, inevitably became — though for a long time unwittingly — a part of it.

Speer, I was already convinced, had never killed, stolen, personally benefited from the misery of others or betrayed a friend.

And yet, what I felt neither the Nuremberg trial nor his books had really told us was how a man of such quality could become not immoral, not amoral but, somehow infinitely worse, morally extinguished.

Like many, I wonder about the people in the inner circle of that man currently in office.

Many of those people are about my age and grew up with pretty much the experience I had growing up in America.

I wonder about the people in the inner circle of that man currently in office and what I wonder is how did they get there.

How did there experience growing up in, for lack of a better description, Our America, prepare to sell out and turn their back on Our America.

I wonder and for the most part, I don’t get it.

Deep down I tell myself that they, too, wonder how they got there.

If asked would they sell out the America they grew up in, they would answer of course not.

Deep down, I tell myself, they know what they are doing.

Deep down they know and they regret it, or at least, they know that a future comes when they will regret it.

And yet, here we are.

I picked up a book last night about Albert Speer, the man known as the good Nazi.

The Nazi who apologized.

The Nazi who apologized but hedged a bit saying he wasn’t really aware of what was going on with all those death camps.

Gitta Sereny had a lot of misgivings about Albert Speer as well

She wondered about this man in the inner circle of Adolf Hitler.

She wondered how he got there.

She went to work, interviewing Speer and thinking about it.

Ms. Sereny would write:

Hitler’s genius in part was to corrupt others.

Speer, in the course of his growing relationship with Hitler, inevitably became — though for a long time unwittingly — a part of it.

Change that up a bit.

Trump’s genius in part is to corrupt others.

That works, doesn’t it?

That really works.

Lets pick on one person.

Lets pick on Marco Rubio.

And say Marco Rubio, in the course of his growing relationship with Trump, inevitably became — though for a long time unwittingly — a part of it.

And finish it off.

Rubio had never killed,

stolen,

personally benefited from the misery of others

or betrayed a friend.

And yet, how a man of such quality could become not immoral,

not amoral but,

somehow infinitely worse,

morally extinguished.

How?

Trump’s genius in part is to corrupt others.

Swap in any name, Mike Johnson, Franklin Graham, Lindsey Graham …

Trump’s genius in part is to corrupt others.

Like Albert Speer, deep down they know and they regret it, or at least, they know that a future comes when they will regret it.

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