Character matters.
I grew up knowing it was wrong to lie. As a kid, I wanted to run after accidentally breaking a neighbor's newly planted sapling in a neighborhood football game. As an adult, I told a colleague a problem was covered, when I knew it hadn't been.
Thankfully, I confessed to those I lied to and no lasting harm was done. But the shame still haunts me even decades later. And I believe those two incidents have made me a better, more honest person, one people learned to trust, one of whom my mom and dad and grandparents would be proud. Those two lies have made me cognizant that I can set the course for my character, and that, indeed, my character matters.
Our current President doesn't subscribe to that notion, as is currently evidenced in the lies and misinformation emanating from the Trump campaign--altered videos and purposeful misstatements of the positions of his Democratic opponent, former Vice-President Joe Biden.
Or it's evident in the continual deception regarding the severity and transmission of the coronavirus--a deadly virus that has killed more than 220,000 of our fellow Americans. Trump admitted to intentionally downplaying the virus, despite knowing earlier than February 7, that it was transmitted through the air and was "deadly stuff," five times more fatal than "your strenuous flus." Even now, he claims it's disappearing (as he continues to push for large-scale, mask-less campaign gatherings), when, especially in my home state, it so clearly is not.
And it's obviously evident in the 22,000+ lies or misstatements to the American people the Washington Post has catalogued from Donald Trump, just since he started his presidency.
22,000 lies.
Just two changed my life.
You'd think maybe 22,000 might have changed his.
Character matters.
And Trump doesn't have any.
Vote Biden.
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