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Living with Consequences
When Everything Goes and Nothing Matters
ELIZABETH GEORGE
May 9, 2026
I think most adults understand that part of what they undertake when
they choose to become parents is the responsibility of guiding their
children into a greater understanding of the world around them, of
themselves as individuals, and of the consequences of their
decisions and their actions. None of this is simple. Nor is it easy.
But the importance of this guidance from parent to child is crucial
to that child’s growth and maturation.
As a high school teacher for more than a decade, I was witness to
the different ways in which parents guide their kids as well as the
lessons in life that are passed on from parents to child through
this guidance. But like any teacher, I was also a witness to the
myriad ways in which parents tried to run interference for their
children, attempting to alleviate any reckoning the child might have
to face as a result of his or her personal failure or unfortunate
decision. Every time a parent did this, I found myself wondering
what these children would be like as they finally came into
adulthood. For consequences are the inevitable outcome of our
behaviors. They can be postponed, certainly. But they cannot be
eliminated entirely.
When I was a teacher, I began each semester by making sure my
students knew what was expected of them and what the consequences
would be should they fall short of or ignore altogether my
expectations. These expectations, by the way, were not unreasonable:
students were required to be on time for class; they were required
to do their own homework and not copy someone else’s; they were
required not to cheat on tests or plagiarize another student’s work
by turning it in as their own. Their failure to abide by the rules
had consequences, and the students knew in advance what those
consequences were.
Some parents, I discovered, could not deal with the fact that I had
consequences. The consequences I myself faced for having
consequences in my classroom came in the form of telephone calls,
in-person meetings, meetings with parents-teacher-and principal, and
in one case meeting with the parents and the entire school board.
Only in one case was the student also present, and in that situation
his parent was also a teacher at my school. The student had
engineered a sophisticated cheating scandal. Because he had done
this more than once before I discovered it, the results of every
test he had taken were in question. The fact that he had involved
other students in another class (same subject) in the cheating
scandal made things worse. The consequences, interestingly, were
suggested by his father, my colleague: his son would be dropped from
the class with a failing grade.
I was always mystified when parents demanded that their child be
treated differently from other students who followed or failed to
follow the guidelines I had set for them. I was always baffled by
the parents’ apparent belief that I would do exactly what they
wished me to do. And I was astonished that they didn’t realize that
eliminating the requirement that their child face consequences in a
situation the child had actually caused diminished his capacity to
deal with future outcomes that were not to his liking.
In our country right now, we can see the long-term result of
parental failure to usher an individual from childhood into
responsible adulthood. We can see what happens when a growing child
is never asked to face the consequences of his actions. That child
becomes a Donald Trump, someone completely unequipped to be an adult
who is capable of taking responsibility for his behavior. If that
same child ultimately attains a position of power—as Trump has
done—we have an individual who cannot bear to own up to mistakes he
has made, wrongdoings that have hurt other people, or failures that
have come as a result of his misguided belief in his own
superiority, which bears no relationship at all to the truth of who
he actually is. When all of this is combined with an untreated
personality disorder, the result is a man who shrugs off his own
moral depravity, who sees his ongoing corruption as another way to
establish himself as a titanic figure in control of the destiny of
millions of people, who believes insults and accusations and the
mockery of others is a just another way to project personal
strength, who callously disregards the suffering of which he himself
is the indifferent author.
Yet, Donald Trump could not be where he is today without millions of
people apparently believing that a savage miscreant can actually be
two people at once: someone who will save them and herald in the
resurgence of a greatness that he cannot, has not, and will not
define as well as someone who violates the Constitution, lies about
everything from the price of eggs to the amount spent on a war he
began, cheats on his taxes, manipulates the stock market, accepts
bribes, and relieves unsophisticated people of their hard-earned
money as they buy his bibles, his tennis shoes, his bitcoin, his
digital trading cards, his watches, his perfume and cologne, his
commemorative medallions, and his mug-shot themed t-shirts, mugs,
posters, and stickers as well as everything from cork-screws to dog
leashes. Millions of people put him back in the Presidency despite
everything he did to show his unworthiness and his farcical
incompetence.
Yet, he could not be where he is today without the collusion of men
and women in powerful positions who see him, not as a great leader
standing astride the world, but rather as a means to an end: their
own enrichment, their political positions, their control of
resources, their future as oligarchs in control of the world.
Because of these enablers, Trump has led us into becoming the worst
sort of society. He has demonstrated the gold-drenched, counterfeit,
hollow wisdom of becoming a country where everything goes—from child
abuse to war crimes—and nothing matters.
And it only gets worse from here.
© 2026 Elizabeth George
548 Market Street PMB 72296, San Francisco, CA 94104
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