The Briefing with Albert Mohler - Thursday, February 27, 2025
Episode Date: February 27, 2025This is The Briefing, a daily analysis of news and events from a Christian worldview.Part I (00:15 - 17:30)New Political Leadership in Germany: Conservative Reset and Electoral Shift in GermanyThe Iro...n Curtain Casts a Long Shadow Over Germany’s Election by The New York Times (Christopher F. Schuetze)Part II (17:30 - 22:29)Target Faces More Consumer Backlash: Now, the Left is Infuriated at Target’s Backing Away from DEI InitiativesTarget hit by consumer anger at its retreat from diversity policies by The Financial Times (Taylor Nicole Rogers)Part III (22:29 - 26:38)Clint Hill and the Moral Verdict of History: The Death of Famed Secret Service Agent Reminds of the Importance of Getting History RightClint Hill, Who Sprang to Kennedys’ Side as Shots Were Fired, Dies at 93 by The New York Times (Richard Goldstein)Sign up to receive The Briefing in your inbox every weekday morning.Follow Dr. Mohler:X | Instagram | Facebook | YouTubeFor more information on The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, go to sbts.edu.For more information on Boyce College, just go to BoyceCollege.com.To write Dr. Mohler or submit a question for The Mailbox, go here.
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It's Thursday, February 27, 2025. I'm Albert Moller, and this is the briefing, a daily analysis of news and events from a Christian worldview.
The Conservatives won the recent election. It took place Sunday in Germany. A party identified as the leading party of the center right that would be the Christian Democratic Union gained a plurality of seats in the Bundestag in the German parliament.
And thus the leader of that party, Friedrich Meritz, is going to be German.
new chancellor. Germany, by the way, has a parliamentary system, the legislative branch. The parliament
is known as the Bundestag. There is also a federal president as head of state, and so the German
chancellor is the head of the government, but not the head of state. But in terms of politics,
the German chancellor is all that matters. The big story here is a political shift, a shift away
from the center left to the center right. Olaf Schultz, who had been Germany's chancellor,
he got the job after the retirement of Angela Merkel, who had been chancellor, for longer than
anyone else in German history. It was Oaf Schultz who basically conceded to reality, knowing that
his party would lose. But the big question is whether his party, the Social Democrats, that
have been in power for some time, would come in second or third. The party came in third.
It is still expected to join with the party that gained the most here, the Christian Democratic Union,
headed by Friedrich Merritt, who will be chancellor.
And so that skips over, the party that came in number two,
and that is alternative for Germany.
It is known as AFD.
And that party is often described in the Western media
as a far-right party.
So the Christian Democratic Union,
that's the party that came out way ahead
in first place in this election,
is described as center-right.
The Social Democrats,
a party that has been more inclined
towards socialism is identified as the center left, and then alternative for Germany is described
as the far right. Now, is there a far left? Yes, indeed, there is a far left, even as identified
by Western media, and that party is pretty much far on the ideological left. But at least there
are those who recognize there is a far left, as well as a far right. All kinds of worldview
issues arise here. But before we turn to looking at AFD and some of the issues of controversy making headlines on
both sides of the Atlantic. Let's consider the situation in Germany. In this case, we are helped
by the fact that the New York Times just yesterday ran an article with the headline, quote,
threads of the iron curtain cling to the vote in Old East Germany. This is a reminder of how much
culture matters and how much history matters. So when we talk about Germany today, we're
talking about the modern nation. But remember, Germany has it been a nation as long as you
might think. As you look at Germany, say, in the beginning of the 19th century, it was not one
nation. It was an assemblage of several German states, several German principalities. Prussia was
always the biggest, the richest, and the most powerful. And eventually, Prussia entered into a union,
and that meant that eventually the modern nation of Germany emerged. And almost immediately,
the balance of power in Europe was changed. The balance in power in the European continent,
particularly in Western Europe, has always depended upon the relationship between Germany and France.
And the relationship between Germany and France was at least a major part of what occurred in the
20th century in the shape of two devastating world wars. And so Britain has played the role of
intervening on behalf of France, not once but twice in the 20th century, eventually also with
allies in both cases, eventually including the United States of America.
a reminder to us that what happens in Europe doesn't stay in Europe.
But the German elections are really interesting because they represent a political shift,
a political shift to the right.
Now, just put that in the context of the fact that various things have been reshaping the political
map on both sides of the Atlantic.
Most importantly, the election of Donald Trump to a second term as president in November of
2024.
Now you're looking at this situation in Germany.
Is it the same?
No, it's different.
Number one, we are looking at a parliamentary form of government.
And that means that you're not looking at someone running for the chancellor's position,
as if you have someone running for president of the United States.
Instead, you have legislative elections and the party that has the majority or can form a majority,
that party leader becomes the chancellor, much like in the British system,
the party leader of the winning party becomes prime minister.
The shift in the election that took place on Sunday is from what is described as the center-left,
a more liberal party leadership to the center-right, a more conservative party leadership.
But you know, the big headlines are actually about the far-right and increasingly the far-left.
Because you have coalition governments in a parliamentary system, it's very different than what we have here in the United States,
where we have presidential elections.
But history emerges in another way.
The history of Germany was altered profoundly by the reunification of Germany after the fall of the Soviet Union in the late 1980s into the early 1990s.
The reunification of Germany was something that many people sought to avoid, even as you had the fall of the Soviet Union and you had leaders such as British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher extremely pleased with the fall of the Soviet Union.
Prime Minister Thatcher was not at all in favor of a reunified Germany.
And you can understand the history behind that.
The 20th century had been the great threat to Britain by a unified Germany.
She did not want to move in that direction.
She was eventually persuaded.
But it's also very interesting to see how the reunification of Germany between West Germany,
which have been a Western Democratic nation,
and East Germany, which have been a Marxist government under the Communist Party's
and frankly under the control of the Soviet Union, the reunification of Germany was something
recognized as a political miracle of sorts at the end of the 20th century, even as the fall of the
Soviet Union precipitated the same. But the reunification of Germany has made Germany once again
one nation, sort of, not completely. The electoral patterns on Sunday's election demonstrated the fact
that much of the energy in a more conservative direction wasn't in the former West Germany,
but in the former East Germany. That's why the New York Times ran this headline.
Threads of the Iron Curtain cling to the vote in Old East Germany. What's the issue there?
Well, the issue there is similar as a pattern in some American regions as well.
You had areas that perceive themselves to have suffered economically in the great economic transformations of the last
several decades. East Germany was far behind West Germany in economic development. That is because it was
under the totalitarian rule and control of the Soviet Union. It was committed to communism. It was
committed to Marxism, which, in case you haven't read the memo, doesn't work. But another Christian
realization is that the past is so powerful that we don't get over it as quickly as we would like
to think. Germany is reunified, but it isn't equal. You see the legacy in terms of the world. You see the legacy in
terms of the communist rule in East Germany in the fact that East Germany, per capita income,
social mobility, social advancement, it still lags behind the former West Germany. Now, here's the
interesting thing. As you look at political change in Germany in Sunday's election, it was the
former East Germany that moved most clearly in a more conservative direction. And that registers
a very deep discontent with the unified government in Bonn, and in particular with the
social Democrats who had been in control. Now, it's interesting. I think a lot of American Christians
will hear the name of the party that won the largest number of seats, the Christian Democratic Union,
and wonder, well, do those three words actually go together? Are they all three meaningful? Union, in
this case, basically just means party. That leaves us with the other two words, Christian and Democrat.
Is it committed to democratic government? It is in terms of what we understand is a modern democratic
form of government. Doesn't mean an absolute democracy. It means a constitutional democratic system of
government. What about the word Christian? That's the interesting part. This should be a reminder to us that in the
ruins of the Third Reich, what emerged as a very powerful political union was a union of parties that
were self-consciously Christian. Now, that's not to say they were all made up of born-again Christians.
It is to say they were absolutely convinced in the aftermath of the horrors of the Second World War that
it was Christian truth and Christian morality, which must be asserted at the very heart of the
nation. Now, in a secularized age, the Christian Democrats in Germany are not nearly so confessionally
Christian as they once were, but it is a reminder of the fact that in the urgency of the aftermath of
Germany's devastation in two world wars, the nation understood, and this was West Germany,
understood the necessity of a Christian foundation of government. In a far more secularized age,
it's not so much Christian in the reality of the present as it was in the tradition of the past.
Another reminder to us, nonetheless.
But alternative for Germany described as the far right, having doubled the vote it obtained
in the last national election in Germany. What does that mean? Furthermore, this is now, of course,
at intersection with American politics. U.S. Vice President J.D. Vance, speaking at the Munich
summit there, just a matter of days ago, in Germany, castigated
Germany's current government for limiting the free speech of conservatives, and in particular,
of alternative for Germany. And he spoke of the suppression of conservative voices, challenging the
German government to stop canceling the voices and suppressing the messages. You also had Elon
Musk so close to the White House offering very supportive messages for alternative for Germany.
So when you have the American press talking about a European party and describing it as far right,
What do they mean by that?
Well, here's where we need to develop something of a defense mechanism against the use of language.
We need to know that when we see language like that, we had better look further beneath the surface to understand what's going on.
When you describe something as far right, well, when it comes to the left, that is like saying wrong, far wrong, double wrong.
We understand that's exactly the game the press is playing.
But here's where Christians do need to understand a distinction.
Christian need to pay particular attention to this. There is a distinction between conservative
and the right. The language of the left and the right, meaning liberal and conservative in trajectories.
This goes back to the French Revolution and the seating of the assembly. You had conservatives on the
right. You had liberals, radicals on the left, thus the language of left and right that continues
in American political discussion. Conservative means those who are committed to conserve certain
truth, certain patterns, certain structures. This is the very essence of conservative. The right means
mostly that you reject the left. It is a battle between left and right. So conservatives are on the
right, but we need to be honest and say there are some on the right who don't really function
as conservatives. The big question is, does that describe the alternative for Germany? Well, here's
a very interesting thing. Even as we talked about the lasting legacy of the division of Germany
into East and West.
It's also very interesting to see when you have a party, described as far right, described as
the alternative for Germany, you need to take a closer look.
Alice Vidal is the leader of the party, and, well, as many people have pointed out, she is
herself representative of some of the contradictions right now on the German right.
Here's my favorite sentence about her.
It really kind of stands out.
Here's what she said in an article in the New York Times.
Ms. Weidel said this, quote, I am not queer, but I am married to a woman I have known for 20 years, end quote.
Now, I don't know exactly what to do with that sentence.
To me, if you've been married to a woman for 20 years or 20 minutes, you're queer.
But it does appear to be her way of saying, I'm not identifying as LGBTQ.
It might be, by inference, that she wants the legal benefits of marriage in terms of sharing a home with this other woman.
It's just very strange.
And so let's just say you can't be very conservative in a genuine sense if you have to start a sentence by saying, I'm not queer, but I'm married to a woman I've known for 20 years.
You're not conserving marriage.
You're not conserving family.
You're not conserving the structures of creation if that's where you have to describe yourself.
On the other hand, it is really clear that what you have in many in the West, in many in Germany, describing this party is the first.
are right, they're basically dismissing a lot of authentic conservatism as well. Because when you say
center left and center right, that means that you're describing kind of a consensus between left and
right and the middle. This pretty much describes the American picture with the Republicans and the
Democrats in say 1960, but it doesn't work this way anymore. The difference is that in a place like
Germany, you have the breakup because of their parliamentary system into various minor parties.
the United States often referred to as third parties, even though they might be third, fourth, fifth,
or whatever. The point is, we have a two-party system precisely because we elect a president by the
electoral college. So long as we elect a president by the mechanism of the electoral college, we're
almost assuredly going to have a two-party system. That means the big dynamic is inside those two
parties. For example, during the period of the 1970s, the big story was the movement within the Democratic
Party to the left. Similarly, the big story.
story on the conservative side was the movement of the Republican Party, the movement in the Republican
party, from the middle to the right, a far more conservative party. Just consider the Republican
nominees, Richard Nixon and Ronald Reagan. You'll see the change. But in the case of the alternative
for Germany, the question is, does far right apply? That doesn't mean it should be censored. It doesn't
mean it should be made illegal, but is it far right? How exactly does that descriptor fit?
I think I want to bring in at this point, Douglas Murray. He's a British figure. He is a very
influential conservative in Great Britain. He's one of the conservatives that has seen through
so much of the leftist of the liberal mess of the last several decades. In a major interview,
about a half a page in the Wall Street Journal over the weekend, he scoffed at the putdown
of far right. Quote, far right, he said, is one of those labels around whose use we could do
with having some hygiene. You got to love the British calling for hygiene with words. He went on to say,
quote, I've only ever been called far right by Islamists and far leftists who want to try to
stigmatize me like I'm a totally unreasonable headbanger. You got to love the British. He said,
quote, it is a smear designed to shut down debate, end quote. So that's absolutely true. It's one of
the reasons why I want to point out when someone says far right, you want to say further right than whom.
What is this represented?
It often means an effort to try to just dismiss an argument or dismiss a party.
But we need to note that even as Douglas Murray said that it's often misused, he came back
and said when it comes to alternative for Germany, we need to send the message that it
just might be complicit in some far right elements, including allowing voices that would
serve, for instance, as apologists for the Nazi regime.
In Germany, that's no small thing.
In moral terms, that's no small thing.
And so the encouragement here is for alternative for Germany to make very clear that it is not going to tolerate the voices of that nihilistic right, but is rather going to represent a conservative force in German politics.
World views all over the place here.
It's a reminder to us that politics becomes a litmus test.
It becomes a diagnostic test to tell us what people really believe.
It tells us about people's frustrations and anxieties, the economic strains, for example, in the former East Germany.
It also tells us about how people want to define the politics.
And you'll notice this.
The professional politicians want things to stay in a consensual middle that always represents a long-term victory for the left.
And so that's one of the reasons why the disruption these days in politics is coming primarily from the right, a story still to be unfur.
folded in Germany. But next, let's come back to the United States. The Trump administration has been
cracking down on DEI efforts, that is, diversity, equity, inclusion efforts that have become so much a
part of the left's activism in American institutions, corporations, academic campuses, and all the
rest. Sometimes it's very helpful to get a little distance and see what people elsewhere are
observing. And so in this case, I want to turn to the Financial Times published in London. Here's a
headline backlash greets Target after diversity retreat. So, okay, let's just remind ourselves
of something before we turn to this article. In recent years, we have often discussed Target
precisely because of these DEI initiatives. You may recall just a matter of a very short time ago
when Target was making headlines because it was pushing so much LGBTQ pride material,
completely offensive material, to the front displays of its stores, it was declaring its
absolute solidarity with DEI initiatives. It was putting its name on just about everything obnoxiously
DEI, but now it has shifted gears. Let's ask the question why, because this is actually something
the Financial Times points to. It says we have to understand at a deeper level, why is it happening?
Now, I'm going to get back to the Financial Times because it points to something else of importance.
But right now, I just want to say, why would target switch gears here? Was it because of consumer
pressure a little bit, no doubt. Target tried to say, no, we're not hurt by this. We're so committed
to DEI, we will lose customers in order to do what's right. Well, a company that defies its
customer base for long is what you know as a former company. So no doubt that had something to do
with it. But I think there are two other things. Number one, it's very easy to say you're going to
follow these kinds of programs with all their ethnic and racial and identity preferences and all
the rest. You can say that. It's very hard to actually make it happen and make your company work.
The point here is that when you buy into identity politics and you structure your company by
identity politics, you're not going to be able to stay in business for long. There are a couple
of other things. It's not just a frustration of the companies that adopted these DEI policy.
It's not just the opposition from without coming, especially right now, in a very concentrated
way from the Trump administration. President Trump and his administration have done
just about everything by executive order they could do to expunge and reverse these DEI programs
where federal dollars go. It's a little harder to get to private employers. Nonetheless, when you
look at companies, they have a relationship with the federal government. Eventually, the Trump
administration is forcing the issue, even at the level of the company like Target. Shareholder
action is also something that has been taking place. Something else, conservatives have had to learn to do.
conservatives often don't show up at shareholder meetings, even though in terms of a lot of investment,
the fact is that conservative Christians, in many cases, have the right to show up at a shareholder meeting and demand to change in company policies.
Even if the company doesn't immediately change its policies, you have set down a marker.
But even as I say, it's one thing for these companies to say they buy into DEI.
It's another thing when they lose customers and also find it very difficult to employ.
there's something else going on here, and that is that there are many on the left who are done with DEI.
Very, very interesting.
There are people on the far left and in some of the groups identified with identity politics who say,
look, a lot of these companies were only giving lip service to this anyway.
They were buying us off, say people on the left by talking about their commitment to these DEI policies,
but in the end, what they want is an economic cultural moral revolution.
Target wasn't buying into a revolution. It just wanted good, progressive, leftist corporate identity markers.
Anyway, the story in the Financial Times says that now you have people who are rebelling against Target for making this announcement.
About two years ago, Target was faced with a boycott from conservative Christians.
Now it is facing boycotts from groups identified with identity politics who say they're just done with Target.
What's the lesson here? You know what? If you're the president,
or if you're the corporate board of a big corporation, especially one dealing in consumer
products, you better be careful about trying to tout your ideological identity. Because it turns
out that's not what people want from Target. What they want from Target is stuff that doesn't
fall apart sold at a reasonable price. That's it. No one's going to target for a moral
code. Or if you are, God help you. We'll continue to follow this issue. I think the most
dangerous thing is that DEI doesn't go away, but it's simply rebranded, that you keep the basic
structure, the basic cultural Marxism that's put in place there, you just rename it as something
else. We'll watch that. Meanwhile, in conclusion, I want to shift to another news story that
reminds us of the moral burden of history. Obituary, in this case, in the New York Times this week,
Clint Hill, agent who sprang to the Kennedy's aide in Dallas, dies at age 93. You see those horrifying
pictures there from Dallas, November 1963, the assassination of President John F. Kennedy,
and you see a brave Secret Service agent leaping on the back of the vehicle towards the president
and the first lady. Eventually, he pushed the first lady off the deck of the car, which was then
getting ready to speed towards a hospital. He used physical force to press her back into the
seat. He was actually a part of her detail, even as he had been on the personal detail before,
of President Dwight D. Eisenhower.
Clint Hill believed that it was effectively a demotion
to be moved from the presidential detail
to the First Lady detail,
but in God's Providence,
in the view of history, as others would say,
he was in that place at that time
precisely to spring into action.
His great agony, which led to a nervous breakdown
and an eventual retirement
as second in command of the Secret Service,
was that he had not protected the president of the United States.
he had been unable to protect the president of the United States.
In images and in films, seared into the nation's long memory, you see the Secret Service agent
leap into action, but by the time he got to the president, it was too late.
By the time he got to the president, the president was effectively dead, and Governor
John Connolly of Texas had also been shot.
But he did save the life of the First Lady, something she remembered long,
long after the events and throughout her lifetime. Clint Hill is an interesting person. Of course,
he was the center of the work of the Warren Commission and other historical investigations into the
nature of the Kennedy assassination. It was the burden of history that drove him in so many ways.
On a program, years ago, I made a statement about looking at controversies over something like
the Kennedy assassination, the assassination of the president of the United States. And I pointed
to how many conspiracy theories surround it. And I just made the point, which is very important
from a Christian worldview perspective, that when we look at a question like that, we should
apply the very same investigative tools and the very same intellectual categories, the very same
moral judgments, to the assassination of a president as it would to any other crime. That's a
discipline Christians need to follow. When we're looking at a category, we need to apply
the same standards to everything that fits in that category. I made the statement,
and didn't think much about it after that.
But just a few days later, I received an email from Clint Hill,
the Secret Service agent whose obituary was just published in the New York Times.
I did not expect that reach out.
And he just reached out to me and said,
thank you for making that argument about the rules of evidence
and the way an historical event should be investigated.
Sometimes, oddly, we find ourselves brushing against history.
November the 22nd, 1963 is now more than 60 years in our rearview mirror.
But for Christians, it reminds us that history presents the demand, not only that we get the story right,
but that we continually rethink these issues, making certain that we understand the great lessons of history a right.
It's a long-term discipline to which we are called, and we're called to it together.
Thanks for listening to the briefing.
For more information, go to my website at Albertmuller.com.
You can follow me on Twitter or X by going to Twitter.com forward slash Albert Mueller.
For information on the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, go to sbtsk.edu.
For information on Boyce College, just go to voicecollege.com.
I'm speaking to you before a live audience in Santa Clarita, California.
And I'll meet you again tomorrow for the briefing.
