Ignorance, Stupidity, and the Megaphone of Power
Ignorance and stupidity are not moral failings. They are human conditions. Every one of us begins in ignorance, and every one of us has moments where we speak with more confidence than comprehension. In private life, the consequences are small. In public life, the consequences can be enormous.
That is the problem we face today.
We have 435 Representatives and 100 Senators — all human, all fallible — yet each speaks with the authority of an oracle. When a member of Congress opens their mouth, it lands with the weight of revelation: God to Jesus, Jesus to Moses, Moses to the crowd. And the crowd, lacking the technical background to evaluate the claim, absorbs every word like a sponge.
The result is predictable: emotion without understanding, outrage without grounding, and action without knowledge. You see it at the voting booth. You see it in the streets. You see it in the memes that ricochet across social media, stripped of context but full of certainty.
This is where moral grammar must enter the conversation.
A public official should follow three simple rules:
- If you must be quoted, speak from knowledge. Not intuition. Not ideology. Not the emotional charge of the moment. Knowledge.
- If you don’t know, say so. Ignorance is curable. Pretending to know is not.
- Do not introduce hyperbole into a subject you have not studied. Hyperbole is gasoline. Ignorance is a spark. Together, they burn down public understanding.
When a lawmaker confidently misstates the mechanics of foreign policy, constitutional authority, or emergency powers, the problem is not their intelligence. It is the mismatch between their certainty and their competence in that domain. And because they speak from a position of institutional authority, their words create ripples — sometimes waves — of misunderstanding.
This is how a single statement, delivered without qualifiers or technical grounding, can become a meme that misinforms millions.
The Restorationist lesson is simple:
Human fallibility is inevitable. Institutional humility is not. And without humility, ignorance becomes dangerous.