The Abortion Pill and Mr. Vance

Monday, 10-20-2025

 

Query from an overseas reader:

I see that your FDA has recently approved a new, generic variety of the abortion pill.  Some commentators say that under the law, the FDA couldn’t have done otherwise, while others say approval could have been blocked.   An article in The Washington Examiner says this is the most anti-life Republican administration in history (though not as anti-life as the other party).

What do you think of the fact that Vice President Vance seems to be on board with the decision?  I ask as someone who is trying to navigate murky waters in my own country.

 

Reply:

I wouldn’t go so far as to say that this is the most anti-life Republican administration in history.  After all, during his first term Mr. Trump nominated the Supreme Court justices who provided the majority to overturn Roe v. Wade.

But it is getting there.  The FDA’s decision is a betrayal.  Most abortions are now carried out by means of abortion pills.  Since they are sold across state lines, to say that the overturning of Roe “returned the issue to the states” is grossly misleading.  And yes, the agency could have done otherwise.  As the article you mention points out, the FDA began a new safety review of the drug in September.  It could have delayed its decision until the review was complete, but it didn’t.

This is deeply disturbing.  A new analysis of insurance data finds that more than one in ten of the women who take the abortion pill experience sepsis, infection, hemorrhaging, or another “serious adverse event.”  The only reason regulators tolerate such a high level of danger to the mother is that the ability to kill her baby cheaply and conveniently trumps all considerations.

In the meantime, the administration promotes in vitro fertilization, which produces large numbers of unwanted embryonic children and then destroys all but those few which are implanted.

What does Mr. Vance think of all this?  Consider five possibilities, ranked not in order of probability but from worst to best.

(a)  Perhaps he thinks these things are a good thing in principle.

(b)  Perhaps he thinks they are bad things, but doesn’t care enough to do anything about them.

(c)  Perhaps he opposes them, but thinks it isn’t yet feasible to ban them, because doing so would cause a backlash which would ensure the victory of politicians who actually promote abortion.

(d)  Perhaps he opposes them, but is biding his time, because as the evidence of their harm continues to roll in, banning them might soon become feasible.

(e)  Perhaps he opposes them, but since he serves a president who doesn’t think it is feasible to ban them, he is working behind the scenes to persuade him.

In charity, I don’t believe his thinking is like (a).  I hope his thinking isn’t like (b), although such attitudes do typify faux pro-lifers.  I don’t understand how the president thinks, but in speaking to life advocates, Mr. Trump himself has made a few remarks suggestive of (c), and it is possible that Mr. Vance agrees.  Ideally, Mr. Vance would be thinking along the lines of (d) or (e), though if he were, it is unlikely that he would tell us, because blabbing to the rest of us might doom his efforts to change his boss’s mind.

I hope his bishop and confessor are speaking earnestly to him.

 

Pandemic of Lunacy available for pre-order!

Thursday, 10-16-2025

I am delighted to announce that my new book Pandemic of Lunacy: How to Think Clearly When Everyone Around You Seems Crazy is now available for pre-order from Creed & Culture.

If you Subscribe to the Creed & Culture mailing list, you can get a special 30% discount code.

Here’s the description:

____________________

What is happening to the world? Why does it seem like everyone has gone crazy? Why are so many things that seemingly everyone believed the day before yesterday suddenly held to be retrograde, hateful, or even criminal? And why are things that everyone seemed to view as lunacy the day before yesterday suddenly taught or even required?

In Pandemic of Lunacy: How to Think Clearly When Everyone Around You Seems Crazy, University of Texas philosopher J. Budziszewski patiently explains the delusions that beset us. Pandemic of Lunacy will be treasured by anyone who is troubled or confused, anyone who wonders whether the world has gone crazy or whether they have, and anyone who feels the need for a trustworthy guide in a topsy-turvy age.

"Pandemic of Lunacy is brilliant, the corrective we need to pull the nation back from the abyss of unreason. Too many elites and intellectuals are saturated with ideologized education that has left them withering in a drought of real knowledge and common sense. Caring guides like J. Budziszewski might bring the best of them back from the realm of false light." — Dean Koontz, bestselling author

“This book is simply the most complete, clear, and uncompromising account of our decaying culture's insanity that I have read yet.” — Peter Kreeft, professor of philosophy, Boston College

“Philosophy and science go deeper than what common sense tells us, and sometimes correct it around the edges. But as thinkers like Aristotle and Aquinas knew, sound philosophy and science cannot coherently reject common sense altogether, especially in what it tells us about everyday human life. Modern thought has been plagued by one assault on common sense after another, typically grounded in simple but persistent fallacies. We need books that expose these fallacies and come to the defense of common sense. J. Budziszewski provides exactly that.” — Edward Feser, author, Five Proofs of the Existence of God

J. Budziszewski offers both a subtle and wide-ranging exposition of the various individual lunacies that make up our corporate social insanity. His is a sober and shrewd voice that offers answers to our malaise. This is a profoundly helpful book for those wanting clarity in our deeply chaotic times.— Carl Trueman, author, The Rise and Triumph of the Modern Self

J. Budziszewski is a professor of government and philosophy at the University of Texas at Austin. Internationally recognized for his work on natural law, self-deception, happiness, and ultimate purpose, he is widely read on the unraveling and possible restoration of our common culture. Among his twenty previous books are What We Can’t Not Know, How to Stay Christian in College, How and How Not to Be Happy, On the Meaning of Sex, The Line Through the Heart, The Revenge of Conscience, and a series of line-by-line commentaries on Thomas Aquinas’s Summa Theologiae. Married for more than five decades, a teacher for more than four, Budziszewski has two grown children and a clutch of grandchildren. His website, The Underground Thomist, is at undergroundthomist.org. Professor Budziszewski lives in Austin, Texas.

 

 

 

 

Nullification Again? No. This Is Worse.

Monday, 10-13-2025

 

A number of conservative writers have criticized so-called sanctuary cities for – they say -- resurrecting the old “nullification” doctrine which over the years has been used to justify a variety of things, including the rebellion of the South in the Civil War.  I agree that the rebellion was bad, and I agree that the sanctuary cities haven’t a leg to stand on.  But it would be more accurate to say that the sanctuary cities want to resurrect anarchy than that they want to resurrect nullification.  Nullification doctrine is different, and it is more subtle than it looks.

What is nullification, anyway?

During the first few decades of the republic, a lot of intelligent people were concerned that the federal government would become a tyrant, aggrandizing itself at the expense of the states.  We have checks and balances inside the federal government; proponents of nullification wanted the states to have a check against the federal government, for our government is a “United States” rather than a single state.  This is not a bad idea in itself.

The argument for the nullification power is intriguing.  We can put it in question-and-answer form.

  • Who knows best what a document means?  Nullification proponents replied:  Its authors know best what it means.
  • Who then are the Constitution's real authors?  Nullification proponents replied:  Its real authors are those who make it the constitution – who convert it from a mere proposal into an instrument with legal force.
  • Who then made it the Constitution?  Nullification proponents replied:  Not those who wrote it, but those who gave it legal force by ratifying it.
  • Who then ratified it?  Nullification proponents replied:  The states did.
  • Who then knows best what the Constitution means?  Nullification proponents replied:  The states do.

From this, they concluded that a state may invalidate a federal law which it deemed unconstitutional, refusing to allow it to be enforced within the state’s territory.  This was usually called nullification, sometimes interposition.   I will explain in a few moments why their conclusion doesn’t follow, but first let’s take a step back and look at the problem from another angle.

George Washington thought the invalidation of federal laws by individual states was a dreadful idea because it would "dissolve the union or produce coercion.”  He and many others thought not just that federal laws are supreme within their proper sphere (which the Constitution affirms), but also that the federal government should have sole authority to determine the constitutionality of its own laws.

But some of the other Founders of the republic thought allowing the federal government the authority to determine the constitutionality of its own laws would be like letting the fox guard the henhouse.  In 1798, alarmed by the Alien and Sedition Acts, both Thomas Jefferson, in Kentucky, and James Madison, in Virginia, penned resolutions declaring that individual states had the authority to declare a federal law unconstitutional and refuse to allow its enforcement in their respective territories.

Jefferson and Madison were right to oppose the Alien and Sedition Acts, which among other things violated the First Amendment guarantee of freedom of speech and press by declaring punishments for “false, scandalous, and malicious” criticisms of the government.  Guess who would decide what counted as false, scandalous, or malicious?  The government itself.  Sound familiar?

On the other hand, George Washington was right to think that Jefferson and Madison’s remedy went much, much too far, because it would pose the federal government with a terrible dilemma.  The government could either use force to compel dissenting states to obey – or else it consent to its own dissolution.

An excellent case can be made that the states ought to have some kind of constitutional check on an overbearing federal government.  But consider:  The constitution did not become a constitution just in those states which ratified it.  Once it had two-thirds approval – nine of the original thirteen -- it became the constitution of all of them.  So what we should conclude from the five bullet points isn’t that any state, all by itself, should be able to decide whether federal law is really law within its territory.  It would make more sense to say that a two-thirds majority of the states could do so.  In 1987, precisely this suggestion was made by former New Hampshire governor John Sununu.  It would require a Constitutional amendment.

So called sanctuary cities do not claim the measured sort of nullification power which Mr. Sununu suggested.  They don’t even claim the more extreme version of the nullification power which Jefferson and Madison proposed.  What they claim is that not just any state, but any locality may invalidate federal laws within its territory.  This isn’t about the form of the federal union.  It is a rejection of federal union.

Even leaving aside the threat of lawlessness and chaos, by what possible constitutional theory could cities, not states, claim such power?  The nullification theory bases its claim on the role the states had in ratifying the Constitution.  But cities had no share in that at all.

So the critics are right to repudiate the claims of the sanctuary cities, but their arguments need some tweaking.  What the sanctuary cities propose isn’t your great-great-great-great grandmother’s version of nullification.  It is something much different, and much worse.

 

 

How Can I Think About the Assassination?

Monday, 10-06-2025

 

Query:

Doubtlessly you’ve received other emails already since the events that took place around Charlie Kirk’s assassination, but I know no other place to ask for guidance so I must ask.

In your living memory, has the United States political climate after World War II ever been this bad?

It is exceedingly difficult to approach these events and retain the Christian morality that I know that I should exercise. I don’t know how people actually in the heat of the situation will be able to make the right choices, and mainly I’m worried for what comes after.

Perhaps I am asking you to help me think.  A more useful question might be to ask you what questions you’re asking yourself at this time, so I can think for myself.

 

Reply:

The United States political climate has never been this bad in my memory.  It isn’t that we haven’t passed through other periods of politically motivated violence in earlier years, but it was much more widely condemned.  For elected officials and news commentators to have egged the violence on, as they do today, was unheard of.  Even during the Vietnam War controversies, very few students, even on the radical left, sympathized with the terror bombings carried out by the SDS splinter group Weather Underground.

The biggest confusion among my own students used to be rudderless moral relativism.  Although there is still a lot of that, it seems to be on the decline.  Now the problem is the explicit embrace of evil.  The suggestion that one must never do what is intrinsically evil for the sake of a good result is a hard sell.  Many of students are strongly attracted to “consequentialism,” the view that whether an act is right or wrong is determined only by the result.  To say that the ends do not justify the means puzzles them.

The decline of faith has also produced changes in character.  Young people who were raised in Christian homes, but then abandoned Christianity, often used to retain vestiges of their moral upbringing, and accepted such ideas as courtesy, love of neighbor, and the sacredness of innocent human life.  Today, having grown up in faithless homes, many seem to think that courtesy is for fools, that no one with whom they disagree is their neighbor, and that they should hate those they consider wrong instead of praying for their repentance and restoration.  As for the sacredness of innocent human life – for them, that idea went out when they embraced abortion.

However, I see some good signs.  There is always “wrong on both sides,” but it isn’t equal.  On one side, the violent nuts are merely the fringe.  On the other side, they are the majority.  I notice, too, that the former side is still having children.  Charlie Kirk himself strongly encouraged young people to marry, have children, and hope for the future.  Marrying and having children itself changes us, shattering our selfishness, forcing us to live sacrificially for others.

He also spoke openly about God.  I don’t think we can reform ourselves by our own powers, just by trying hard.  I know by experience that God can change us, and I find an increased longing for the truth and grace of God among many of my students.  They have had enough, and “having enough” doesn’t meant that they start shooting, but that they start inquiring about Him.  May He grant that I help that along!

If I believed the strange things so many people believe today, then I would be without hope.  Seeing all the downward trend lines, I would despair.  But I don’t believe that way, and trendlines are not a fate.  In the first place, the providence of the loving God overrules our designs.  In the second place, His grace through Jesus Christ enables us not only to repent, turn around, be forgiven, and forgive, but also be healed by a power greater than any mere resolution to be good.

As C.S. Lewis pointed out, a culture does not last forever, but a soul does.  The redeemed will still be glowing when the last star has died out.  Sneering at people of faith, some people say “History is against you.”  By history, though, they mean only the last 15 minutes -- and they don’t understand even those.

For me, as you may know, this deeply personal.  When I first got my PhD, I thought that good and evil were arbitrary human inventions, and that we are not responsible for our actions anyway.  It took some years of painful divine surgery, but now I know better.  When I hear people around me saying crazy things, I remind myself that I used say many of them myself.  God, blessed be He, has devised a suitable penance for me, and I pray that I will never forget it.

So as to your second query, about what questions I may be asking yourself at this time:  I don’t spend much time asking what is going to happen, but I do ask what God would like me to do in my own place.  He sees the whole shape of things.  I can’t, but like a faithful bone, I can try to turn nimbly in the joint where I’m placed.

Write any time.

 

 

Those Violent Other People

Monday, 09-29-2025

 

Recently I read a news story purporting to give the results of a statistical study of the politically motivated violence in recent generations.  I am resisting the temptation to comment on the timing.

The upshot was that for several generations, the great majority of instances of politically motivated violence were motivated by right-wing or conservative ideologies, with incidents of left-wing violence becoming a majority only in the last few years.

Such exercises in counting on fingers are worthless.  Terms like “right” and “left” have some usefulness in limited contexts in which all sides use the terms the same way.  The problem is that since they have no universally agreed-upon definitions, it is far too easy to manipulate them.

During the Jim Crow years, segregationists were part of the New Deal alliance, which might reasonably be viewed as making them part of the left.  They engaged in plenty of violence.  But we are required to call them conservatives because, after all, they were segregationists.  Segregation was bad and old, and everything bad and old is conservative, don’t you know?

By most definitions, communists are part of the left, not the right.  But the die-hard communists who resisted the breakup of communism in the Soviet Union were called conservatives because they wanted to conserve – well, communism.

Monarchists are called right-wing, and Stalinists are called left-wing.  Yet what was Stalin but a tyrannical monarch by another name?

Socialists are considered part of the left, and Adolph Hitler’s party were called National Socialists – Nazis, for short -- because they accepted the tenets of revolutionary socialism, but rejected the internationalism of other socialists.  Although they wanted to smash institutions, not conserve them, today we unhesitatingly classify them as conservatives -- because, golly, they were extreme racists, so they just had to be conservatives.

The ideology of Italian Fascism was a totalitarian confection made up of nationalism mixed with what most of us would call left-wing ideologies such as socialism, anarchism, and syndicalism.  But we call it right-wing, because, after all, it was a new kind of leftism, which broke with the old kind.

Surveying this terminological chaos, we misunderstand our own confusion, saying “Isn’t it amazing that the extreme right is so much like the extreme left!”  But in many cases, so called extreme right-wingers are varieties of what used to be called extreme left-wingers.  We’ve merely changed the definitions.

 

What the Pundits Missed about Senator Kaine

Monday, 09-22-2025

JUST NOW:

My new essay "Mercy, Yes, But Justice Too,"

about capital punishment and the Charlie Kirk

killing, has just been posted at the First Things

website.  Notice too my forthcoming book from

Creed & Culture, Pandemic of Lunacy:

How to Think Clearly When Everyone

Around You Seems Crazy.

 

During the past few weeks, a great many pundits have commented on Democratic Senator Tim Kaine’s bizarre remarks in the Senate Foreign Relations Committee on September 4th, but although most of his critics make good points, they are missing one of the most important.

Kaine was criticizing Secretary of State Marco Rubio, who had pointed out that our republic was founded on the principle that all men are created equal, and that our rights come not from laws or governments, but from God.  Secretary Rubio wasn’t pulling the idea from a hat.  It comes straight from the Declaration of Independence.  Government ought to protect our natural rights, but we have them whether the government recognizes them or not, because they come from a higher source than government.  God built them into our nature.  Thus, we are beings of such a nature that some things cannot be done to us without grave wrong.

Here is how Sen. Kaine replied:  “The notion that rights don't come from laws and don't come from the government, but come from the Creator — that's what the Iranian government believes.  It's a theocratic regime that bases its rule on Shari’a law and targets Sunnis, Bahá'ís, Jews, Christians and other religious minorities.  And they do it because they believe that they understand what natural rights are from their Creator.  So the statement that our rights do not come from our laws or our governments is extremely troubling.”

All of the critics get the first reason the senator’s remark was bizarre.  He seemed completely ignorant of the fact that our own republic, which is no theocracy, was founded on the concept of natural rights which come from the Creator.  To him, this founding principle is a brand-new idea which smacks of theocracy and Shari’a.

Most of the critics also get the second reason the senator’s remark was bizarre, which is his explanation of it.  The senator said that he believed in natural rights (in a sense he did not explain), but that “people … with different religious traditions” have “significant differences in the definitions of those natural rights."  The tacit argument might be put like this:

  1. Saying that God gave us rights which make some deeds gravely wrong is dangerous, because people might disagree about them.
  2. The remedy?  Don’t say that God gave us rights which make some deeds gravely wrong, because then we will have nothing to disagree about.
  3. We can safely say that we have natural rights, but only if we say they come not from God, but from laws and government.  And apparently we won’t disagree about that.

This line of thinking is so obviously fallacious that one suspects there must be something more in the senator’s mind.  I think there is.  For the third reason Sen. Kaine’s remark was bizarre is one which even most critics have missed.

The senator seems to confuse an ontological claim, that is, a claim about what we are, with a claim about identity, that is, a claim about which group we belong to.

What the principle of natural rights claims is that we have rights because we are created in God’s image, whether our religion acknowledges this or not.  Therefore the Christian, the Jew, the Muslim, the Bahá'í, and the atheist all have the same natural rights.  This is the idea on which our republic was founded, and the senator is oblivious to it.

But Sen. Kaine thinks that the principle means that we have rights because of our group, because of what our religion believes about GodMuslims, in his telling, think they get rights from “their” Creator only from believing their holy writings; Christians, that they get rights from “their” Creator only from believing their holy writings; and so on.  So each group concludes that religious groups other than themselves don’t have these rights from God.

Let us set aside whether this is an accurate description of what Muslims believe.  It surely isn’t an accurate description of what Christians believe, and more to the point, it isn’t an accurate description of the principle of natural rights.

In fact, what the senator calls natural rights aren’t natural.  In his view there would seem to be Jewish rights as seen by Jews, Muslim rights as seen by Muslims, and Christian rights as seen by Christians, but there just aren’t any merely human rights, rights for all who share human nature.

If we really do have rights because God made us that way, then they are discovered, not invented, and they preexist laws and governments.  This fact lays on government a duty to make laws which identify, acknowledge, and protect them.

The alternative is to think rights are arbitrary things that governments are free to invent, define, redefine, or wipe out of existence just as they please.  They are just one more form of policy.

And despite his claim to believe in natural rights, that is what the senator seems to think.

 

“He Must Be Crazy!”

Monday, 09-15-2025

 

Query:

Some people blur the distinction between mental illness and moral wrong by ascribing certain behaviors to mental illness when they are in fact simply evil acts.  Have you ever addressed this interesting topic?

 

Reply:

I haven’t written much about your question, but let me make amends.  It’s a good one for sure.  I was brought up to believe that all criminality and wrongdoing reflect a kind of mental disease, and we do say things like “The man who stabbed that woman on the subway must have been crazy!” and “What a nutcase, to shoot someone just because he disagrees!”

If a stabber or the gunman were really nuts, we think, then he wouldn’t be to blame.  Or would he?  It’s true that all justifications for doing wrong reflect some sort of disordered thinking.   But are they disordered in that sense?

The traditional insanity defense tried to pin down the kind of disorder which absolves a person of blame, declaring that he would have to be incapable of telling the difference between right and wrong.  Unfortunately, this standard doesn’t pin down what it is supposed to pin down, because the idea of not being able to tell the difference between right and wrong is deeply ambiguous.

Let’s see whether we can untangle the matter by making some distinctions.  What does it mean to say that someone can’t tell the difference between right and wrong?

Suppose we take it to mean that a person understands all the words in a sentence like “It is wrong to deliberately take innocent human life” but just doesn’t know that the sentence is true.  I don’t think this is possible:  There are no such people.  If this were what the insanity defense meant, it would be nonsensical.

But there are other cases.  First, here are two cases in which a person is clearly not culpable for wrong acts.

  • Perhaps he is so profoundly impaired that he doesn’t know the meaning of the words in the sentence.  It is unlikely that such a person would have enough mentality to act at all, but if he did, and committed wrong, then he should certainly not be held responsible for it.  On the other hand, he should be institutionalized.
  • Or perhaps he suffers such grave delusions that he cannot recognize what is actually the case.  For instance, he may understand perfectly well that it is wrong to deliberately take innocent human life, but he mistakes the man whom he kills for an escaped lion, which must be slain to protect others.  Such a person is not culpable, but again, he should be institutionalized, both for his own protection and for that of others. This, I think, is the sort of case to which the so-called insanity defense was meant to be applied, but it is very narrow.

Now here are four cases in which a person should be viewed as culpable for wrong acts, even though some might deny it.

  • Perhaps the person understands the basic moral rules, but does not grasp some of their obvious their corollaries.  For example, he might know it is wrong to kill, but be confused about whether it is wrong to allow an injured person to die and do nothing to help.  Even though there is such a thing as innocent error in hard cases, we rightly demand better moral understanding than that.  Thus in most cases, such persons are culpable.
  • Or perhaps he would grasp the wrong of his deed if only he thought about it, but alas, he doesn’t think about it -- either because the deed is habitual, or because he has fallen into passion.  An example of habitual inattention is that he has done so much petty pilfering that he no longer gives it a thought.  This is a vice, and it is culpable.  An example of distraction due to passion is that when he finds a man in bed with his wife, he falls into a rage and kills him.  This too is culpable, although it not so bad as killing in cold blood, because the provocation is so extreme.
  • Or perhaps he knows at some level that he is doing wrong, but tries to persuade himself that he doesn’t.  We should all be familiar with this sort of self-deception.  Who among us has never made an excuse for something he knew, deep down, to be wrong?  Unfortunately, depraved ideologies teach denial and make it more extreme.  For example, nothing is more common than for a person in the grip of a corrupt worldview than to think “I may do evil for the sake of good.”  Wrong for which we make excuses is still entirely culpable.
  • Or perhaps he is a sociopath – he knows full well that he is doing wrong, but lacks normal inhibitions against it and normal feelings of sorriness about it.  Contrary to common opinion, a sociopath does have a conscience, because conscience is knowledge, and he has that.  What he lacks is remorse, a feeling which accompanies guilty knowledge in normal persons, but not in him.   In fact, just because sociopaths do have an idea of right and wrong, they sometimes work pretty hard to represent their actions to themselves and others as just:  “Of course I took his car.  How else was I supposed to get home, man?”  Interestingly, some sociopaths are aware that there is something wrong with them, or missing in them.  They realize that they ought to feel inhibitions and remorse, and even work at controlling themselves, whether just to fit in, or even to be more nearly normal.  At any rate, wrong done through lack of normal inhibitions and feelings is still culpable. 

Finally, here are two cases in which a person may or may not be culpable, or may be culpable to a greater or lesser degree.

  • Perhaps the person knows that he is doing wrong, but is incapable of controlling his compulsions.  As though by itself, his hand grasps a knife and plunges it into another, even though he is trying to keep the act from happening.  Such a person may have varying degrees of culpability, because to have literally no control over one’s impulses is very rare.  Another issue in determining his culpability is how he got this way.  For example, if he fell into his condition because of habitual abuse of drugs, then he is indirectly responsible, because he shouldn’t have abused them in the first place.  In any case, he needs to be locked up.
  • Or perhaps he doesn’t know he is doing wrong because he isn’t aware of his actions at all.  As in the last case, if this condition results from his own prior actions -- for instance, if he is too drunk to know he is drunk – then he is culpable, because he should not have become drunk.  But if his ignorance of his actions results from, say, a brain injury, then he is not culpable, but should be institutionalized.  Then again, suppose he has medicine for a mental disorder, but refuses to take it.  Even if he is not responsible for the disorder, to some degree he may be responsible for failure to take his medicine.

So most criminals are to blame.  Only a few rare ones are not, but even they should be restrained, whether in a prison or a mental institution.

People of a certain widespread persuasion think that because of the unequal distribution of wealth, no criminals are to blame.  They suppose that crime isn’t due to sin, but to capitalism.  For example, they make excuses for burglars because houses are so expensive these days.  You can work out for yourself into which of the cases I’ve discussed these ideologues fall.