There is a dangerous moment in public life when people stop asking whether a leader is telling the truth and begin assuming that truth no longer matters.
That is where much of the West now finds itself. The Iran war is one of the clearest examples. One day President Trump speaks of progress, peace, a ceasefire, or some great settlement. The next day the ceasefire is fragile, the threats return, and the public is told that bombing may resume if Iran does not behave. Then envoys are sent back to talks, officials insist the peace process is alive, and everyone is expected to call this coherent strategy.
The issue is not simply Trump. He is the loudest example, not the only one. The deeper problem is the destruction of trust as a governing tool.
We see a quieter version in Canada. Prime Minister Mark Carney now speaks the language of national urgency. He has launched a Major Projects Office to fast-track nation-building projects, promising ports, railways, energy corridors, mines, LNG, nuclear power, critical minerals, and high-speed rail. The slogan is big, build now, move faster, transform the economy.
Canadians have heard this before. The promise is speed, but the reality is bureaucratic slogging. Even the government’s own framework admits that a project referral does not guarantee funding, approval, or listing under the Building Canada Act. There still must be Indigenous consultation, provincial coordination, regulatory review, environmental conditions, and treaty-based processes in some regions.
Politicians do not say, “We are starting a long approval and negotiation process that may or may not result in shovels in the ground.” They say, “We are building Canada.” Then years later, construction is still being accelerated, reviews are still being aligned, and taxpayers are told to be patient, and they wonder why cynicism is through the roof.
Doug Ford has made the Ontario version almost routine. He promised not to touch the Greenbelt, then opened part of it to development, then apologized and reversed himself after the scandal became politically unbearable. His government allowed municipalities to use speed cameras, then Ford attacked those same cameras as a cash grab and promised a ban after cities had already built policy around them. The public is constantly asked to absorb reversals as leadership.
Skepticism is healthy, but cynicism is not. Skepticism asks hard questions because truth matters. Cynicism stops asking because it assumes truth is unavailable. Authoritarian systems do not always need people to believe every official claim. Sometimes they only need people to believe that everyone is lying, every institution is compromised, every announcement is theatre, and the ordinary citizen is powerless to know anything for certain.
That is how empires rot from the inside. Not first by losing territory, but by losing credibility. Not first when enemies cross the border, but when citizens no longer believe the words coming from the capital.
The old model of propaganda tried to persuade, but the newer model often tries to exhaust. Flood the zone with claims and then reverse yesterday’s statement today. Call conflict peace and delay acceleration and then blame the media for noticing the contradiction. The loyalist will defend anything, but the exhausted citizen will resist nothing.
Political trust is not a soft issue. It is a national security issue. A country whose people cannot trust official statements cannot make sober decisions about war, debt, infrastructure, taxation, or sacrifice. It cannot distinguish a necessary strike from a reckless one, a real ceasefire from a press release, or a serious building plan from another taxpayer-funded announcement.
No free people should outsource their judgment to politicians, generals, media outlets, consultants, or bureaucrats. A self-governing people must demand plain standards. What was agreed to? What is being built? Who approved it? What is the cost? What is the timeline? What counts as failure?
A country can survive bad policy, and it can survive hard debate. It can even survive failed leaders. What it cannot survive is a ruling class that treats truth as optional and citizens who finally decide they no longer care.