@Citizenzen @ericgtr12 @PearsonX
i really like reading all the viewpoints on the topic you are discussing.
when (under what conditions) and/if a person has a ethical obligation to remove him/herself from an organization/company/political party/admin/group when that group is no longer meeting with his/her own standards/views.
i usually have said/continue to say that a person in such a situation should remove himself as soon as possible and publically denounce the group they are leaving.
since i feel as above, i tend to call trump supporters and hangers-on co-conspirators. i mean that in every sense of the word.
here is the "but":
i can think of no exception except one: only in the case of civil servants.
this group, where knowledge is housed in our government, should not voluntarily quit.
they should not be silent however. they should make their professional opinion known as loudly as possible.
if they are removed unvoluntarily then that is the price of the truth they pay.
if they remain silent, then they also become co-conspirators.
by the way, generals should never speak their opinion. if generals disagree they should resign.
in the case of Fauci, he is a kind of civil servant.
do i wish he spoke up more in the beginning. yes. very much yes.
at one point i gave up on him.
it was only when realized that the general USAmerican public supported him that i realized he should in fact stay.
Trump can fire him now that the election is over. for spite.
but Fauci really became more trusted than trump.
and that is a large part of why Biden won, i think.