One section of Fleming Rutledge’s book The Battle for Middle-earth is called “The Treason of Isengard.”
The leader of the kingdom of Rohan, Théodan, has allowed a disreputable person to control his kingdom. “This clever but craven personage . . . is a classic example of the person who holds an entire human unit captive to unreality by calling black white, truth lies, and wisdom foolishness.”
Rutledge comments on what leadership is about: It has to do “with defining reality,” she says.
It is interesting to examine how some leaders in today’s world define reality. Rutledge’s book was published in 2004. Yet, eerily, she says, “If the person who is allowed to define reality falsely retains the premier position in the group, the potential for corporate evil is unbounded.”
We now are learning what happens when facts are defined as “fake” merely because they are unfavorable.