Someone should inform the New York Times, which is appalled that Secretary of War Pete Hegseth sees divine meaning in the Iran War.
Individuals and groups usually experience their actions from the inside, where motive, hope, fear, duty, memory, and self-justification all add weight that the bare external facts do not contain. A punch is never just a punch to the person throwing it. It is self-defense, honor, revenge, necessity, destiny, justice, loyalty, survival, or love. Nations do the same thing at scale. A tariff is not just a tariff. It becomes sovereignty, security, fairness, national renewal, anti-colonial dignity, historical correction, or civilization itself.
That inflation of meaning serves real functions. It binds allies. It recruits sacrifice. It turns costs into duty. It converts muddled interest into moral clarity. People rarely mobilize around plain facts alone. They mobilize around stories that tell them what those facts mean.
The plain facts are usually too thin to sustain action. If a government said, “We are bombing because we think this marginally improves our strategic position,” that would not inspire many people. So the act gets wrapped in higher language. The same is true in personal life. “I left because I was bored and restless” is harder to live with than “I had to be true to myself.”
That said, not all meaning is fake. Human action really does take place within interpretations. Meaning is part of the fact of action, not just decoration added afterward. But the meaning people assign is usually larger, nobler, and more coherent than the underlying reality warrants.
Hegseth is not describing military action in flat, technical terms. He is elevating it into something cosmic. Not just strategy or deterrence, but providence, destiny, civilizational defense, even divine will.
This is exactly the move you were pointing to.
The plain facts might look like this. The United States is using overwhelming force to pursue strategic goals in Iran and elsewhere. There are risks, tradeoffs, and uncertain outcomes.
But that description is too thin to sustain mass alignment. So the act gets reinterpreted.
It becomes:
protection of civilization
fulfillment of a divine mission
defense of “Christian nations”
a test of historical destiny
Once framed that way, the action is no longer just one policy choice among others. It becomes morally charged and harder to question. Opposing it starts to feel like opposing something sacred rather than something contingent.
From an Alliance Theory angle, this is coalition technology in its pure form.
The religious language does several things at once:
It fuses political allies into a tighter moral community
It raises the cost of dissent within that coalition
It signals alignment with evangelical and civilizational-right networks
It converts strategic violence into perceived moral necessity
And it is not unique to this side.
Iran does the same thing with martyrdom, resistance, and divine justice. Russia invokes civilization and historical destiny. Progressive actors invoke human rights, anti-colonial justice, or the “arc of history.” Different vocabularies, same underlying structure.
The pattern is stable.
People and nations do not just act. They narrate their actions upward. They inflate them into something worthy of loyalty, sacrifice, and belief.
Without that inflation, most large-scale action would lose its psychological and political fuel.
Humans seem to need some system that gives their lives significance, continuity, and a sense that their actions matter beyond immediate survival. Becker calls that a “hero system.” It answers a basic problem. We are self-aware animals who know we will die. That creates a kind of pressure that raw biology alone does not resolve.
So people attach themselves to structures that promise symbolic importance. Religion, nation, career, family, moral causes, even subcultures. These systems tell you that your efforts count, that you are part of something enduring, that your life is not just a brief biological episode.
A hero system looks close to a psychological necessity that emerges from our biology but it is not a fixed biological module in the way hunger or thirst is. It is more like a recurring solution that cultures generate to stabilize human beings who are aware of their own mortality.
The content varies wildly. One person finds meaning in raising children. Another in religious devotion. Another in intellectual status or political struggle. The need is stable. The form is flexible. Also, people can weaken or step outside particular hero systems, but they rarely eliminate the need entirely. When one system collapses, people tend to drift, feel anxiety, or attach to a new one. That is why periods of social breakdown often produce intense ideological or religious movements. People are rebuilding meaning structures.
Here you have a direct clash between two competing “hero systems” inside the same society.
On one side, the administration’s approach treats information control as part of a larger mission. The war effort, national security, and civilizational framing all push toward disciplining the flow of information. The implicit claim is that responsible leadership requires managing what the public sees, so the nation can act decisively. On the other side, the judge is invoking a different moral universe. Not strategy, not unity, but constitutional freedom, independent inquiry, and the idea that truth emerges from unconstrained reporting.
Both sides are imputing meaning upward.
The administration’s policy is not just a bureaucratic rule about press access. It becomes part of a larger story about loyalty, mission alignment, and national purpose. Journalists who resist are cast, implicitly, as obstacles to that purpose.
The court’s ruling is not just a technical First Amendment analysis. It becomes a defense of a nearly sacred principle. A free press is framed as essential to the survival of the republic itself, not just one institutional preference among others.
From a Becker angle, both are hero systems competing for allegiance.
One says:
Meaning comes from serving a national mission
Unity and disciplined messaging are virtues
Leadership requires control and alignment
The other says:
Meaning comes from defending open inquiry
Dissent and investigation are virtues
Legitimacy requires independence from power
From an Alliance Theory angle, these are coalition-building vocabularies. “National security,” “mission,” and “on board and willing to serve” recruit one coalition. “Free press,” “independent journalism,” and “First Amendment” recruit another.
Notice the deeper structure. Neither side presents itself as just one interest group among others. Each presents its position as necessary for the survival of something larger. The nation. Democracy. Civilization. Truth.
The facts on the ground are narrow. A policy about press credentials. A court ruling striking it down. But the meaning attached to those facts expands outward until it becomes existential. That expansion is not accidental. It is how these systems generate loyalty, justify power, and stabilize themselves in the middle of conflict.
