Since the assassination of Charlie Kirk, Auron MacIntyre, BlazeTV host of âThe Auron MacIntyre Show,â has been calling for conservatives to get serious about crushing left-wing violence. Inaction, heâs warned, will only invite escalation. In other words, the Trump administration needs to use its power to obliterate left-wing chaos. Auron gets quite a bit of pushback for this stance. Many will use J. R. R. Tolkienâs âThe Lord of the Ringsâ trilogy to argue against the use of power to quell evil. âThe one ring is dangerous. You must reject the call of power because ultimately power corrupts and destroys and divides,â they say. But Auron says this is a âshallow readingâ of the father of modern fantasyâs three-volume series. âUltimately, while yes, there is a message about power in there, thereâs also a message about right authority. The last book is, of course, called âReturn of the King,â and this is seen as a good thing,â he counters. âSo it doesnât look like Tolkien is ultimately rejecting the use of power, but he does have some very important things to say about the nature of power.âTo discuss this important distinction, Auron speaks with Evan Cooney, the host and creator of âThe Middle-earth Mixerâ a popular podcast that dives into J. R. R. Tolkien’s lore, themes, and Middle-earth universe. For starters, Tolkien was adamantly opposed to allegory, meaning that the one ring cannot be said to symbolize power alone. Further, in the books, âThere is lawful use of lawful authority, which translates to power, that many characters have and have permissions to do so by the creator god IlĂșvatar, and then there are characters who commit unlawful use of unlawful authority, and Sauron creating the one ring would be a perfect example of that,â says Cooney. Auron points to Aragorn, the rightful king of Gondor, as an example. Initially, Aragorn, using the name Strider, runs from his destiny. âAnd because he’s not in that position of the true king, there are others who are less worthy who are ruling in his place,â says Auron. This is seen by characters and readers alike as a bad thing. Aragorn must wear the crown and wield the sword and scepter, as this is what pushes back darkness and brings order to Middle-earth. Cooney, unpacking Aragornâs lineage all the way back to Isildur, who initially took the ring of power from Sauron, says, âThis shirking of responsibility from everyone involved and [Arveduiâs, the last king of the North] inability to take power created the political disaster that made for why men were so weak by the time you get to the âFellowship of the Ring.âââUltimately, Tolkien recognizes that power will exist, that this void will be filled, and if it’s not filled with the appropriate people, the worthy people, those who belong in the line . you will be ruled by inferior men,â says Auron. âIt’s not that you won’t be ruled; itâs that the stewards are there instead of the kings.âIn the kingdom of Gondor, Denethor a steward charged with holding the throne in trust until the king returns is consumed by pride and despair. He refuses to rally with allies, distrusts Aragornâs claim to the throne, and abandons the city in its darkest hour. In Rohan, however, King ThĂ©oden, who Cooney says is Denethorâs character foil, shows us what it looks like to wield power rightly. With the help of Gandalf, he exiles his corrupt adviser, GrĂma Wormtongue âthe quintessential archetype for the sneaky government bureaucrat,â says Cooney and rides out and meets Sauronâs army in the Battle of the Pelennor Fields. The exile of GrĂma, says Auron, is a lesson for our current government: âThe council [of bureaucrats] is paralyzing. It’s meant to be paralyzing. It’s meant to stop you from taking your rightful authority and taking the honorable action, and you have to remove that influence.âOnce evil advisers have been banished, the next step is to step fully into the role of rightful power. After GrĂma is exiled, the first thing Gandalf has ThĂ©oden do is pick up his sword. âYour fingers would remember their old strength better, if they grasped your sword,â he tells the old king.âItâs a very moving symbol,â says Auron.âWhat stirs the king back to a noble action is he has to feel the weight of the instrument of his office. The rightful sword he has been entrusted with as the civil magistrate has to be felt in his hand before he can once again truly return to who he is and behave honorably.âTo hear the full conversation, watch the episode above. Want.