Any western medical institution more than a century old and which claims to stand for peace and justice has to confront a painful truth—that its success was built on the savage legacy of colonialism. Perhaps we deal with uncomfortable pasts by burying them, excusing them, or atoning for them. The Lancet, for example, is a colonial-era institution. Its editors today must be exquisitely sensitive to the ethics of memory. How easy it is for us to pronounce on what others should do from our position of advantage. How simple it is to turn away work held to standards so much harder to achieve in lower-income settings. How effortless it is to say one is seeking to promote a global conversation about health, while at the same time justifying, on the intellectually persuasive yet deceptive grounds of quality, exclusion, inequity, and disempowerment. Some might kindly call it the inevitable contradictions of progress. Others, rank hypocrisy.