- Work can be good medicine (8/9/24)
- I’m glad I made that call (10/28/23)
- The tale of a cruel, cruel summer (10/14/23)
- Be safe when walking, bicycling (9/16/23)
- An overdue thank you to a friend (8/5/23)
- Walking the road to better health (7/1/23)
- Remembering Kyle Smith, one year after his passing (3/11/23)
Bring civility back to politics — and to life in general
I was on Instagram a few years ago and one of my friends posted a picture of former first lady Barbara Bush with this caption: “I can’t imagine how painful her life must have been, at times. When your husband and oldest son are U.S. presidents and your youngest son is a prominent political figure as well, it comes with the territory, but it still had to hurt. Can you imagine turning on the news and hearing someone speak of your child like people speak of political figures?”
Needless to say, it was very thought-provoking — and in this age of venomous partisanship, very true.
American politics has become very caustic over the last few years on both ends of the spectrum.
Part of the problem with our political process today is that we often have little respect for those who disagree with us. I was listening to a talk show in March 2018 when a caller said that he disliked the return of “Roseanne” to ABC because it “legitimize(d) deplorables,” referencing Hillary Clinton’s generalization of Trump supporters from the 2016 presidential election campaign.
Even if a person dislikes the politics and the personality of the president, to write off roughly 74 million Trump voters as racists and fascists is going way too far — and it contributes to the growing division in our country. After all, who wants to even say hello to someone who is a racist and/or fascist — much less have any meaningful dialogue with them?
However, it’s not just Democrats and members of the left who have painted their opponents with the broad brush. In 2012, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney damaged his chances of defeating Barack Obama in the presidential race when he referred to many of his opponents as part of the “47 percent.”
“There are 47 percent of the people who will vote for the president no matter what,” Romney said. “All right, there are 47 percent who are with him, who are dependent upon government, who believe that they are victims, who believe the government has a responsibility to care for them, who believe that they are entitled to health care, to food, to housing, to you-name-it.”
Again, even if a person dislikes the politics and the personality of the president — at that time, Obama — to write off the millions who voted for him as lazy, sponging moochers is going too far. After all, who wants to even say hello to a lazy bum who mooches off the taxpayers so he or she can do nothing all day but watch TV and drink beer, much less have any meaningful dialogue with them?
I moved to Nebraska in September 2015, just as the countdown to the Iowa caucuses was heating up. As a political aficionado, I enjoyed getting to meet many of the presidential candidates on both sides of the aisle, including Ted Cruz, Carly Fiorina, Chris Christie, Martin O’Malley and the daughters of Bernie Sanders.
But along the way, I learned something: They are all human beings just like the rest of us. And I’ve always found it much harder to throw rocks at a living, breathing human being than at a TV set. Democrat, Republican, Libertarian, Green, independent or whatever, we are all Americans and we are all in this together.
My friend closed his Instagram photo caption with these words: “That’s why when I speak of a (politician), regardless of their affiliation or party, I try to keep in mind that person has or had a Momma who loves/loved them very much, just like me. #humanity”
Words to live by.
Posting a comment requires free registration:
- If you already have an account, follow this link to login
- Otherwise, follow this link to register