Pick a hot-button issue.
It doesn’t matter which one. Any
issue that divides the country, the state, the community, or the workplace,
with a large number of people adamant on both sides. Undocumented immigrants, opening government
meetings with prayer, gay marriage, gun control, education vouchers, abortion, religion
in the public schools, overcrowded prisons, environmental concerns,
interpreting the constitution, . . .
Now, where do you stand on your issue, and then, more
importantly, what do you think of the people who are on the other side?
If you or I see any divisive issue as 100% black and
white, clearly right and wrong; if we see all those who disagree with us as
ridiculous, or stupid, or religious idiots, or lost souls; then we, you
and I, might not have a full understanding of the issue, perhaps because all the sources we listen to (websites,
tv and radio stations, spouse, friends, church) are getting their information from each
other. We are missing at least
half the issue.
The sign that we understand both sides of an issue is not that we switch sides, but rather that we can see and interact with the people on the other side as equally valued human beings, and can accept that disagreeing with us does not in itself make someone an idiot.
The sign that we understand both sides of an issue is not that we switch sides, but rather that we can see and interact with the people on the other side as equally valued human beings, and can accept that disagreeing with us does not in itself make someone an idiot.
The more probable truth is that both sides have intelligent people,
not-so-intelligent people, religious people, non-religious people, well-meaning
people, mean-spirited people, valid points, sensationalist arguments, people
who care for the rest of the world, and people who care only about themselves; and every one of us, every single
one, is ignorant about far more in the world than we will ever understand.
What we are lacking is a strong group in the middle, made up
of both sides, people who care enough to listen and learn from each other, who
can lay their politics aside in favor of making a better world for our
children, our grandchildren, and strangers we will never meet, far and near.
As a society, have we lost the maturity to say “I don’t
understand everything, and I don’t have all the answers”? Are we even capable of stopping the stone throwing
and trying to really hear both sides? Have
we, you and I, traded our common sense, our integrity, our kindergarten-learned
ability to play well with others, for a political label? Have we?
What a label that must be, for such a trade.
2 comments:
There is truth in what you say. But that is one thing that makes America so great. We can agree to disagree, respect people's opinions and ideas. In some countries they can't do that.
Hi J. Thanks for reading and commenting. I wonder if you are seeing "agree to disagree" at work in our current political climate, either nationally or locally. I'm mostly seeing hatred, bitterness, and name-calling; family members snubbing family members. I agree with you that "agreeing to disagree" is the ideal scenario, and I hope my view is skewed.
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