Mediating
Truth
No matter whose camp
received your support in the 2016 election, it seems clear that our country is in
disrepair: an unsettled energy permeates our sociopolitical institutions. Dysfunction prevails, extremism has replaced
our cultural fulcrum, and uncertainty has taken up residence in our lives. My human instincts – the ones that I don’t
validate against some accepted norm – tell me that the American standard has
shifted. My knowledge of history makes
me harken to repressive eras and cautions me to prepare, now that their
hallmark signs have begun to surface. I
say these things, not because my candidate didn’t win, but because the same
instincts operating within me (even now) that engender empathy, cooperation,
and progress now suddenly feel unacceptable, if not criminal. But, whatever. Empathy, cooperation, and progress also compel
me to set aside the urge to retreat into resignation and, instead, seek
reconciliation on exactly those grounds.
This idea now seems
timely, the notion that labeling and self-interest must stop. I’m not talking about identity politics as pejoratively
described by some pundits. Rather, I
refer to a recent, hostile
unwillingness to see ourselves in others.
Only with extreme effort or willful ignorance does one deny the existence
of innate human worth – this is nothing new.
Lately, though, the drive to exclude and dehumanize is vehement. So, whether the impetus is current economic
hardship or past generational prejudices, we are witnessing the warmed over practice
of defining groups of people using outward perceptions necessarily aligned with
our fears. When one appreciates the
convergence of these behaviors, acknowledgment that this newest constituency
has as its standard bearer the President of the United States is beyond frightening. While we have much work to do, I believe that
it is possible to withstand this wave of separatism and emerge a stronger
nation. I believe that we have been presented
with a most unexpected and fertile ground from which to create a reincarnation
of America that is home to all manner of class, gender,
ethnicity, and immigrant.
This country has,
from its beginning, narrated its autobiography in terms of exceptionalism. Its
leaders are ever noble, and its people are righteous in all things. Revisionist history takes on a life of its
own to perpetuate this false “persona.”
To a majority, though, this caricature is the reality they navigate
daily, dishearteningly pushing the true knowledge of our national DNA to the margins
of historical significance. In that
sense, each of us has been fooled. We
have been spoon fed that version of history that complements rhetoric, without
regard for times like these, when clarity is critical to charting our future
course. There is no more persuasive
argument to strip our realities bare and confront our biases than that laid at
our feet by this chief executive. This
President is now under investigation.
However, it is worth noting that both the leadership and the hardline
support of the party that ensconces him tries desperately still to validate his legitimacy.
Amid this
dissension, we must do the hardest thing and recognize our hypocrisy despite
the social advantages it brings: How do I demand respect of my philosophies and
decisions, yet boldly deny the same to you?
How do I characterize a group of people without reflection, but except
from that group the one neighbor or one coworker who somehow revealed her
humanity? Though it may be rehearsed, this
practice continues in its counterintuitiveness.
Recall, for example, that Africans were happier as slaves than freed men
and women, and indigenous people just wanted a westward vacation – this also is
nothing new. So, what do we see and fear
in each other that justifies the active withholding of those rights we deem
basic for ourselves? This question is critical
to beginning the process of national accord among current oppositional
forces. The ensuing dialogue, however, requires
that we refrain from spouting canned justifications and retorts. Rather, now is beyond time for analysis into
how we created this sociopolitical impasse; honest inquiry into who we aspire
to be as a people; and passionate advocacy from those who responsibly answer
the call.
I predict that
things will get worse for American interpersonal relations before they get
better – change is hard. Despite the
current level of unrest observed in communities and Congress, within protests
and the White House, I nonetheless have faith that there are more of us who
value the outcome that results when we want as much for our neighbor as for
ourselves. More importantly, these times
have revealed the deep chasms that now seem uniquely formed to the contours of
the challenging circumstances we now face.
This signals to me an historic window of opportunity to not only showcase
our better angels but to save our very souls.
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