Presidential elections are always
emotionally charged. This one felt just feels different, though. President
Obama’s election and re-election were emotional, but those elections went my
way. I’ve supported (and defended) President Obama since the 2008 primaries, so
it’s been a good eight-plus years for me. Maybe those who voted for our
President-elect feel now what I felt in 2008 … and vice versa. I don’t really
know.
What I do know is that politics have
become pejorative. I’ve been called a liberal, with the same tone ex-girlfriends
have called me a jerk, more times than I can accurately recall. The term libtard
has been thrown at me on more than a few occasions. A couple weeks ago, I was
called a cuck for the first time. I’m sure there are liberals who treat
conservatives the same way, but these are the experiences I can report.
The battle lines have been drawn.
Centrism is going the way of the dodo. Crossing the aisle, once seen as admirable
and respectable, is now looked upon with disgust.
Blue and red used to come together to
make purple. That’s also becoming a thing of the past, as nobody bothers to
understand anyone anymore. People don’t listen – they just wait to speak their
opinion, oftentimes stating their opinion as unimpeachable fact. The most
important part of effective communication is listening (shut up, comm degree) but
waiting to talk, or hearing out the other person so you can impose your opinion
as superior, isn’t a form of effective listening.
Social media, and, more specifically,
Facebook, has become the epicenter of this behavior. (I'm not the only one who feels this way: https://theringer.com/social-media-echo-chamber-2016-election-facebook-twitter-b433df38a4cb#.u18x56jwb) Users can post literally
anything and sell it as factual news. Sources don’t matter, nor do the
unabashed leaning of sites like Breitbart, Addicting Info, Patriot News, Dead
State, or the myriad other decidedly biased sites. It is human nature for
people to find information that supports their beliefs, but that shouldn’t
excuse them from finding factual
information that backs up their points of view. Screaming conflicting opinions
at one another is a veritable pissing contest in which nobody wins.
I saw a good number of Facebook users
claim liberals/Clinton supporters were being immature, overreacting and/or
being sore losers because they were sad/hurt/upset/angry about the results of
the Presidential election. Many of those users never bothered to ask why, never
thought to ask for more information to paint a clearer picture of this
sadness/anger/whatever. Those users appeared to feel the need to express their
moral superiority, to let viewers of their timeline know that their way was the
right way, and if you didn’t see it that way, you needed to get your priorities
straightened out.
I can’t speak for everyone, but I can
speak for me. So, if you’re one of those people who posted something like that
last week, here’s the explanation you never asked for.
As a white male, my life isn’t going
to be very difficult these next four years. I can still get married, I still have
access to the health care I need, and I don’t have to worry about police
violence or religious persecution because of how I look. But I am in the
minority. When Donald Trump, champion of racism, divisiveness, xenophobia and
misogyny, won the Electoral College last week, my thoughts didn’t immediately
go to me.
They went to my gay friends, whose existing marriages are in jeopardy, and
whose future marriages may not come to be in the next four years, because our
President-elect sees their relationship as an ugly abomination instead of the beautiful
relationship it really is. They went to my non-Christian friends, who will be
ostracized even further, if recent events are any indication. They went to the
Hispanic people in this country, who are not rapists and degenerates, as our
President-elect has said, but integral members of our diverse American society.
They went to the Muslim population in this country, who are subject to intense
hatred and, now, a potential unequivocal ban because their religious practices are the
same as a minute percentage of Muslims who have committed acts of terror in the name of Islam. (Spoiler
alert: Plenty of Christians have killed in the name of God, too. The problem is
extremism, not religion.)
We’re not upset because we didn’t get
our way. We’re upset because a champion of racism, divisiveness, xenophobia and
misogyny got his, and because our loved ones are going to pay the price.
Removing myself as an active member
of the Facebook community was the first step in moving forward. I’ll be around
every now and again – there’s a good chance you’ve found this page because of
the link I posted on Facebook – but, for the foreseeable future, my Facebook
page is a means of pimping my other blog (the link can be found to the right of
this post) and remaining in contact with friends I do not regularly speak with.
The next step is writing this. I’ve
always been better in front of a keyboard than I am in front of an physical audience.
So, how do I reconcile my
frustrations with our society – the violence, the racism, the tribalism – with my
desire to move forward, both as a person and as a citizen of a country I'm deeply disappointed with? I don’t know.
I do know that communication in our
society appears to be broken. It’s not broken beyond repair, though. We need to listen –
really, actually listen – to each
other. We need to empathize. We need to be patient. We need to focus on our
similarities instead of our differences. That goes for everyone:
liberal, conservative, and everyone in between. It applies to me, and it
applies to you.
My political posts won’t go away
forever. When I believe strongly in a cause, I will tweet and hashtag it. When I’m
upset by news I read, I will tweet and hashtag it. It’s a means of venting my
feelings, and hoping to find someone out there who feels the same way.
There has been some good to come out
of this election cycle. All the negative feelings I had built up led me to
research and identify my place in the political world. I did this so I could
properly support the candidates that will best represent me. I also did this
so I could get out and volunteer for the right candidate(s). Bitching on
Facebook or Twitter isn’t activism – it’s just bitching. I used to do it, and
the last week helped me realize that doing so is like sitting in a rocking
chair: It’s something to do, but it doesn’t get me anywhere.
Maybe becoming active instead of
passive in the political arena is the first step for me to reconcile my
feelings with the state of this country. I’m sure there’s plenty more to do,
but the first step is the most important one.
And, hell ... if all else fails, we'll always have Joe Biden memes.
And, hell ... if all else fails, we'll always have Joe Biden memes.
No comments:
Post a Comment