I had this line once:
“Conservatives hate
everyone but themselves. Liberals love
everyone… but conservatives.”
That’s right. (If
there is any truth to that Italicism.) The
“All you need is love” people have a “line.”
And that line bisects the American populace.
Which, as Ed Grimley might aver, “… is sad, I must say.”
Okay, not to pile on.
But, you know how when your own
kids act up in a restaurant it feels different that when other people’s kids misbehave.
You are less likely to loudly proclaim, “Children for sale”? That’s how I feel when my side is not at its optimum.
The other side? As my late Mom
used to say, “Let their mothers
worry.”
Moving on…
Yesterday, I offered a reasonable rationalization for the
electors of the current president not wanting to engage with their ideological adversaries. The summarized version:
Their haughty opponents have been insulting them for more
than two hundred and forty years.
Their reflected-in-the-voting reaction:
“Enough is enough!”
Okay, now it’s our turn.
(Accepting my inclusion in “Our” because they would unquestionably label me “Them.” Although, due to my proclivity for examining
both positions, “Them” can be coolly unwelcoming to me.)
Question:
(Flipping yesterday’s question around):
Why would we want
to talk to them?
(And it took just 249 words to get there.)
Okay. Trying not to
stereotype, but given my ingrained “home team” perspective, I probably will, despite
a lifelong dedication to absolute fairness.
Do you see how tricky this is? Still,
I am eagerly up for the challenge. Look
at me – the venerable fire horse, ready to go!
Some supporters of the elected president – an uncertain number, but indisputably
greater than those supporting his opponent – are haters.
Why would I want to talk a hater, more specifically a Jew
hater? What would I say to him, in an
effort to meet the guy half way?
“I hear you revere the man who tried to annihilate my
people. Wow. That’s really interesting.”
Ecumenical. But an insult
to history.
Then there are the elected president’s supporters who,
although moral and decent in their personal lives and the rules of appropriate behaviors
they instill in their children, dismissed the candidate’s rampant vulgarity and
serial falsehoods as “He’s just saying what other people are afraid to say.” My reflexive reaction:
“How could you do
that?”
Honestly? That gambit
is unlikely to get the ball rolling. Instead,
they might easily take offense.
Then there are the elected president’s supporters who, as
commentator Neal Gabler once insightfully observed, have erroneously transferred
the template of “unshakable faith” to
the political arena where it does not naturally belong, the political arena having
been created for open debate and hammering out differences.
“Transferred erroneously to where it doesn’t naturally
belong”? That conversation is over. Or, if it continues, will inevitably finish
where it began.
Finally – and, being the Just
Thinking guy, this one may be the toughest for me – how do I talk to – or,
more candidly, why would I want to talk
to – a person who perceives logical reasoning and factual evidence not as legitimate avenues for possible
persuasion but rather as an exercise in irrelevance, laced with elitist condescension? How do I respond to:
“I’m not saying you’re wrong, ‘Mr. Smart Pants.’ I just don’t give a hoot.”
So there’s that. Reasons
I don’t want to talk to them. And why the
heck should I? (Aside from “We have
to.”)
Tolerance – out!
Consistency – out! Flexibility –
out! Factual Evidence – out!
They blew up the bridges.
How do I possibly get across?
Well, sir and madam, that’s where the pessimist concludes
the conversation.
The optimist’s rebuttal?
Lay it on me.