“Say it’s not so, Matt,” my friend’s message read,
accompanied by a photo of a public figure that I don’t know personally but
follow on social media. I explained that I follow/befriend people on social
media that I often disagree with, and that while I find some of this person’s
views extreme, they were not the murderous villain popularly portrayed in the
mainstream press.
My explanation was lost and I found myself “blocked.” It’s a
real shame. This is someone I’ve been friends with since college that is
generally open-minded and intellectually strong. I know this person from a
college debate society, the whole purpose of which is to listen to people you
disagree with and debate them peaceably without tantrums or emotional self-immolation.
Maybe this person will find it in their heart to befriend me
on social media again, but if not, so be it. I can’t please everyone and I
can’t apologize for the opinions of others.
No matter who you are or what your politics, you are going
to find I am friends with someone you hate.
I can guarantee that to everyone: someone on my list of friends is going to
piss you off.
I won’t have it any other way. I refuse to live in an echo
chamber only occupied by people who share my view of the world. No matter how
right you think you are, no one is above having their opinions and perceptions
challenged and there is absolutely nothing virtuous about a closed mind.
In our era of divided politics, trolls on both sides of the
spectrum feel morally justified in becoming increasingly uncivil. I’ve had a
few people block me or “unfriend” me. One even called me names and blocked me
so I couldn’t see or respond, a cowardly low. People engage in this kind of
behavior when they have no real ideas or don’t have the wherewithal to defend
their beliefs.
But I also have lots of friends that don’t block me. The
friends with more substantial progressive activist bona fides – the people
who’ve actually been in the streets and done battle with the cops, who’ve been
to jail for their activism or actually rumbled with real Nazis in the real
world – don’t find the need to block me on social media or prove their online
virtue through their computer keyboards. I have friends who are law enforcement
officers and military veterans who have been shot at in the line of duty at
home and abroad; none of them have expressed horror that I’m friends with people
that are communists or anarchists. They don’t need to wear their patriotism or
their toughness on their sleeves, they live it every day.
Fortunately, the majority of my friends are confident enough
in who they are to listen to other’s people’s views. That doesn’t mean they
agree with me or like that I’m online friends with people they deplore, but
they have strong enough wits to disagree without name calling.
I can’t judge people based on their ideology alone. Some of
the people considered most virtuous in public life have been some of the most
miserable human beings; egos rendering them incapable of treating others with dignity
and respect. How you treat the waiter or waitress at a restaurant tells me much
more about you than whatever politician you voted for last November. So many
people who check all the right virtue boxes can’t be bothered to act like a
decent human being in real life.
I hope my friend comes back online. I won’t block or
unfriend someone just because they hold opinions we may despise. There’s
something about my collection of friends that everyone can hate. But I have a
great group of friends nonetheless. I’ll never apologize for keeping an open
mind to different ideas, no matter how offensive they might seem to others. If
that makes enemies out of some friends,
then that’s too bad.
If you’re not making enemies, you’re not living life.
3 comments:
So who is it? The public figure your former friend hates? Who's not a murderous villain?
So was the public figure a Nazi or what?
The much reviled Richard Spencer of the National Policy Institute. I am "friends" online with nationalists of every variety, not because I agree with them necessarily but because they are interesting people with interesting ideas. I don't follow any real Nazis that I'm aware of.
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