As the presidential race of 2020 is already underway, before
the office-holders elected in the mid-terms have even taken their oaths of
office, it would be a great time for Americans to demand that the level of
conversation be switched permanently to ‘grown up.’ The stakes are very high
with the looming possibility of a recession, a bitterly divided Congress and an
executive branch in a constant churn. It would be a real treat for a few brave
candidates to insist on taking the high road and talking about how their
policies will benefit the citizenry.
This will run afoul of the zeitgeist of contemporary
politics. Rampant partisanship has created a knee-jerk politics where not only
is everyone expected to wear their allegiances on their sleeves, but to be at
the most ideologically pure part of the spectrum with blind obedience. Facts
that may run counter to one’s argument are “FakeNews” or “HateFacts.” Serious adults don’t use terms like that except to mock
those that do.
We’re seeing the worst in tantrum politics and mental
gymnastics among both major political parties as the current budget impasse
over a border wall continues. Trump’s insistence on a border wall is a clear
sign he doesn’t understand the issues, and Democrats are hard-pressed to
demonstrate any serious commitment to increased border security or give lie to
the notion they want open borders.
Both parties once were able to function and understand nuances
of policy. Sovereignty and human dignity are not mutually exclusive. It is
inexcusable for Americans to support a porous border and deny our right to a
sovereign nation. It is also inexcusable that children would die preventable
deaths in the wealthiest country in the world, no matter their circumstances.
We are a better country than to let people die of common disease or dehydration
in detention centers; we also won’t be a country without strong, enforceable
borders—there is no contradiction in those statements.
Let’s all admit that our political opponents are not
monsters and that seeing the logic in the other side’s argument is not a
betrayal of our own ideals. No, people advocating for stopping family
separation at the border are not doing so to create some kind of socialist
global utopia just as people advocating for tougher border controls are not
trying to reproduce the Third Reich on American soil. These are not staggering
revelations to the worlds of adults, but these are gut-punching concepts to
hyper-partisan audiences that tend to dominate the public conversation these
days.
Future generations will look upon these times as days of
decay and decline, when a vacuum in leadership and long-standing myopic public
policy exacerbated a fractured society. The values that make our society great
can endure even if our institutions crumble, but it means a conscious effort to
build new communities for those of us with clear vision and willingness to see
beyond the outdated prism of our fraying standards.
We can rebuild communities if we leave the echo chambers of
media and engage with the world around us. If we can take anything constructive
from the Trump candidacy and record in office, it’s that people respond to
frank dialogue and people who stick to their guns. Trump trampled several
political sacred cows in his road to the White House—I thought his candidacy
was dead when he insulted John McCain before the first primary was held. Have
no doubt: Trump’s success in winning office came from his being rooted firmly
outside the political establishment. You don’t have to be a fraudulent, vulgar
ignoramus to break out of the mold and effectively challenge that status quo. Let
the barriers Trump broke down let in a better slate of candidates and
activists. There are decent people who hold all kinds of political opinions.
Hear them out and be one of them.
Let this be the year you speak your mind and demand honesty
and understanding from candidates within your own party. The first step of
breaking out of our political rut is to embrace the politics of honesty and
change on our own terms.
Demand more from the election of 2020 than we got in 2016.
We (hopefully) can only go up from here.
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