Sunday, August 7, 2016

Across The Great (Political) Divide

 ... or, seeing the same light through differently-colored glasses


I am a firm believer in two theories that are currently popular in progressive politics:

Donald Trump is the least qualified candidate for President in the history of the USA

Hillary Clinton represents little or no change in the status quo

I believe both of these things, but I believe in one more than the other, which is where I come into conflict with many of my very progressive Sandersonian friends.

The theory I believe most in and actually believe is demonstrable fact is the sheer inappropriateness of Mr Trump for any national political office, most importantly President.  And this is where I veer sharply away from my conservative borderline libertarian but staunchly republican friends. However, it make me political brothers-in-arms with the 'traditional Republicans' who hate and fear Trump, as much or more than Democrats.

And this experience, my fellow captives in this political theater we are calling Presidential Election 2016, is a reflection of the political divide that has encompassed our nation this quadrennial season. It is proof like nothing else that we can appear - actually be -  the same in almost every way and yet look at the same information and come away with distinctly different conclusions.

I believe another thing; that the cause of this inability to reach the same conclusions based on the same information is we are not getting the information the same way. It is being 'filtered' for us by media and by influential people we believe are trustworthy (or at least interesting). By the time we hear the important things we need to know to make a good decision, those things have been added to, colorized, and pre-digested for us.  We are given slanted information to support the position of those who gave it to us.

If you need a blatant example, it's this:  the statement that America is in dire straights and in need of making 'Great Again', both economically and militarily.  And the counter to this statement that America is already Great, has always been, and will always be (as long as reasonable non-Trump people run the show).  Both can't be true, seemingly; however,  I think each of these views are wrong as presented yet both contain elements of truth.

America - overall - is currently the 'best' nation to be a citizen of and/or a resident of in the world. People flock here (or try to) from all over the planet, and once they are here often want to stay. But it is true that while our economy has recovered under a democratic presidency better than most nations from the meltdown of 2007 (which happened at the end of 8 years of republican administration I must add), we have not protected the middle class American dream in that recovery.  I believe some of those who support Trump believe that is what making American Great Again means.

The United States of America is also the most powerful nation on earth militarily. Our current annual military spending far outstrips any other singe nation by huge margins.  Our global capacity to strike is daunting to any would-be foe.  This ability has not appreciably decreased during President Obama's administration and is likely to increase under a Clinton administration (much to the dismay of progressives).  Yet, Trump's claim that America has been weakened under Obama is believable to conservatives when viewed in a certain Fox-news, slightly-twisted way.  Our current President has attempted to work with other western nations and NATO, instead of going mostly our own way as George W. Bush did in Afghanistan and Iraq.  Obama has attempted to avoid direct introduction of US troops wherever possible and avoid US entanglement in fights we don't understand.  This policy is long-term, complicated, nuanced, and hard to understand.  Positive results are largely unnoticed because nothing newsworthy happens while negative results make the headlines, presenting the view the policy isn't working and that America is helpless (or incompetent). I think this is what many of those who support Trump believe when they say 'Make America Great Again'.

Our mutual divide is based on our individual and collective backgrounds and experiences, but differences based on these are nowhere near as great as when they are magnified through our choice of trusted media and thought-leaders.  If you wish to believe that Obama is Satan and Clinton a Crook, then you will have plenty of media voices to support and encourage you in that belief.  If you believe Obama was too moderate and a traitor to the progressive cause, and that Clinton will be even more of the same, you have shrill voices to support you there too.  If you believe that Trump is unqualified and perhaps even an insane Hitleresque demagogue, you have ample backing from thought leaders (both democrat AND republican).

We are more alike that we are different.  We all want to see our country endure and prosper; we wish for health and happiness for our families and friends, and we aspire to enjoying our lives in freedom.  All of us are striving for these same things, but we have been told (and are being reminded everyday) that somehow our political opponents threaten our achieving these things.  We have been separated by an artificial yet impactful Great Divide of opinion.  Let's try our best not to live by that Divide; let's instead look for common ground based on real life concerns and necessities and not political theories and dogma.

I also have to add (because I believe it so strongly):  Let's agree that we shouldn't hire someone who is totally unqualified for the nation's top job.  Whether you are a fundamental conservative or socialist/progressive, or sit somewhere in the great in-between, let's agree on at least that.

3 comments:

oldironnow said...

Great essay!
I really agree with your last paragraph. Hopefully, the middle Right will gather their courage to stand up for themselves. From the day George HW Bush ate his Voodoo Economics words to enable Ronald Reagan, they've acted as beaten spouse co-dependents.

But the second-to-last paragraph gives me pause. I have made such statements. I feel that Second Amendment Right and the Anti-global War left are actually different sides of the same coin, and maybe we can come to see that. But I have also noted that there are many on the Right who only want happiness, prosperity and the Freedoms of America for their "kind". Not only do they not care about anyone else, they want to be able to actively pursue, punish, and penalize those they despise. The also want free roads... They are almost always comfortable, white, "Libertarian" Christians. They got theirs now, and there's not enough "theirs" to last... so get off my lawn and into this cage... or grave...

IMO there is nothing more contradictory than "Libertarian" and "Christian."

Wayne T said...

Yeah, there are some (too many, really) who want to protect what they believe is 'theirs' and either don't know or don't care that doing so prevents others from getting anything of their own. That may be a deeply-wired part of our human nature and evolution in tribal-groups of hunter-gatherers fiercely competing with each other for resources, but i don't know. I do hope either we or near-future generations find a way to finally grow beyond it.

Unknown said...

Good point. Tribal groups, reptilian-brain sorting, self-preservation.
Drop me and my first-world views into Aleppo and see how I do...

- oldironnow