In 2000, Saturday
Night Live aired a skit based on the premise that Al Gore and George W. Bush
were essentially the same Presidential candidate. The skit is not noteworthy
because it was funny; it is noteworthy because we had nothing to argue about.
It feels like
2000 took place 50 years ago. It is impossible for Republicans and Democrats –
conservatives and liberals – to agree. Our culture has become so toxic in the
past decade, driven by the War in Iraq, a crumbling economy and the first black
President.
Our culture
reached its nadir in the past week following the fallout from a Missouri grand
jury's decision to not indict Officer Darren Wilson for the death of Mike
Brown. The entire country again
divided itself to extremes.
Brown was an
unarmed teen gunned down in cold blood or a violent thug criminal who got what
he deserved. Wilson was a heroic policeman doing his duty as an American
patriot or a racist predisposed to shoot on sight based on stereotypes.
In the aftermath,
the hundreds of black teens that gathered in Ferguson were labeled as protestors
or looters – the description depended on your point of view.
Without any
voices occupying the middle, it has been a low point for our society. To say
we've lost the plot is a polite understatement. On Sunday, five St. Louis Rams
players showed solidarity with protesters by emulating the
“Hands Up, Don't Shoot” pose. On cue, it has become fodder for social media and
cable news for another 24 hours as we move further and further away from any
true, meaningful change.
To wit: the St.
Louis County police department and the St. Louis Rams are in a digital
war of words and, man, if that isn’t the saddest thing I’ve had to write in
a while.
Whether you side
with Officer Wilson or side with Mike Brown's family, the end goal should be to
ensure we don't have unarmed teenagers dying in broad daylight in the middle of
the street. That should disgust everyone on a very human level. Instead, it has
become merely another talking point for more and more political “debate.”
I put “debate” in
quotes because there is no debate going on in this country. All anyone does is
consume the news they want to read, remember the facts that prove their point
and pound the living hell out of them to any and every one.
Now, this is the
part where I'm supposed to point the blame on social media, or the Internet, or
Fox News, or MSNBC, or journalism, or bloggers, or, well, you get the point.
There appears to be this bizarre fascination with blaming technology for the
cause of our problems.
We are the
problem, myself included. The problem is we can't stop listening to and giving
credence to the lunatic fringe on both sides. An even bigger problem is neither side can admit they have a lunatic fringe, even as they creep closer to them on a daily basis.
The lunatic
fringe has always existed, though it took different forms. The Internet has
been around for two decades but its ugliness has only increased in recent
years. Social media has been around for close to a decade but only in recent
months has Twitter turned into a veritable volcano of hate spewing from
seemingly everywhere.
How did we get to
this point? How did we reach a point where a 12-year old child is killed by a
cop in Cleveland and many rush
to choose sides? Shouldn't we all be on the same side – the side where
children are not killed by police officers on playgrounds?
It is far too
simplistic to blame social media or Fox News for the hatred bubbling to the
surface in society because it's always been there. When I worked
as a daily newspaper reporter in eastern Connecticut, I was confronted by
many who were either racist or homophobic or worse. They wrote letters to the
editors. They wrote letters to me. They made their points clear. But we ignored
them. And many others did too. We did not give them the satisfaction of our
disapproval.
Today, there is
no ignoring the lunatics because the lunatics attract page clicks and followers
and television viewers. It's become clear to those in charge that the more
extreme you get, the more people will listen – whether they agree with you or
not. It has moved beyond humorous and into dangerous territory as the shockingly low turnout of the voting
public means these lunatics make their way into office. Is it any wonder that
our government has essentially done nothing for six years?
In football, the
most popular player on the team is the backup quarterback. He never plays, so
you can allow yourself moments of fancy to imagine how great he could be. Here
in the District, we saw that play out with Kirk Cousins, who was lauded by many
as the future of the team until an RG3
injury meant he actually had to play. Surprise, surprise, Kirk Cousins wasn't
the answer.
For the past six
years, Republicans and conservatives have been our nation's backup quarterback
and they have rallied support by demeaning and denouncing the starter. Having
lost control of Congress, you can be assured Democrats and liberals will run
that same playbook for the next two years.
Every issue has
become a stand-off without a middle ground. It's ruining our country and no one
seems to give a shit, because it's all about talking points and winning.
I thought Officer
Wilson should have gone to trial. If he was acting in self-defense, as he
claims, than it would have been proven in the courts. So it sickened and
disgusted me to read people celebrating the result, just as they celebrated the
exoneration of George Zimmerman. Have these people lost all decency?
This country is
splitting apart at the seams and is crying out for a leader. But how can one
emerge? There was hope – a word has lost all meaning – when Barack Obama swept
to power in 2008 with a hopeful, powerful message of, “Yes, We Can.”
Instead, we
can't. Obama was not the skilled politician necessary to deftly extend his hand
across the aisle and the bitterness escalated.
There is little
hope for a new leader to emerge because our political parties and institution
refuse to promote new blood, leaving us with a string of retreads. Does Al
Sharpton need to be at the forefront of every racial controversy? Can
conservatives trot out anyone who does not regular appear on Fox News to be
their voice? Could the 2016 Presidential election actually
devolve to Hilary Clinton and Mitt Romney? Is this the end?
When I started
writing this piece, I wanted to end with a call to action – a reason to believe
in the good of our nation and our country. I wanted to share why I think we can
be great again. I don’t like to be a liar.
That leader may
be out there but we haven't identified who he or she is yet. We are a country
wallowing in despair because we can't put the good of many ahead of our own
steadfast belief in ourselves.
Technology has only
brought out the worst in us. Why can’t it bring out the best in us?
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Well this made me depressed.
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