Tuesday, July 12, 2011

When Compromise is Compromised

How very good and pleasant it is when kindred live together in unity! 
It is like the precious oil on the head, running down upon the beard,
on the beard of Aaron, running down over the collar of his robes. 
It is like the dew of Hermon, which falls on the mountains of Zion.
For there the Lord ordained his blessing, life for evermore. -- Psalm 133


I've been sitting for a few days on an e-mail chain letter sent to me by a beloved relative. The thing is dripping with muddled thinking, wild diatribe, and delusion. But I've sat on it. Maybe this relative reads my blog. I don't know. Not sure what to do, so I'll follow my usual mantra in such confounding, hair-triggering moments: "Don't just DO something, STAND THERE." Pause. Breathe deeply. Think it through.


I am deeply concerned for my country. This liberal-conservative wrestling match is refereed, broadcast and performed much like a WWE match: the two sides pound their chests and scream death and destruction down on the "evil" other side and will stoop ever lower to gouge, thump and kick their way to victory; the "journalists" are little more than hucksters promoting the fight with breathless credulity and fire-breathing graphics; and the referees conveniently have their heads turned as the rules are broken... if they agree to enforce any rules at all. Is there even a rule book anymore?!?


Worse, I've come to believe the bulk of our electorate is addicted to this match-play mindset, with our no-fall, 20-minute time limit attention span. 


Little or nothing constructive can be accomplished in such a circus environment. Thoughtful analysis and careful consideration are drowned out by the carnival barkers whose sole task is to grab attention and keep the money flowing from every passing suckers' pocket into their tills.


If we ever stop the three active wars we are currently waging overseas, we'll find that the real battle is an uncivil war of such magnitude and ferocity that it has swallowed up our political system, most of our media and the daily head-space of almost every voting American. 


I was happy to hear these words from President Obama at yesterday's press conference:



"My experience with John Boehner has been good. I think he's a good man who wants to do right by the country.  I think that it's a -- as Chip alluded to, the politics that swept him into the speakership were good for a midterm election; they're tough for governing.  And part of what the Republican caucus generally needs to recognize is that American democracy works when people listen to each other, we're willing to give each other the benefit of the doubt, we assume the patriotism and good intentions of the other side, and we're willing to make some sensible compromises to solve big problems.  And I think that there are members of that caucus who haven't fully arrived at that realization yet."
GEORGE CONDON:    So your confidence in him wasn't shaken by him walking away from the big deal he said he wanted?
THE PRESIDENT: "These things are a tough process.  And, look, in fairness, a big deal would require a lot of work on the part of Harry Reid and Nancy Pelosi and myself to bring Democrats along.  But the point is, is if everybody gets in the boat at the same time, it doesn't tip over.  I think that was Bob Dole's famous comment after striking a deal with the President and Mr. Gingrich back in the '90s.  And that is always the case when it comes to difficult but important tasks like this."



With everyone addicted to incendiaries and head-slams into turnbuckles, what can compromise possibly bring? We first need to ratchet down the bloodsport, ratchet up the level of discourse, and gain a clear grasp of what exactly is going on. THEN we find our path of action. The first step to reasonable compromise is REASON, which is so lacking at the moment. Without it, our ability to compromise is compromised.

4 comments:

  1. Amen, Core. Nicely said, as always.

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  2. Corey, seems you've been listening to npr, too. I turned off my car when I got to work this morning after hearing the same nonsensical arguments as last night's All Things Considered and felt incredibly hopeless. It seems so obvious that this is pageantry and positioning, yet so many Americans fall for the theatrics. Depressing, indeed.

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  3. There has always been animosity between political factions and there has always been savagery and pageantry in our government. At least we don't see our reps beating each other with canes these days.
    What has changed is the technology and the speed and breadth with which we are able to create and disperse our melodrama.
    But we are stalled now. And the divisions between the democrats and republicans in political philosopy is wider, perhaps, than it has ever been.
    What has been lost is focus on their common goals. Polls are instantaneous now. "Points" are counted hourly.
    I'm afraid it is going to take an effort commensurate to the impact of that increase of speed and breadth to bring compromise to the table. They have to WANT to do it.

    That's where WE come in.

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  4. I will sometimes follow Facebook threads that are fueled by politics, religion, sexuality, etc., as a fly on the wall. I'm almost always left thinking "do we REALLY believe what we're typing?" Or are we driven by just wanting to "get one over" on the other guy? To be the one that gets to say "see, I told you so"? Indeed, it has more the appearance of bloodsport that discourse. Our leaders need to work harder than ever to bring the people back to the fundamentals on which our country was built. A great place to start is outlined rather nicely last week by our own Pastor Corey: http://wbccucc.blogspot.com/2011/07/regard-for-other-wbcc-sermon-070311.html

    ReplyDelete