The New Oxford American Dictionary defines
thoughtfulness as: absorbed
in or involving thought, showing
consideration for the needs of other people, and showing
careful consideration or attention.
Sadly,
thoughtful expressions of beliefs and policies have given way to toxic diatribe
and name calling, where substance is replaced by emotional and often
inflammatory exclamations. Anyone
paying even the slightest attention to public media has experienced this in the
growing division in so many areas of our culture. We are now “at war”: there is a “war on women”, a “war on
God”, a ”war on the 2nd Bill of Rights”, and more. What thoughtful dialog that does exist
is drowned out by the noise of the extremists whose only concerns seem to be to
discredit the opposition and rally their “base”, rather than present a
well-reasoned narrative explaining their position and supporting it with
facts. The losers in this climate
are truth, understanding, and we the people,
I
am not proposing that we ignore our differences; that would be neither possible
nor desirable. On the contrary, we
should, learn from one another by embracing them and selecting the best that
each has to offer. And this cannot
happen until we learn to respect opposing viewpoints, and replace diatribe with
thoughtfulness. Without thoughtful
dialog there can be no compromise, and a Democracy representing over 300
million people cannot survive without reaching for a compromise on political,
fiscal, and religious differences.
A
frequent refrain is “we will not abandon our principals”. I would suggest that fiscal policies –
tax rates, financial regulations, etc. – are indeed, policies, and should not
be confused with principals that should never be compromised - honesty, integrity,
civility and respect.
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