Saturday, February 26, 2022

Can't we all get along?

Try listening and empathy.

In theory, we want politicians who are open-minded and willing to consider all sides.

Not really. 

Today I share a Guest Post from Oregon State Senator Jeff Golden. He wrote urging people to abandon the "blast furnace" of partisan news. We share our lives with people who see the world differently. Engage with them, he writes. Find out what they are hearing and how it shapes what they think.  

Jeff Golden
That attitude is deeply out of fashion now. Trump is the archetype contrary example of what is expected of a politician. Voters who vote in primary elections want a warrior. Their warrior. Politics is war by other means. Activist voters want an advocate. Anything less is a RINO or DINO, a partisan in name only.

Golden risks being in a lose-lose situation. His desire to be open and empathetic risks appearing indecisive and weak and disloyal to partisans Democrats. That same attitude wins him few friends on the right. He is, after all, a Democrat and therefore "the enemy."

Golden was a classmate at college, but I did not know him then. We met in Medford, when our lives intersected doing politics. Like me, he got elected as a Democrat and served as a Jackson County Commissioner, a reddish-purple polity. Like me, he has been involved in public radio and television for decades. I have supported his campaigns over the years. He is probably more liberal/progressive than I am.


Guest Post by Jeff Golden
Oregon State Senator

This week I complete my fourth session in the Oregon legislature. All four, longtime Salem watchers tell me, have been surpassingly strange. 

2019 and 2020 were disabled by minority walkouts that drew the national spotlight to Oregon for weeks. Walkout threats and the related run-down-the-clock tactic of requiring lengthy bills to be read in full (these days by robot-chipmunk computer voices rather than human clerks) continued into the 2021 and 2022 sessions as well, alongside Covid-19 restrictions that ruptured the traditional connection of citizens to their legislators. Stir in the frantic work of triaging human suffering from the pandemic, wildfire and lethal heatwaves and you end up with the most disrupted four years Oregon government’s seen.

We all feel the disruption. It exhausts and worries us. I worry about the precious time we’ve lost tackling problems we’ve already kicked down the road for too long. But there’s a bigger worry. This pandemic’s deepened our social/political divide such that the polarization of the Obama and Trump years, so troubling at the time, feels in retrospect like courteous philosophical disagreement. Politics and Covid fever have brought many people to a point of sheer contempt and something close to hatred for a broad swath of their Rogue Valley neighbors. 

An hour or two on social media makes that clear. There the dueling narratives are 1) a fascist wave is rolling across the land, with cowardly sheep bowing down to ruthless tyrants, and 2) we’re dealing with a mob of gullible paranoid idiots who are content to see some of us die and all of us suffer for the “freedom” to flaunt sensible science-based rules.

You could be thinking one of those narratives sounds about right. If so, it might be time for reflection. Is it likely that tens of thousands of our valley neighbors, people you’ve likely shared volunteer or social or school-connected time with, have turned into monsters and zombies that scorn all your values? I don’t think so either. What I think we have is a whole lot of people struggling mightily to get through a fierce ordeal, in part by claiming more certainty than they really feel and doubling down more rigidly in reaction to the insults they hear from believers in the other narrative. We’re creating a dark and dangerous spiral. 

Ponting this out severely annoys some people. “Spare me, dude,” went one response to a recent comment I made online, “from your lame Kumbaya. Those people will destroy this country if they can. Sympathy for them is helping them do it.” I get what he was saying. I want to be clear that the way out isn’t to surrender our core values and beliefs—for me, the imperative to push every way I can for changes that give our kids and their kids better odds for inheriting a planet with stabler climate and a fairer economy. I don’t care who gets mad in the process. Remembering the humanity of those who menace us doesn’t remotely mean surrendering.

So what does it mean? Three habits help—none earth-shaking or perfect, all practical:
         1) Dial back your consumption of blast-furnace media, those websites and outlets whose business model is poking your reptile brain into anger and resentment.
         2)  Find ways to listen fully—and that doesn’t mean thinking up your response while the other person’s talking—to people you like and can’t agree with. This is harder than it should be; check out livingroomconversations.org for good tips.
         3) Breathe. Often. It makes easier the business of remembering that everyone’s struggling.

Are you skeptical that any of this will help? You should be. Next week marks the 32nd anniversary of the LAPD’s famous beating of Rodney King, who later asked the world “Can’t we all just get along?” The years since point to a big NO on that, and that thinking otherwise isn’t likely to bring a better future. 

I don’t know that it will. What I do know is that we Oregonians, we Americans, are edging closer every year to ripping our communities and each other to shreds. So the really important question probably isn’t whether dealing with each other more respectfully will make much difference. It’s closer to this: What lies ahead if we don’t?

                                         ----    -----    -----

Senator Jeff Golden represents District 3—Medford, Phoenix, Talent, Ashland, Jacksonville and the Applegate Valley—in the Oregon Senate.  You can reach him at sen.jeffgolden@oregonlegislature.gov.



14 comments:

Anonymous said...

“by claiming more certainty than they really feel and doubling down“

Listening deeply actually means giving up your need and desire to be right. Hopeful, but unlikely.

Michael Steely said...

Jeff Golden is thoughtful, intelligent and caring – pretty rare in a politician and for that I support him. On the other hand, he opposed COVID-19 vaccine mandates for health care and school employees. Many of his constituents don’t believe in them, and he felt they needed representation. The problem is their disregard for medical science makes them a danger to themselves and others. This is an issue, like the outcome of the 2020 election, that can’t be resolved by listening and understanding. Those who believe that vaccines have microchips, or the election was stolen, can’t be swayed by facts or reason. What we have here isn’t a political divide but separate realities.

I’m not sure what the answer is, but I suspect it starts in our schools. Children need to learn critical thinking skills and how to identify credible sources of information. Too many people seem to rely on social media, which then develop algorithms that wrap them in a groupthink bubble impervious to facts. How can we address such existential crises as climate change when so many don’t even believe in or care about it?

We’re living in a time when our very future and the future of our democracy is being threatened. Those are hills worth dying on.

Anonymous said...

“How refreshing it is to be able to have an open conversation,” Beck said. “I'm supposed to hate her. She's supposed to hate me. We're not supposed to talk.”. Glenn Beck on former Rep. Tulsi Gabbard’s (D) speech to CPAC.

The times they are a changing.

Low Dudgeon said...

I remember listening to Jeff Golden in the mornings on JPR before he turned that gig over to Geoffrey Riley. He is an old-school liberal, meaning not closed-minded and judgmental as the default position.

Nevertheless, if one is convinced that another is a "fascist" or "authoritarian", for instance, what value could debate or even conversation possibly have? Why bother to know such a person's side?

I agree that education is crucial. So many power-words are bandied about by folks who cannot define and apply them, and worse, lack the intellectual and ethical integrity to assay inconvenient argument.

The burden of production is not the burden of persuasion. When met, the former is the precursor to the former. Silo people simply jump to conclusions like a single-minded teen to bra strap and panties.

Mr. Golden's famous example from the late Rodney King is both apt and telling. We can all get along--more--if society is not a zero-sum game between rival groups. Reginald Denny would surely agree.

Michael Steely said...

Just a little addendum to Dudgeon's comment:

We actually do have fascists and authoritarians, here in the U.S. as well as elsewhere. Ignore them at your peril.

Ayla Jean said...

Thanks to Jeff Golden for getting out there and trying to make a better future. It's an ugly fray to jump into, and I admire all good people who do so.

So many problems need to be addressed if we are to build a functioning society, a functioning country.

First off, it would be great if Democrats, when given the opportunity, would actually solve problems instead of enacting half-measures that kick the can down the road, and keep people arguing and fighting.

I remember when Clinton was elected, I was so excited to see what the Universal Health Care system we got would look like. Instead, Clinton focused on passing NAFTA during his first year, and health care got kicked down the road until the GOP took over Congress and the issue died. Decades later, Democrats finally passed Obamacare. But still there is no universal health care in America, Americans are dying because they can't afford to buy insulin, and half of Americans are choking on medical debt.

Universal Health Care is the issue that got me involved in politics. I expect I will spend my entire life arguing about and working for UHC, and die without seeing it realized. That's a lot of arguing about an issue that all civilized countries solved decades ago.

The other issue I will mention is multi-culturalism. I feel this is a misstep, an ideology that is unworkable. America needs to be one people who have a shared culture and values, so we can like each other enough that we want our neighbors to have a good job and health care. Fire up the melting pot!

Good luck to you, Jeff Golden. Again, I admire anyone who tries to get some good results out of a system that is so frustrating. Good on you for giving it your best effort.

Doug Snider said...

Whether it’s for monetary gain or for a more nefarious purpose, social media has done a good job of driving the political poles further apart and infusing the extremes with utter nonsense. Seeking common ground with someone whose political thinking includes Qanon insanity seems perilous and purposeless. I believe, however, that there is hope for constructive discourse between those on both sides who don’t inhabit the outer fringes.

I left Medford six years ago and now live in a purple enclave on a very blue Indian reservation in a red county in the very blue state of Washington. It’s a wonderful community where I interact on a daily basis with people who proudly displayed their Trump signs and flags during the last election. We have many things in common to remind us that politics isn’t everything. Shocked as I was to see friends and acquaintances supporting a man I see as inherently evil, I can still work with them for the betterment of our small community. This has been a great place to ride out the pandemic because, through all of the isolation, we have been able to meet while out walking or biking and exchange pleasantries. Occasionally those exchanges include political discussions. They are always civil and sometimes surprising. To me, our little community park on the Swinomish Channel is the better than any social media.

Low Dudgeon said...

More errant self-editing, sorry. The second “former” should read “latter”.

Mr. Steely—

Fair enough. Who would be an example, as you see it, of “fascist” and/or “authoritarian” Americans? As opposed to, if you consider it a material difference, Americans with what you would characterize as having fascistic or authoritarian tendencies? By extension to Canada, do you view Justin Trudeau as authoritarian too?

Michael Steely said...

"Fascist" and/or "authoritarian" Americans would be the neo-Nazis, white supremacists and militias such as the Proud Boys. People like those Marjorie Taylor Greene addressed at the pro-Putin America First Political Action Committee conference. In other words, the Trumplican base.

Ralph Bowman said...

A little preachy, but I am sure Jeff is taking a beating trying to stand for his ideas. I think there are many problems that we are experiencing which are free from the political snd religious bile being thrown up as one liners that have no substance. Use the letters CRT and bile begins but all can agree that Native Americans were slaughtered and their land stolen. Everybody is now so proud they have a little Indian blood in them without questioning the rape that brought about that DNA discovery or the cute little history moment of a family member”I got Apache blood in me, you know that? “ I am not good at biting my tongue but many are realizing that screaming and yelling in the customers face does not get the sale. Cooperation and softening a diatribe can keep the flow of your business expanding. I rejected a bid from a mover because he kept screaming about hate for the mask. “Go to hell”
I kept saying in my mind. He lost my sale.

Low Dudgeon said...

Mr. Seely—

Define and apply “fascist” and “authoritarian”, and you manage the Republicans now at CPAC. Okey-dokey.

Q.E.D.


Mr. Bowman—

Human history ain’t beanbag. Just about every dog’s had its day across globe and time. Africa’s massive slave trade led by West African warlords began centuries before the West joined in as a trading partner. Every loincloth ‘n spear aboriginal culture was doomed long ago. There’s no more reason to selectively overreact to man’s inhumanity to man than to underreact. The modern white liberal savior’s hand mirror and navel-gazing is just the other side of the same tribal collective-morality coin from the Manifest Destiny.

Ralph Bowman said...

Dear QED
WONDERFUL INSIGHT as long the slaughter is not dismembering you and your family. You will be the dog who had his day with help of the poor bastards conscripted to fulfill your wretched fantasies of power; no problem we all just living in the bean bag game of life.

Michael Steely said...

Low Dudgeon -

Oh, is CPAC white supremacist? Then yes, Q.E.D.

Low Dudgeon said...

Mr. Bowman--

It appears we agree on the foolishness of selective, ahistorical lionizing and demonizing. "Some victims are more equal than others" expresses both pride and false humility.