In May of
last year I posted “Destination of
Choice”. It dealt with the choices
we have about how we live after a tragedy; we can become mired in self-pity and
bitterness or we can make a conscious decision and effort to go anywhere but
there. I think the same is so very true
of us corporately. Today is Election
Day. We have been hearing from both
sides of the political spectrum, and from varying political positions in
between, that this election is of historical importance because it determines
where we go as a nation; it determines the role of government; it most likely
determines the future makeup of our Supreme Court. But you know, I think there are decisions to
be made with respect to the election’s outcome.
And there are decisions to be made that are independent (or
most certainly should be) of the election; decisions that I personally believe
to be of equal import. No, maybe these
decisions are of much greater consequence.
The decision
to be made regarding the election’s outcome is fairly straightforward, at least
from my perspective. We must decide how
to respond if the side for which we have voted wins. We can gloat with an
equivalent of the childhood taunt “Na-nana-naa-nah!”, letting the “losing” side
know there is no intention of being gracious and conciliatory; things will be
our way and only our way. Or we can be winners of
integrity; making it clear that although we have won, we do NOT intend our
winning to mean there can be no compromise or failure to respect the really
good ideas of anyone with opposing ideas.
And, more to the point, we can mean that and actually proceed to work
that way.
Should our
party of preference lose, we have similar choices. We can be outraged, pout, and decide absolutely,
under no circumstance, will we give
an inch; the other side might have won, but they can try to get things done for
the common good without any help from us.
Or, we can indicate
our plan to continue the process by being willing to engage. And then, we can actually do that.
Whether we
are on the “winning” or “losing” side should be irrelevant. The resolution to act in a constructive way
is one to be made not only as a political “side”, but individually in how we
respond to those around us, our friends and family. Being the voice of a peacemaker is not the
responsibility of only those we elect.
In fact, I think the argument could be made that our individual responses
have more effect. Why? Because our individual responses will set our
expectations of how our leaders should react.
And if we insist on a reaction of integrity and cooperation, that should
ultimately be beneficial and constructive for all of us.
Okay, that
all has to do with the election process and outcome. In my first post “Destination of Choice” I maintained that as a family we could
decide how to live after the loss of a child.
We could choose self-pity and/or bitterness. Or we could choose to proceed with caution
and avoid these two negative choices. I
said, “Shortly after Natalia’s death I
said to my sister that I did not want us to get sensitive and assume/see hurt
where it was simply not intended. And
actually, I wanted to overlook it if it did come…I wanted us to be very careful
about choices made as a result of one of life’s horrible journeys I wish we had
never had to take. If nothing else, I
saw that as in our best interest. I continue
to want us to be very careful and deliberate about our destination from
here. We do have a choice.”
Now let me
explain (or try to, anyway) what I said about decisions to be made that are
independent of and of more weight than decisions centered on the election
itself. From my perspective, we have the
same decision as a nation to make as individuals whose life experiences include
a major, life-altering loss; the same decision I spoke about above and in that
first post.
Let’s go
back to 9/11, but only as a starting point.
Because that’s exactly what I think it was. Obviously, that was a frightening and
devastating loss. We saw people holding
hands and jumping out of windows many stories above ground. We saw what we had previously only seen in
model-sized or computer-generated movie scenes, the complete collapse of huge
buildings. We saw real-life scenes of
people running for their very lives, not knowing what was happening. We heard
of airline passengers calling loved ones to say they were loved, to say
goodbye. We heard the stories of airline
travelers, regular people, who did battle with other “passengers” in an effort
to prevent the takeover of the plane and thereby insuring its destruction and
that of those aboard. Until that time,
that kind of in-air suspense and drama had been our entertainment, in movies
like “Air Force One”, for example. I do
not want to leave out or minimize the tragedy experienced by workers in the
Pentagon and their families, but I've made my point, I think.
Unlike many
of our individual life tragedies, we had someone to blame for 9/11. Responsibility was proudly announced by those
who did not mind killing innocent people; people who were just going about
their everyday lives; people who had no power to make the political decisions
against which the anger of those guilty was directed. I know from personal experience that it is
easy to think a tragedy could be made easier (I find it difficult to say it
would be completely accepted.) if there were an understanding of why it had to
happen. Having an explanation and
someone to blame can perhaps be helpful both mentally and emotionally, I
imagine. But very much like
chemotherapy, it can also be very toxic.
Chemotherapy can, in due course, be life-saving. Yet, it killed my friend Ruth; her body could
not take the poison that is chemotherapy.
The “comfort” (if it should be called as such) provided by an
explanation and someone to blame can quickly and so easily morph into something
that can either severely damage our corporate sense of fairness and compassion,
if not completely and utterly kill both.
When (I personally feel that given where we are, it is more accurate to
say “when” and NOT “if”.) that happens, I do not see how it can matter which
political party is in power, or what our determination about what government
should be. We will have become no
different than the enemy against which we rail.
We will hate indiscriminately, just as they do. We will throw blame to those who had little
or no power regarding political decisions that were hurtful to some. It will not bother our collective national
conscience if some pay the price for what they personally and individually did
not do; for what they perhaps did not approve.
We will cease to see people as separate from their group (or what we
determine to be the group to which they belong); all will be judged on the
few. And we will justify that in the
same way those guilty of 9/11 did; focusing on the wrong done to us. We will be judge and jury in exactly the same
way al-Qaeda was when they decided to set the attacks in motion. And once hate has taken over, the political
power and the policies which feed our hate will be those we choose.
However, the
explanation and resulting blame for 9/11 as a poison could be
controlled. It did not, and does not
have to continue becoming an ever more wide-spread and more lethal toxin. We had, and have, two choices: to blame and direct our anger towards ONLY
those truly responsible, those who were involved in the decision to plot and
carry out the attacks; or to blame, be angry towards, and
begin to hate any and all who have anything in common with the guilty,
be it through religion, nationality, world geographical region, just
whatever.
It does seem
to me that we, thus far, have chosen the second of these two possibilities. We have political leaders and religious
leaders who aggressively malign all Muslims and people with the coloring which seems
to indicate they might come from the Middle East. I know individuals who think “they’re coming
here to kill us”. I know people who get
on a plane and look around to see if any such “types” are also on the plane. Allow me to share a recent example.
I attended
the annual Halloween party of a friend a few weeks ago. It was a smaller party than usual, which I
liked; more intimate and conducive to shared conversation. Since my friend had just returned from a mission’s
trip to Mexico, the topic of air travel came up. My friend admitted that she and another
friend always look around to check out their fellow passengers. She and the friend apparently have some name
they use to refer to anyone who “looks like” he could be the terrorist. (That is actually one of many things I love
about this friend; she is open and honest.
You know where she stands on things, even if you do not agree. Another is that she can agree to
disagree.) “Really?”, I asked. “That was 2001. It’s been 11 years.” Not too much to my surprise, but a little,
others spoke up, totally agreeing that they did the same and had the same
concerns about who was on a plane with them. Only a retired airline pilot, whom
I did not know, was able to relate an incident that illustrated how ridiculous
some regulations have become. I understood
that. It was a specific case, something
someone truly HAD experienced; something that had no connection to a particular
group of people.
In fairness,
I understood to a very small degree the fear you can have. Allan and I flew from Buffalo to Atlanta ten
days after 9/11. The plane was
practically empty. I did look around at
the other passengers. I was afraid. But, to the best of my memory, that is the
only time I have done that. I HAVE, on a
couple of occasions, looked around to see if there are any young, strong guys
on the plane. I truly don’t remember
caring what they looked like. To me, the
one with the darker skin could be the guy to save us. The potential threat could be a crazy guy who
is white and hates the US government, passionately. So, I just wanted to see a decent number of young,
strong-looking guys, period.
As I’ve been suggesting here, we do have a choice
about where our collective, national attitude towards and respect for others will go. Its impact on us will be great. If we doubt that, we need only study and
consider the impact on Germany when just one voice gained an audience; one
voice insisting on the hatred for and discrimination against one group of
people. I’ve been hearing an awful lot
about the “exceptionalism” we Americans enjoy.
I’ll show self-discipline and for this post only say that we need to
remember we would NOT be in
any way exceptional when it comes to hatred.
No group would. But, since we
call ourselves a Christian nation, we should be especially aware of how all human
hearts have the same capacity for what we call evil. And we do believe hatred to be evil, do we
not? Something to think about, I
hope.