Thoughts on Tucson
In the wake of the violence in Tucson, there has been, as is so common in these times, an awful lot of finger-pointing. For a long time, I’ve deplored hatred and bigotry and many of my posts reflect those feelings. I’ve not posted much lately, because I’m busy with other things in my life right now, but I did find this article, by Michael Hasty, very relevant. Michael lives in Hampshire County, West Virginia, a very conservative county. No doubt, it is very much like Floyd County, Virginia.
My father often said, when I accused someone of some heinous act, that I should be careful when I pointed my finger at that person. He said that when you point your finger at someone, there are three fingers pointing back at yourself. Those fingers pointing at ourselves are almost always ignored, by all of us. Perhaps after reading Michael’s essay, a few people might start to think about the larger implications of the incident in Tucson.
It is time that we all stop labeling others and pointing fingers, breathing the fire of hatred and bigotry, and find common cause to solve our problems. As Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. said, “Returning hate for hate multiplies hate, adding deeper darkness to a night already devoid of stars. Darkness cannot drive out darkness: only light can do that. Hate cannot drive out hate: only love can do that. Hate multiplies hate, violence multiplies violence, and toughness multiplies toughness in a descending spiral of destruction. So when Jesus says ‘Love your enemies,’ he is setting forth a profound and ultimately inescapable admonition. … The chain reaction of evil — hate begetting hate, wars producing more wars — must be broken, or we shall be plunged into the dark abyss of annihilation.”
Read this essay and meditate on the words of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. on this day, the day he was born in 1929.
Michael Hasty published this piece on his blog, The Hampshire Independent, on January 9, 2011.
A House Divided
A few months ago, I happened upon an old farmer giving a soliloquy to a couple of other guys in a local store that included the opinion that, “Obama voters and other liberals should all be shot between the eyes” — presumably since it was their fault that that socialist dictator Obama was in the White House.
It was obvious that the guy didn’t know who I was, because I’m pretty widely known in this community as a “liberal,” having been a columnist in the local newspaper for seven years, with my picture in the paper every week. So naturally a statement like that, coming from someone in the community, attracts my attention, and I hung around to listen to the conversation. The other people there knew me.
(Personally, I don’t self-identify as a “liberal,” because how that term is perceived in this political culture, in this particular era, is an inaccurate and too mild picture of my political beliefs. But I do fit into the broader dictionary definition of “liberal” as “generous, tolerant, broadminded, and favoring reform or progress,” so I accept the designation when it’s applied.)
When the guy finished speaking, I asked him, “Who owns the government?” He had been talking about how “the government” was doing this and that, and I wanted him to think about who that actually was. He looked at me like I was stupid. “The people,” he said triumphantly.
“The people?” I scoffed. “What about the corporations?”
You could immediately see the look of confusion cross his face. He tried to recover by talking about government regulations, but I knew I had him, because around here, everybody of every political stripe knows that corporations own the government, because they’ve seen firsthand how that fact has over the years decimated the county agriculture industry, with farmers abandoning the orchards that previously dominated here for cattle farming, the last refuge of the independent small farmer.
After a few more questions, he fled in terror at this ever-so-brief glimpse into the dark infinity of his own cognitive dissonance. I followed him out of the store, announcing that I was a liberal and didn’t like to hear people talking about shooting me between the eyes, even if I didn’t vote for Obama (I voted for Cynthia McKinney), and pointing out the “Impeach Obama” bumper sticker on my tailgate. He just looked at me, still confused, and drove off.
It never occurred to me until later that he could have been going out to get the gun in his truck. That would have been embarrassing, me standing there, talking like a fool. Fortunately, that wasn’t the case.
I couldn’t help but think about that incident Saturday, when I heard the news about the shootings in Arizona. We don’t know at this point if it was just a troubled kid who killed and wounded so many, or a deliberate act of terrorism. Law enforcement is searching for a second suspect at this writing. But in either case, you cannot reasonably deny the influence of a toxic and unstable national political environment.
Parallels between this era and America in the 1850s, the decade before the Civil War, have been talked about for some years now — including very eloquently last night by Keith Olbermann, on his MSNBC show. He was shocked and subdued as he confessed his own part in the increased incivility of media rhetoric. Violence has no place in a democracy, he so rightly said, closing his comment with the reminder that, whatever our politics, we are all Americans. But of course, so were the Americans of early 1861 — exactly 150 years ago, the year the Civil War began.
At the heart of this tragedy is our nature as a republic. We are a nation born in violent separation from our mother state; a nation established on ancestral lands stolen by force from the native population — lands developed and harvested by African slaves, brutally wrenched from their home continent — a nation whose global power rests on a proven and continuing willingness to do violence to those we perceive as enemies.
We have a military budget that almost exceeds that of the rest of the world combined; we are the world’s number one arms merchant; one of our biggest national exports is violent entertainment and grotesquely bloody video games, the favorite pastime of our scarred youth; for sheer firepower, we have the mightiest military empire the world has ever seen, over millennia of human carnage. Violence R US.
A “Christian” nation, indeed. You know . . . Prince of Peace.
As a nation, we have undergone a half century of culture war — a war itself inaugurated by the 20th century’s version of abolition, the civil rights movement — a war that expanded to broaden rights for others, but a war that has always included a racial undercurrent. We have been fortunate that, unlike the 19th-century culture war, ours has not yet degenerated, despite isolated episodes of violence, into actual civil war. Not yet.
But we have been partly protected from that eventuality by fortuitous circumstances that, in this era of declining empire, national indebtedness, climate change and global economic convulsions, have largely disappeared. We are a nation ripe for chaos, to be quickly followed by military dictatorship, at this very unstable moment. Our only hope for averting that is ourselves, united. We, the people who started this thing.
As an outspoken “liberal” living in a very conservative community here in the politically volatile and well-armed state of West Virginia, I have to hope that the horrific tragedy of people being gunned down in the very act of democracy serves as a wakeup call to all Americans to remember who we are, and rededicate ourselves to the highest ideals that animated our founding — including the freedom to disagree, without putting ourselves in mortal danger because we are seen as the incarnation of evil.
In order to do that, we need to rebuild our national civic culture — from the ground up. In order to do that, in this sensitive and overstressed political culture, we are going to have to come to terms with the violence at the heart of every American soul.
Perhaps we’ll find the answer — as Abe Lincoln hoped, during the last great national division — in the better angels of our nature.
Of course they haven’t Beth. Jesus is powerful ammunition and some people simply use his name and the Bible to get what they want. This has been going on since the beginning of time and continues whenever someone needs some ammo–right down to the lady in Roanoke who is fighting with her neighbors because she started nailing stuffed animals on a dead tree and they are rotting there and have become a huge eyesore. Whether or not you think she has the right to do this, whether you think this is “art,” what I found ridiculous was that she claimed Jesus told her to do it. Com’on! This is one reason why religion shouldn’t have anything to do with politics or the way we run the country because some people “use” it.
As far as the Tucson shootings, if people keep talking so mean, and I’m sorry but it’s the right more than the left, what can you expect? There are sick people out there who take it to heart. We are not allowed to yell “Fire!” in a theater when there is no fire. Words have power.
This makes me think of when the election was happening and I was afraid to put an Obama sign on my lawn because I live in an area populated by passionate right-wingers. I SENSED I could be asking for trouble and maybe my property would be vandalized. Perhaps I got this idea that some people could get violent when I saw people shouting things like “Kill the nigger!” at the McCain/Palin rally that was in Roanoke. Most of those people at that rally would never do something to hurt another person. But I’m sure there were a couple of nuts in the audience who took Palin’s smirk in response to those shouts as approval. The people who do the bad things are the guilty ones and the people who encourage it, directly or not, have a hand in it as well. And the Jesus I know is not happy about any of it.
Thank you, Jeff—very thought provoking. I particularly like the quote from Dr. King. I really wonder sometimes if some of these folks who call themselves “Christians” have actually read, REALLY read, the words of Jesus.
Very well said Jeff…and so, so true.