ACCEPTANCE,
REJECTION, AND COOPERATION IN THE BODY POLITIC
Christopher Ebbe,
Ph.D. 10-13
ABSTRACT: The fundamental choice
of how to relate to persons within one’s society who are different from one is
explored, along with its consequences in the political life of the country.
KEY WORDS: difference, politics,
acceptance, cooperation, rejection
The recent “shut down” of the U. S. Federal government brings into
stark relief the question of how to relate to others in one’s society who think
and act differently from oneself. The
small minority of Congresspersons who had enough power to temporarily prevent
authorization by Congress of money to run the government caused harm to some
citizens and to the economy, but they felt justified (even exalted) in doing so
because by halting government operations they expressed their beliefs about how
they want government to operate. Some of
them and their supporters are also expressing built up anger over having their
views and beliefs generally ignored and demeaned by the opposition. Their focus on “stopping” the national
healthcare effort has resulted partly from feeling that their views were not
incorporated into the healthcare law (though mostly from a dislike of central
control of citizens’ lives). Both sides
in the shut-down operated politically purely through the exercise of power, and
neither showed interest in compromise.
These liberal-conservative, right-left, and “red state-blue state”
differences in this country have a great deal to do with far-reaching life
differences, with more liberal persons viewing life more from a large group,
urban perspective, in which individuals have less power and must receive help
from the group from time to time through less personal and more institutional
actions, in which there is a great deal of diversity in cultural backgrounds,
and in which there are so many different belief systems that no one of them can
be viewed as dominant. More conservative
persons view life from a more small group, rural perspective, in which operating
groups are smaller, individuals are more important and have more power, helping
is motivated by personal knowledge or contact, there is little diversity
(compared to urban settings), and Christian assumptions about life are presumed
to be dominant. (There are other
meaningful ways to define liberals and conservatives, but the arguments
presented here apply to all definitional distinctions between the two, since
the focus here is not on liberals vs. conservatives but on the general issue of
how to deal with people who see the world differently.)
The reasons for such seemingly insoluble conflicts that will be
explored in this paper are (1) both sides using power to get their way rather
than engaging in cooperation and compromise, (2) lack of understanding by each
side of the other, (3) lack of interest on the part of both sides in
understanding each other, (4) the basic human fear of and suspiciousness of
those who are different, and (5) a view by both sides of the other side being
“the enemy,” unreasonable, and not worth being taken seriously. The only way out of this battleground view of
things is to give value to the constituents and views of the other side, to get
to know and understand them (through relationships and empathy), to accept the
other side as an ongoing and legitimate part of the country just the way they
are, to treat the other side with respect, and to enter policy discussions with
the assumption of working together to produce results in every case possible,
by recognizing and incorporating the needs and wants of both sides.
One key reason for the intense political conflict that we see in the U.
S. is that neither side is able or willing to take the other’s worldview
seriously and to give it legitimacy when legislative and government planning
are done. Urban liberals think that
rural conservatives are ill educated, prejudiced, and behind the times, and
rural conservatives think that urban liberals relate to people only abstractly,
have no values, and have lost touch with what is meaningful in life. Neither side is correct in these
assumptions. Urban liberals are intent
on solving the problems of mass society, using, in part, tax dollars of rural
conservatives, and rural conservatives value their lives and worldview and want
to preserve their values (and to benefit from the tax dollars of urban
dwellers). Both sides think to
themselves that these problems could be solved “if only the other side would
see things my way.” Each side views the
other as wanting to unilaterally control the future of the country, and both
are correct in this! To do more
effective planning and have a more collegial atmosphere in the country in
general as well as in Congress, the challenge is for persons on both sides to
be able to think about life and about problems from the point of view of both
sides.
Each side tends to lose sight of its dependence on the other side. Urban groups could not survive without the
food and raw materials produced by the smaller, more dispersed groups, and the
smaller, more dispersed, rural groups are benefiting greatly from the roads,
subsidized electricity, and other modern services provided by the money of the
larger groups (which the smaller groups could not pay by themselves). The current “red states,” which are more rural,
receive far more services and benefits from the Federal government than they
could pay for themselves. Both sides
should keep this dependence in mind when deciding on their version of what is
best for the country!
This worldview conflict occurs frequently for human beings, primarily because
they tend to associate their views and values with their safety and security,
thinking that their views and values (how to get things done successfully, what
things to revere and worship, the customs of the group, etc.) are causally
responsible for their current security and welfare, when in fact there are
many, many other ways to think about the world that would produce the same or
better security and welfare. To consider
living by any different set of views and values is frightening (to liberals as
well as conservatives) because of our sanctification of our own views and
values, and to admit that one’s views and values are not the best and most
truthful would undercut one’s security, so groups close ranks when their views
and values are questioned or threatened and trumpet their wonderfulness even
more loudly. The vast majority of people
never have an opportunity, through education or travel, to see and evaluate
what it would be like to live in and believe in a different worldview system.
In our society we are more intent on raising children to be independent
and assertive than to be empathic and cooperative, and this primes us, when we
grow up, to be combative rather than cooperative when we encounter barriers put
up by people we do not individually know and accept. We believe in forcefulness more than we
believe in understanding. Most of us
believe that those who work to understand others instead of fighting or
competing are odd or sissies! There has
been an increase in “programs” in schools recently to show children how to
accept other children and be cooperative, but schools are afraid to show
children the fact that any set of views and values (including those of their
parents) is to some degree useful (perhaps more or less so than other sets of
views and values) but not sacred.
Unfortunately this part of our collective psyche is only strengthened
by (1) the fact that individuals in our society are becoming less and less able
to control their lives and destinies (and more and more anxious about it),
while more and more of our lives are being determined by decisions made elsewhere
and above our heads to which we have little individual input, and (2) the fact
that it is much harder now than it used to be to get another job when one is
laid off due to economic downturns, because jobs are becoming increasingly
specialized and complex. Due to these
factors, our sense of security is reduced and is more easily threatened, and
this leads to a tendency to fight before investigating. It adds to our economic insecurity that so
many of us have chosen to consume so much that we live on the economic edge,
with no savings or cushion, and are more vulnerable to any economic shift.
Most people have great difficulty understanding the complexities of
themselves, others, and society and in reaction want simply to assert their own
viewpoints (the ones “that they were raised with”) and to try to force people
with other viewpoints to conform to theirs, so that they can continue to
believe that their views and values are powerful, can triumph over other
viewpoints, and have in fact produced their current security and welfare.
Liberal readers may believe that they are not subject to this fear or
to the desire for others to change instead of themselves, because they can
consider things objectively and intellectually, but they are just as unwilling
to change as conservatives and just as prone to believe that their views and
values are “right” as conservatives. It
is as true of liberal views and values as of conservative views and values that
there are many, many other ways to conceive things and to organize society that
could produce just as high levels of security and psychological and material
welfare as their own. Look at the world’s
cultures and at what each of those cultures produces in terms of material
welfare, happiness, well-functioning families, lack of anxiety, peacefulness,
etc., and you will conclude that your own views and values, while useful, are
not sacred and perhaps not even outstanding.
The resulting worldview conflicts range from the struggles of each
newly married couple to settle on a joint way of life all the way to religiously
motivated wars. Salafi jihadists
sincerely believe that not having women veiled will lead to societal disaster,
while many Westerners believe just as sincerely that gender equality is humane
and desired by God. Neither is
correct. Having women veiled (and all of
the other restrictions on women that go along with that) may reduce incidents
of rape and adultery and keep women from leaving marriages, but it also
restricts them to only half a life (as life is conceived in modern times) and
in the view of most men and women keeps them in an inferior role. Gender equality does provide more options for
women, but it also adds considerable anxiety and stress to most women’s lives,
as well as downgrading women’s importance and value in the home and in the
family. The maintenance of these
conflicts reflects the fact that only rarely does anyone see the other side
“from the inside,” through knowing individuals in the other camp or living in
the other camp. It is easy, then, to
view the other camp as “the others” and not quite as human as our camp, and to
be simply frustrated that the other camp is so intransigent that it won’t be
more like our camp.
Human groups (and individuals) almost always prefer to work to get the
other side to change, rather than having to adjust themselves, and this
preference not to have to adjust sometimes results in wars and other
inhumanities. The decision of the North
to impose its views of slavery on the South and to not permit secession
resulted in a war with the largest casualty list this country has had in any
war, and regardless of whether slavery was moral or not, and regardless of the
“good” that resulted from freeing the slaves, to force Northern views on the
South was a selfish act of people who wanted others to see and do things their
way and were willing to use deadly force to accomplish this. (Slavery would almost certainly have
disappeared over time without the Civil War, due to economic changes, changes
in morality due to cultural and economic evolution, and the gradual worldwide
abolition of slavery.) To take another
example, the passage of the Affordable Health Care Act was a power play by one
side imposing on everyone much that was disliked by many, when a more balanced
approach would have been to take several large but incremental steps, instead
of making the total change all at once.
Both sides prefer to fight rather than to work together toward workable
compromises. Both sides think that they
“should” be able to have their own way, even when they only get 50 to 55
percent of the vote in elections. How do
you feel when the other side says that it has a “mandate” from ”the American
people” to pursue their own worldviews when your side got almost 50 percent of
the vote? Consider how the other side
feels when your side makes these claims.
Most of us feel ignored and demeaned by such arrogance, but we should
remember that the other side feels that same way, too, when we do it. Given how you feel or would feel, why do we
continue to distort reality by claiming these “mandates”?
Surely it does not make sense to believe that the side that wins an election
by a slim margin should be entitled to shape the country to their vision of it
until the next election, ignoring the views of the other side. That attitude guarantees resentment,
conflict, and redoubled efforts by the other side to win the next election and
get that supposed privilege for themselves for a while. It would be more sensible, wouldn’t it, if
the election were 52 percent to 48 percent, to presume that 52 percent of
decisions “should” go the way of the winning group and 48 percent of decisions
“should” go the way of the losing group?
It’s peculiar that we do not think of this reframing of the issue.
THE PSYCHOLOGY OF DIFFERENCE
From a psychological point of view, we know that human beings are
troubled by differences between themselves and others.
This applies to all levels of relationships, from dyads to nations. Since other human beings affect us or
potentially affect us practically all the time, we are always watchful about
what they might do toward us, and we depend for our sense of personal security
on being able to understand and anticipate the actions of others. This means that we are most comfortable with
those who are just like us. The more
another person is different from us, the more frightened and insecure we
become, or conversely, the more effort we must make to preserve our sense of
security and to maintain comfortable relations with the other person (by making
special efforts to understand the person and predict his/her behavior).
Culture is the set of understandings, beliefs, customs, and rules that
all members of a cultural group use to organize their behavior and goal
attainment efforts. Culture is often
viewed as sacrosanct, even though it is only made up by human beings, probably
because people transfer the awe they felt for their parents as virtual gods, to
their society and its forms and rules.
Regardless of the stimulus, if one person reacts with surprise or
amazement to the stimulus and another person with fear, they will be unable to
predict each other's next move. In a
similar vein, those who believe in following the instructions of authority
figures (parents, police, teachers, etc.) will distrust and fear those who
comfortably decide things for themselves, sometimes contrary to what authority
has said.
Imagine how you would feel if, when you walked into a room, the people
in the room were very different from you—perhaps speaking a language that you
do not understand, having furniture with which you are not familiar, and having
behavioral rules that you do not understand.
(You think that a slight wave is a friendly gesture, but perhaps because
of their culture they see it as an insult.)
You would experience considerable anxiety about being in this situation,
until you learned more about them and could once again predict what will happen
and how your behavior might be seen by them.
The important conclusion we reach from these considerations of
prediction and uncertainty is that differences are always threatening. We may value diversity, but despite these beliefs
about diversity and despite our tolerance for others who are different, we
are still threatened by difference.
The emotions most often felt in response to differences are fear,
confusion, distrust, frustration, consternation, suspicion, shock, disbelief,
and insult (or disrespect). Actually,
the annoyance, irritation, or anger that we feel are reactions to the fear and
insecurity that we feel first but then suppress and cover up. Cognitively our reaction is caution, because
we realize that we are not confident in predicting the behavior of the other
person. If behavior proceeds further
than an initial, cautious backing off, it may involve aggression, with verbal
or even physical attacks, which are seen most often when the misunderstood
behavior of the other person is viewed as insulting, disrespectful or as
demeaning to one's honor.
This would be an opportune time to pause and to reflect on your own
stance with regard to others who are different.
Is it conceivable to you that some elements of others’ worldviews
(beliefs, attitudes, customs) could be more useful or more conducive to getting
along with others than your own worldview?
How much do you know about the worldviews of others (including the
worldview of your political opponents)?
Try to define the worldview of your political opponents, in four or five
sentences. Do you believe that it is
better to fight your political opponents than to get to know them and to work
with them for the best possible outcomes as seen by both sides? Why or why not? Can you imagine both sides coming to a
compromise on abortion or the budget—a compromise that included elements that
each side disliked (as well as elements that each side liked) but which both
sides accepted because it was the best that could be done? How would you feel about such compromises?
EMPATHY HELPS
Employing our empathy skills with others is an ideal tool for
understanding others, understanding our differences, and exposing possible
means of bridging differences. Having
accurate empathy for those who are different is more difficult than empathy for
those who are like us, and this calls for us to gain more knowledge about those
who are different, so that we can both “feel our way into” the experience of
those others (through what we share with them that is universally human, such
as the experiences of sex, having and raising children, trying to get along
with others, feeling embarrassed, ashamed, guilty, or frustrated, etc.) and
adjust our projections according to what we know about our differences from
them. (If you would like to read more
about how empathy works and how to develop greater empathy, see the blog “Empathy”
on http://livewiselydeeply.blogspot.com
or on www.livewiselydeeply.com.
MOTIVATION
Given the arguments in this essay, an obvious motive for changing our
political attitudes is simply to be better able to get things done through our
already established governmental structure and process, instead of continually
dealing with stalemate and potential stalemate due to having two political
parties, relatively equal in strength, that have come to represent two quite
different attitudes toward life and government.
Even our revulsion at our current “government by stalemate and crisis”
situation will not be enough to cause us to change our attitudes, however, if
we do not have a key belief—that we can get more of what we want by cooperating
and compromising than we can get by fighting with each other. All of us want to maximize our benefits in
life (rewards and benefits in general, not benefits from government programs!),
so the only way we will change is to believe that the new attitude or behavior
will get us more than the available alternatives.
Please take a few minutes to consider whether you believe this—that you
can get more by cooperating than by fighting for what you want. It may mean a major change in your coping
methods, but cooperating does not mean never fighting again. It simply means choosing your fights more
selectively, and even in cooperating, there is a place for passion and
forcefulness. Each of us must consider
the alternatives of fighting versus cooperation. If you believe that you will get more by
fighting and “overcoming” the opposition, then you will continue to fight, and
our political situation may remain the same.
The current situation does occasionally deliver results on significant
issues, though this is only when one party can outvote the other. Our current situation, however, leaves
bitterness and makes enemies of people whether there is stalemate or whether
one party manages to force through something it wants. This psychological consequence cannot be ignored,
even if some might say that “it’s just politics, and it isn’t personal,”
because it is taken somewhat personally by both politicians and by voters.
There will be some who will say that they can’t give up fighting
because that would be giving up hope of ever getting their way and having
things just as they want them. However,
in reality, unless we change our governmental procedures, there is even now no
hope of either side getting its way fully.
Perhaps, though, that is as it should be, since respecting all citizens
and looking out for the welfare of all citizens should be the aim of government
and of all of us as well. Also, it would
be a disservice to democracy if one side got its way fully, for that would mean
total disrespect for a significant number of citizens who would prefer things
to be different. The only alternative,
then, is to accept that we should go ahead and do all we can to benefit
both sides to the maximum_at the same time.
This means working together to figure out how to do this, and this requires
people on both sides to take seriously the wants and needs of the other side.
WHAT CAN BE DONE?
One key to a change in this political competition based on who is
“right” is to be realistic enough to acknowledge that no group and no
individual has the complete truth. No
group’s truth is really true. In order
to function in life, we must decide what we believe to be true, but very few of
our positions are absolutely true, all the time, everywhere in the world, and
yet we act as if everyone else would be better off if they just believed
and acted like us. There’s nothing wrong
with being satisfied with or even proud of one’s serious efforts to determine
what is best in life, but we should also recognize that we can’t be really
sure of much of anything, and this applies especially when we try to tell
others how they should live. Your
political opponents have what they feel are good reasons for their
beliefs. It would behoove you to find
out what they are and to take them seriously.
The challenge for both political sides is to accept that the other
exists and has a perfect right to exist.
Both sides are composed of real human beings, probably identical
genetically, with the same basic hopes and goals—to make a living, have a
reasonably satisfying life, raise children to be good adults, and contribute as
they can to the welfare of the group as a whole. It would be a relief for both sides to stop
thinking that the other side “should” change.
We need a different worldview—one that assumes that the most constructive
course of action is not to fight all the time but to find the solution, policy,
or position that does the most for both sides.
People do not choose their worldviews.
Their worldviews are their conclusions (largely unconscious) from their
total life experience (including what everyone around them is saying about
these fundamental issues), and their worldviews are not going to change except
through additional life experience (which includes seriously observing and
listening to others). Since no group has
“the truth,” all human beings must try as best they can to figure out how to
live, which both sides are already doing to the best of their abilities, so
there is no reason to demean the other side (except to use demeaning as a
tactic to subdue those others).
When you wonder how your neighbor could believe and act the way he
does, it is easy to proclaim him to be crazy or ignorant, but it is much harder
(but would be much more useful) to find out why he believes and acts as he
does. Have you ever done this? Have you looked at all of the other cultures
around the world and carefully concluded that for good reasons that you can
cite, your group’s way of believing and acting produces the best life possible? Have you found out or tried to find out what
motivates jihadi terrorists or what they believe that makes sense of their
actions? Their motives and reasons come
from the same large pool of human motives and reasons that yours come from.
We often use strength in numbers to justify our beliefs, especially
when we can’t or don’t want to investigate something ourselves in enough depth
to come to a conclusion, but bear in mind that just because a large group of
people believe one way, that does not mean that that belief is true or right. It only indicates that it is probably useful. And, if we were to judge solely by numbers,
the Chinese would outvote everyone else!
Don’t be fooled by your politicians.
The main goal of most of them is simply to get elected, and many of them
seem to make a living on brief and inflammatory public statements that are
designed to frighten you into believing that your values and views are in
danger if you don’t “fight back” by giving money to their campaigns, so that
they can “fight for you” in Washington.
This approach, when used by both sides, leads naturally to a fighting
stance by both sides, and the politicians play out these fights for your
viewing pleasure and to maintain the belief within you that you must fight (and
contribute) or your way of life may disappear.
This leads predictably to governmental gridlock (as long as neither
party has a clear majority) and to resentment and more conflicts if one party
does have a majority and uses it to ram its views down the throat of the other.
We need a more constructive assumption
about political interactions. A better
alternative would be to acknowledge that everyone deserves to be heard in our
democracy and that everyone’s views and needs count, and to assume that the
best way to get the most done is to find positions that benefit both sides as
greatly as possible.
Newly elected Presidents often say that now that they have been
elected, they will be the President for everyone, not just for those who voted
for them (in a bid, sometimes falsely, to get Congresspersons on the other side
to “work with them”), but you rarely hear such statements from Congresspersons,
who presumably believe that the “winner take all” principle of vote counting
gives them the right to represent only those who voted for them. How do you feel when your Representative or
Senator does not represent you but instead represents only those who agree with
him?
So, what is the adaptive thing to do when two groups are part of the
same larger group (the nation), are quite dependent on each other, and have different
worldviews? The best thing to do is
to get to know each other, to understand each other, to recognize the humanity
and the skills and knowledge of each other, and to therefore resolve to work
together amicably to make choices that benefit both sides as much as possible. To create public policy that is as acceptable
to all sides as possible (because all have contributed to it and been
recognized in it) should be a satisfying accomplishment, something to be proud
of, rather than a grudging “giving in” done solely in order to move the
political process.
An example might be melding concerns of “hawks” and “doves” by
approving construction of a new fighter plane but including in the same
legislation new specifications for when aggressive actions against other
countries would be appropriate and when they would not.
To take a more difficult example, at any point in time abortion can
only be defined as “murder” or “not murder,” so one side will always be the
“loser” on this aspect of the debate.
Since only one side will get what it wants in this respect at any point
in time, the other side can be given something, too (like a restriction of some
sort on when abortion can be done, or if the murder decision went the other
way, some circumstantial exceptions where abortion will be permitted given
certain specified authorization procedures).
A similar approach on the issue of appointment of Supreme Court
justices would benefit our society as well.
Instead of trying to figure out a candidate’s future inclinations to
rule in one direction or another (so that they can “have their way”), both
sides would do best to approve only candidates who will be the most fair and
objective (i.e., those who are most able to separate their personal
predilections from the questions of law before them).
If operating in this new fashion is difficult for those currently in
elected positions, there are many individuals in several professions (such as
psychology, psychiatry, counseling, and pastoral care) who could serve as
guides to operating in this new fashion.
Each chamber of Congress could have not only a parliamentarian but also
an “interactional consultant” to make all aware of why stalemate is occurring
and aware of alternative behaviors.
These consultants could be available to all Congressional members individually
also, to help them plan for creating and enabling legislation.
WHAT CAN INDIVIDUAL VOTERS AND CONGRESSPERSONS DO?
First of all, it is your decision whether to choose the current
situation or to seek change. The barriers
to change are all within ourselves.
(1) It is essential to acknowledge that there are large groups of
people in this country that have markedly different worldviews (beliefs and
values).
(2) For change to occur you must “accept” that these differences exist
and that the other group’s views and values are just as important to them as
yours are to you. You do not have to
agree with the other group’s views and values, only to acknowledge and accept
that the differences are meaningful and must be taken seriously if we are to
take proper care of the country and its citizens.
(3) It would help if you tried to understand the other group’s views
and values. Finding out how supporters
of the other side actually live (geography, jobs, religious participation, size
of communities, etc.) is essential. Understanding
the history, ethnic issues, population composition, and religious composition
of the other group would help you to make more sense of their views and values,
and you can get this information readily from historical and popular political
writing. As noted above, empathy helps
greatly in efforts to understand others, but, of course, you can have empathy
for others much more easily if you accept them as having legitimate needs and wants
and if you believe that cooperation and compromise will get you more of what
you want than using power tactics alone.
(4) You must treat the other group as important and recognize them as
fellow countrymen whose needs and wants are meaningful, and you must attend to
their needs and wants as being almost as important to you as your own. You are “your brother’s keeper” in an
important sense, since we are all in this country together.
(5) In your relations with persons of the other group, you must treat
them with respect and approach them with a positive attitude. Obviously, demeaning others and approaching
them assuming the worst will produce mostly negative results. Treating the
others side as the enemy and demonizing them may produce more campaign contributions
from the extremists and the frightened in your party, but it will also destroy
all chance of working together with positive expectations.
(6) Candid discussions of worldview differences (views and values)
between supporters on both sides, and between politicians on both sides, could
be very helpful, and this would ideally take place before working to resolve
legislative differences, since it will make it easier to understand why the
other side is saying what it says and wanting what it wants. In these discussions, it is vitally helpful
for everyone to give understandable, plausible reasons (background, life
experience, and data if possible) for their views and values. Only when we know what information another
person is using to form her worldview (as well as knowing what our own reasons
and supporting facts are for our views and values) can we compare these reasons
and data and have the maximum chance of making our own views and values more
consistent with reality and ever more useful.
(7) It will be important to reassess frequently whether you really
believe that you can get more in the long run by cooperating and compromising
than you can be fighting and doing what you can to take advantage of others. Don’t forget what has been occurring lately
in government as a result of most people taking a fighting approach, as this
will help you to be willing to give cooperation a chance!
(8) In every discussion of issues and plans, you must attend to how the
other side can get something from a joint action. Even if you have the votes to get something
you want without giving anything to the other side, if you do that, you will
kill future cooperation. More will be
accomplished if each side looks out for the welfare of the supporters of the
other side, because it is only with a positive attitude and expectations that we
can achieve maximum cooperation. If we
acknowledge that others are entitled to their views and values, then it follows
that both sides (all sides) should be benefited to the maximum possible in
every governmental decision.
(9) You can require more truthfulness of your elected officials. Many public statements by many politicians
seem to be aimed at stirring up support among constituents rather than
reflecting what the total constituency wants or needs. The many references to what “the American
people” want surely refer to vastly different portions of the American people,
and Congressperson should make this clear, rather than pretending that what
they say represents everyone. In
addition, it has apparently been found that for most politicians, the less they
say about actual policy stands, the more likely they are to be elected (because
more people will be turned off by policy stands than will be turned on by them). We as voters can challenge our officials to
be truthful and to tell the whole truth about themselves and what they will do
in office, and then we can reward their doing this by voting instead of staying
home. (If a candidate won’t reveal what
she would do, you probably wouldn’t want her doing it.)
Television advertising (and the money it requires) is probably the
biggest enemy of an informed electorate, since many voters are swayed most
easily by ads with appealing pictures and phrases plus the U. S. flag. It would be a big change, but publically
financed campaigns would help, and fair rules could be established to prevent
campaign ads that have absolutely nothing to do with the fitness for office of
the candidate.
BARRIERS TO CHANGE
The barrier that you have the most control over is your own attitude toward
your fellow citizens who have different views than yours. If enough of us change toward understanding each
other and giving everyone’s needs some legitimacy, things will change.
The desire of most Congresspersons to be re-elected is a huge barrier
to better government, both in terms of campaign contributions and appealing to
voters. If Congresspersons know only
what they hear from those who take the time to communicate with them or come to
the community meetings that they hold while “back home”, then they have a
decidedly skewed sample of the American people, since those who write to their
Congresspersons or attend these meetings surely contain more “extremists” and
single-issue voters than their actual constituency. Many polls show that “the American people”
want even-handed and reasonable government, rather than the combative split
that we currently endure.
Campaign contributions are another barrier to change. There is nothing inherently wrong with voters
contributing money for political work, but it would appear that since campaigns
have become races to see who can get the most money (and therefore the most TV
advertising), your money is only buying advertising, most of which is purposely
deceptive and deceitful, if not outright lies, so your money is not helping you
to elect the person who will do the best job (since neither your candidate nor
the other candidate are telling you what kind of job he or she would do). Politicians can get more money out of people
with extreme views and single-issue voters than they can out of the vast party
membership, so they naturally appeal to these voters. This makes them seem more extreme themselves,
and then they have to perform as promised to all these contributors
(businesses, ordinary folks, single-issue voters) so as to get those
contribution for the next election. They
therefore have little maneuvering room when important issues require creative
solutions.
Political parties are the other major barrier to working together
better. It is certainly natural for
like-minded Congresspersons to establish relationships with each other and to
work together, but the big problem is that the two major parties require
adherence in voting (vote as we tell you on everything) in return for helping
with less important bills that the Congressperson might want passed just for
the sake of his or her own district. If
Congresspersons vote independently from the party, then the party refuses to
help with those bills that will benefit his or her own constituents. This distorts total votes greatly and makes
the Congressperson dependent on the party.
In addition, gathering Congresspersons together into two major parties
means that there are only two positions on every issue, and since these
positions have to be some amalgam of the views of all party members, these
views become unwieldy and have little chance of being accepted by the other
side (which is doing the same thing itself).
Having only two possible views also restricts creativity in solving the
country’s problems.
It will be difficult for many Congresspersons to change their attitudes
on this matter of compromise, since they have been demeaned and demonized by
the other side for years, and feelings have been badly hurt. Be clear, though, that making government more
responsive and more efficient is within our grasp. It only takes a change of attitude
(cooperating/compromising as our modus operandi, rather than fighting for our
own way).
essays\worldviewcompromise