Dearest Madame:
Your words on mistrust
are digging deeper at the roots. What is
behind the mistrust one might ask? It is
not just the lack of a tangible mega-enemy (Nazi Germany, Soviet Russia) that
has fractured us and bitterly polarized us. It is our disconnection with each
other and with our society. We retreat
into, and hide behind, our so called instruments of connection (television,
internet, cellphones, social media). We
do not FEEL the human connection. We are
reaping the excessive focus on our “independent” American nature, our
hyper-individuality.
It is a fine thing, a
very fine thing, to have grit and determination and solitary work ethic. It can work wonders in both personal and
societal benefit, as well as self-pride.
But it can also mutate all too easily into a dismissive, judgmental—even
condemning—anger and disgust with those who do not seem to perform the same.
Those doing the condemning
leave aside the incredible importance that luck and fortunate background and
circumstances play in one’s outcome, even when those factors are not readily
apparent. People are also spun up by the
manipulators with their own malicious or selfish agendas. Yes, there are some of the lower class who
abuse the social safety net system and tax code, and it is infuriating when
that happens. But it isn’t the majority,
and certainly not the majority of the poor.
What ails them (and with them, us) are systemic things.
Can the poor be blamed
if their economic foundation is removed, and virtually all of their ready
options, when they even exist, involve lower wages? Can the poor be condemned for “stupidity”
when the system not only discourages critical thinking, not only encourages
despair and passive acceptance, but even more so encourages diversion into
entertainment of all kinds? Can the poor
be blamed for, in what little time remains after working 2-3 far below livable
wage jobs, having their thoughts and drive often drowned in a cloud of fatigue? Can they be blamed for not bearing
sufficiently all the crushing weight of all their burdens as the nuclear family
or sole individual bears them all without the social support network—for nearly
everyone in that network are all similarly burdened? Can the poor be blamed for not having clarity
of thought if they are forced to live with few healthful options, but only a
poisoned environment and degraded and low-quality food that all leads to mental
and physical and emotional disabilities, toxicity, and genetic damage?
Those who listen
strictly to the manipulators want a quick and meaningless sound bite so they
can congratulate themselves, like the biblical Pharisee, at how superior they
are to the poor and sinful. That false
sense of superiority—instead of the calm, reflective, and nuanced truth—is just
as sad and reprehensible as it was 2000 years ago.
1 comment:
Well said....
Post a Comment