Waterloo Region Record

An eye for an eye and a fork for a fork – it never ends well

- Lori Borgman Tribune News Service

I asked our four-year-old granddaugh­ter about her family’s recent visit with friends. “It was good,” she said. “Did you enjoy the little girl who was your age?”

“Yes,” she said. “But she forked me.” “She what?” “We were eating bweakfast and she forked me. Wight here in my shoulda. She stabbed me with her fork.”

“That’s too bad. Did you fork her back?” I asked.

She grinned at the thought and said, “No, Gwamma. I don’t pay evil for evil.”

Stunning, isn’t it? A four-yearold understand­s the value of restraint more than a lot of adults.

An eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth, a fork for a fork — it never ends well.

While chatting with a friend I hadn’t seen in months, our conversati­on turned to a matter on which we hold different views. We had a good exchange, and were ready to go our separate ways when my friend paused and said, “So, are we mad at each other now?”

She said it partly in jest, but not entirely. No, we were not mad at each other, but many in our nation are mad. Actually, they are beyond mad — they are enraged, furious and seething. And these days many of us seem utterly incapable of holding anything back. It’s as though we are compelled by some irresistib­le force to say, post, tweet, and scream every rotten thing we think.

Is this really who we are? Is this really who we want to be?

Dozens of columns will probably be published this week documentin­g the slippery slope we’re on, with calls to scale back the rhetoric. But how? Well, we can start by turning down the heat one person at a time and one insult at a time.

For starters, we could all give ourselves permission not to say everything we think. It’s OK to bite your tongue sometimes.

And to keep your fists at your side. It’s called self-control.

Second, we can turn down the volume. Screaming has never been an effective means of persuasion.

Third, we can get real. As long as America has existed there have been disagreeme­nts. We will always have disagreeme­nts. Aside from the Civil War, national disagreeme­nts have largely been resolved without resorting to violence or lethal hatred. Our disagreeme­nts may be intense and passionate, but they can still be civil. If you have a disagreeme­nt, go after the idea, the policy or the legislatio­n, not the person. Learn how to structure valid arguments and stop the name calling.

If we do not detox ourselves soon, we will cease to be a nation ruled by laws and become a nation ripe for anarchy.

The day after the world was horrified by an unhinged man attempting to assassinat­e Republican congressme­n on a ball field in Alexandria, Va., there were three organized prayer meetings on the Hill and numerous spontaneou­s ones.

Each of us can pray, too. We can pray for God’s mercy on the U.S., for temperance, wisdom, prudence, and the ability to love our neighbours as ourselves. Finally, we can pray that we do not succumb to being a people who relish repaying evil with evil.

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