Albuquerque Journal

Each of us can help make 2018 a better year

Respect for others’ choices, opinions is key to turning page on a bleak 2017

- www.DianeDimon­d.com; email to Diane@DianeDimon­d.com. Diane Dimond

Terror attacks on American soil, mass murders in church, widespread serial sexual assaults, unwarrante­d police shootings, continued gang activity in major cities, nationwide political schisms — news headlines during 2017 were both frightenin­g and dishearten­ing. So, will 2018 be any better?

The truth? It depends on us. All of us.

First, to restore respect among citizens politician­s need to draw on their better instincts, ignore pressure from their party leadership and stop with all the political pot shots. They do no good and only tear at the fabric of government. Politician­s at every level — local, state and federal — need to concentrat­e on the job and pledge to take actions for the good of the country, not their political party.

Sheriffs, police chiefs and all law enforcemen­t leaders should demand more of and for their officers. Insist on better training in anger management, mediation and conflict-dispute resolution because teaching an officer ways to respect all citizens and keep the peace in lieu of reaching for their weapon is a win-win for everyone involved. Standing by a good officer is to be admired; protecting a bad officer is not.

Judges, lawyers and employees of the criminal justice system need to remember that compassion really does have a place in their work, especially when dealing with guardiansh­ip of the elderly or issues involving children. Uncaring or unfair treatment leads to growing citizen mistrust of the system. As does uneven applicatio­n of the law.

Prison wardens must maintain discipline, for sure. But the dehumanizi­ng conditions in some facilities are shameful. Guards who rape, employees who threaten visitors and deliberate­ly inadequate meals or medical attention for inmates is disgracefu­l. Ice cold cells in winter, oven-hot cells in summer are akin to torture. Serving hard time is difficult enough, but making every day a struggle to survive only serves to make inmates more anti-social upon their release. That’s a nowin for everyone.

Lawful gun owners must make sure to safely store and protect all their firearms to make sure the criminal element — or, God forbid, children — can’t get at them.

The families of a gang member need to try to convince their loved one there is a better path in life, urge them to help sweep out the neighborho­od’s criminal element and turn guns over to the nearest police precinct. While this may sound impossible, it is not. Who better to talk sense into a bad kid than a concerned parent or loving relative?

Mental health experts must band together and protest until they are blue in the face to get the necessary funding for more treatment centers and psychiatri­c beds. Mass shooters and homegrown terrorists who turn their wrath on innocents just to see how many people they can kill rarely act on impulse. They live and work among us and display their unbalanced discontent in all sorts of ways. When we fail to help them, society pays a morbid price. Think the outdoor concert attack in Las Vegas, the massacre at the First Baptist church in Texas or the Sandy Hook Elementary School in Connecticu­t.

Men and women across this country need to reassess their sexual attitudes and behavior toward each other. Everyone needs to keep their hands and suggestive thoughts to themselves until they are sure there is genuine interest from the other person. If men who grab, squeeze and demean women haven’t already gotten the message, they better get it fast. And women should realize the current dialogue now imbues them with the power and responsibi­lity to stop sexual harassment and assaults dead in their tracks. Standing up for one’s self doesn’t mean running to a lawyer. It means forcefully saying, “Back off — now!”

Special interest groups with a duty to speak up for their constituen­ts must realize the whole world doesn’t revolve around their particular needs. They are only one square on America’s quilt of needs.

Organizati­ons demanding automatic diversity, racial harmony and acceptance of alternativ­e lifestyles need to realize change happens incrementa­lly, not overnight. And change forced down the throats of others is, really, no change at all.

Those on the right, left and on the fringes have to stop vilifying others’ points of view be they political, intellectu­al, spiritual or otherwise. It may seem foreign to some — say, those on college campuses — but this country was founded on the basis of tolerance and the right to freedom of thought and speech. Those must remain at the forefront of our national attitude.

It all really boils down to respect for others. Their choices, their opinions, their bodies and the way they live their lives. If they aren’t hurting others or committing a crime, tolerance should be the key.

If we could only move the needle a bit on these issues — if everyone would work to improve their own little corner of the world — we could truly make 2018 a better year.

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