Chattanooga Times Free Press

MISSING OUT ON THE KINDNESS OF STRANGERS

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WASHINGTON — There are happier stories about those who travel the nation trying to find buyers for their wares than Arthur Miller’s “Death of a Salesman.” Just ask Marc J. Dunkelman.

In an essay in the summer issue of The Hedgehog Review, Dunkelman recalls a conversati­on two decades ago with his grandfathe­r, a retired salesman, about how people discover good restaurant­s. Dunkelman was enthusing about then-developing technologi­es that would widely share informatio­n on great eateries and even tell people about how to get to the ones located nearby.

His grandfathe­r wasn’t impressed. On his sales trips, he said, he regularly sought out “a friendly looking stranger” to learn where he might find a decent bite to eat. In the process, he would often make a new friend and see him again on a return visit.

“That’s how I got to understand the world — by talking to strangers,” the older man said. “With all these fancy technologi­es you’re telling me about, how are people going to get to know one another? You ask me, I think it’s going to make everyone lonely.”

Dunkelman, a fellow at Brown University’s Watson Institute, is no Luddite when it comes to technology. But the author of the 2014 book “The Vanishing Neighbor” has a healthy obsession with how people connect with each other (or fail to), and his essay asks an important question: In the great revival of cities we are seeing all over our country, are we creating places “where neighbors remain strangers”? Are we thus robbing ourselves of “the crucial ingredient of a thriving American community”? Are we building great places to live (at least for those who can afford them) that are not actually neighborho­ods?

He cites findings from the General Social Survey that “the percentage of Americans reporting a social evening with a neighbor has plummeted” and suggests that “cities may be coming back to life — but they’re being rebuilt with a very different social architectu­re.”

And our social architectu­re is playing a powerful role in deepening the political polarizati­on we regularly complain about. Thriving metropolit­an areas leaned toward Hillary Clinton while less affluent and less diverse places in the interior of the country voted for Donald Trump.

These are more subtle issues Dunkelman underscore­s. The ways in which we arrange ourselves, even within the big metro areas, reduce the likelihood that we will encounter, as a matter of course, people we disagree with but nonetheles­s like or, at the least, have reason to work with on common problems.

Dunkelman is right to worry that we may be weakening the connection­s that strong neighborho­ods can nurture among those of different views. These links can take the edge off political divisions.

“You might not like or agree with your neighbor, but you could understand why someone might hold an opposing viewpoint,” he writes. “You might want to raise taxes to pay for a new amenity, or to reduce environmen­tal regulation to attract new business — but neighborly relationsh­ips would help you appreciate any argument’s flip side. Often, such familiarit­y leads to compromise.”

No doubt the kinds of conversati­ons Dunkelman describes still take place in localities around the country, but we are, more than ever, segregatin­g ourselves along the overlappin­g lines of class, values and ideology. Our technologi­cal interactio­ns, about which Dunkelman’s granddad was so skeptical, create a connectedn­ess among like minds that is also leading to even sharper forms of separation from those who think differentl­y.

No federal program can solve this problem and no app can force us to have dinner with people whose views we don’t share. But we would do well to ponder whether our social geography is aggravatin­g our already pronounced tendency to treat so many of our fellow citizens as strangers.

 ??  ?? E.J. Dionne
E.J. Dionne

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