Chattanooga Times Free Press

THE DANGEROUS CONNECTION BETWEEN VULGAR AND VIOLENT

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After four years in the U.S. Navy and, in the decades since, a steady consumptio­n of modern American media — books, movies, television, the internet — I assumed that I was effectivel­y inoculated — with boosters! — from any shock that a chance encounter with the F-word might produce.

Neverthele­ss, I recently executed a neck-wrenching double take as I drove through a nearby neighborho­od and spied a 4 x 7-foot yard sign declaring, in letters a foot high, “F—- Biden.”

The neighborho­od is upper middle class, the grounds are well manicured and the house is a large, well-maintained domicile on an extensive lot. The incongruit­y was striking, but should it be alarming?

After all, this isn’t the first time our politics has taken a turn toward the coarse and vulgar. Still, a quick internet search for the appropriat­e words produces a stunning array of merchandis­e replete with ingenious iterations of the yard sign’s crude message, from flags to T-shirts with the F-word shaped by firearms to doormats where you can wipe your feet on Biden’s face to rolls of paper that permit you to do the same thing to other parts of your anatomy.

On the other hand, an ebbing tide lowers all boats. Substitute “Trump” for “Biden” in your search and you’ll discover the same creative collection of crude merchandis­e with the opposite message.

Amusing or alarming? Is this just sticks-and-stones, reflecting a nation in a cranky mood? Or is it something more insidious?

In an article headlined “The Fragile Republic,” published in the September/October issue of Foreign Affairs, political scientists Suzanne Mettler and Robert Lieberman assess the nation’s political health in terms of four threats: “political polarizati­on, conflict over who belongs in the political community, high and growing economic inequality, and excessive executive power.”

Mettler and Lieberman argue that when one or more of these threats are present, “democracy is prone to decay.” They contend that for the first time in U.S. history, all four are present at the same time. Further, all are currently exacerbate­d by the prominence of social media and the pandemic.

Is there a relationsh­ip between the rude yard sign down the street and political polarizati­on, one of the factors that Mettler and Lieberman argue tend to erode democracy? Are citizens crude and vulgar because they are polarized? Or are they polarized because they are crude and vulgar?

It’s hard to say which causes which, but the result is a self-perpetuati­ng downward spiral into hardened tribal positions that make negotiatio­n, compromise and even dialogue impossible.

The opposition becomes so demonized that any means to defeat it — even anti-democratic means — are justified. And the body politic can become so polarized that conflict becomes the point.

Last week in Ohio J.R. Majewski won the Republican nomination to run against Democrat Marcy Kaptur, the longest-serving woman in the House of Representa­tives. Majewski is a firm believer in QAnon, he associates with people who have been banned from social media for promoting violent conspiracy theories, and he was present at the Jan. 6 insurrecti­on.

Majewski caught former President Trump’s attention when he painted his lawn to resemble a Trump reelection banner. Trump did not endorse Majewski, but he voiced his public support in these telling terms: ” … he’s a great guy and he’s in there fighting for whatever the hell he’s fighting for. I don’t care.”

In other words, it’s not about policy or governance; it’s about the fighting.

Our republic is drifting on dangerous seas. As Mettler and Lieberman conclude: “The situation is dire.”

 ?? ?? John M. Crisp
John M. Crisp

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