Imperial Valley Press

Incivility hits new depths, many work to combat it

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NEW YORK (AP) — In state capitals, lawmakers attend workshops on how to avoid demonizing their opponents. On a college campus, students re-enact hard-fought debates that led to great compromise­s at the country’s founding. Even a summer camp is aiming to give children the tools to show respect in the face of disagreeme­nt.

Americans alarmed and dishearten­ed by a coarsened culture and incivility in politics — especially following a brutal presidenti­al campaign season that bared new lows in both — are fighting back with a range of initiative­s around the U.S. to restore some semblance of decorum. Tennessee State University. That’s where students have staged classroom roleplays of compromise­s from the 1787 Constituti­onal Convention, assuming the parts of the Founding Fathers to act out the giveand-take required to reach agreement on crucial but difficult decisions, such as how large and small states would share power.

“There’s so many people with a difference of opinion,” said Brendon Holloway, who participat­ed in various Democracy Project initiative­s at Middle Tennessee State, including voter registrati­on drives. “It’s really important to bridge the gap.”

The school is training faculty to incorporat­e civic learning across discipline­s, holding a lecture series on rhetoric, and hosting former members of Congress to talk about respectful dialogue. Evins says it’s all part of addressing not just college and career, but citizenshi­p.

“If we do not address that third C, then we have shamed ourselves,” she said, “we have walked away.”

Even as polls find Americans say a civil tone in candidates is an important factor in how they vote, surveys have also shown people more accepting of personal attacks in politics. A poll by Zogby commission­ed by Allegheny College in October found in the six years since its previous survey, significan­tly more people viewed it as acceptable to interrupt, shout over, belittle, insult, personally attack, or question the patriotism of those with differing opinions. Respondent­s also have grown more accepting of commenting on another’s sexual orientatio­n, race or ethnicity.

Fewer people even believe elected officials should pursue friendship­s with members of other parties: 56 percent in the more recent survey compared with 85 percent in 2010.

“If this incivility continues, we’re going to lose a generation to politics,” said Jim Mullen, president of Allegheny, in Meadville, Pennsylvan­ia. “And that’s a very dangerous thing for our democracy.”

“It’s incumbent on us to be the adults who push back against what we’re getting in the popular culture and the political rhetoric,” said Mary Evins, who directs the American Democracy Project for Civil Learning at Middle

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 ??  ?? Students take part in a role-playing game about the 1676 Bacon’s Rebellion, in a class Feb. 2 in Murfreesbo­ro, Tenn. MARY EVINS VIA AP
Students take part in a role-playing game about the 1676 Bacon’s Rebellion, in a class Feb. 2 in Murfreesbo­ro, Tenn. MARY EVINS VIA AP

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