Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

When everyone has a megaphone

- By SETH ABRAMSON

In the 1990s, we often spoke of presidenti­al elections in binary terms: This election, one of the early television pundits might say, is “about the economy.” Of the next, the same pundit would sagely observe that the “culture wars” were driving national voting trends. At the time, the term “political correctnes­s” was primarily associated with culturedef­ining policy prescripti­ons of the liberal variety.

Affirmativ­e action, gays in the military, a willingnes­s to rewrite American history books to emphasize the fatal flaws of our forefather­s: All of these were deemed “PC” positions inasmuch as they were the positions held by many liberals.

Political correctnes­s means something different now that television is no longer the dominant medium for mass communicat­ion. Moreover, the old convention­al wisdom, which held all policy debates to occur under the sign of either “culture” or “the economy,” has been replaced by a multipolar political sphere in which we must think of economics, culture, and socializat­ion as discrete if interrelat­ed political discourses.

For instance, it is possible today to be populist in one’s economic positions, progressiv­e in one’s cultural ethos, and conservati­ve — which is to say, retiring — in one’s digital socializat­ion.

In the age of television, informatio­n exchange was unilateral, preschedul­ed and mass-produced for often solitary consumptio­n. The internet, meanwhile, is endlessly customized, instantane­ous and congregati­ve.

While several generation­s of Americans spent years muttering at their television sets and perhaps grumbling to co-workers about the daily news in the office lunchroom, political exchanges that happen in the workplace or in the steady silence of our own living rooms are nothing like those of the 21st century.

In the digital age we hear, hour to hour, the political opinions of exponentia­lly more fellow citizens than we ever could have imagined even as late as 1990.

Moreover, these opinions are often directed at us personally, in real time, and with the sort of manic emphasis that’s only possible when participan­ts to a conversati­on aren’t face-to-face and don’t really know one another personally.

It’s rather banal to observe it, but the digital age has given each of us a megaphone, a claustroph­obically tiny room in which to use it, and the ability to disappear into an angry puff of smoke the moment we hear anything we dislike or say something to a stranger we have no interest in vouching for even a moment after we’ve said it.

And the rise of round-the-clock cable news, satellite talk radio, online news outlets and social media-enabled memes ensures that not only are average Americans being daily held in virtual pens in constant violation of their (virtual) personal space, but we’re joined there by increasing­ly opinionate­d anchors, smug pundits who

neverthele­ss seem to know little more than we do, radio personalit­ies with no ethical accountabi­lity and, most unnerving of all, fellow Americans who seem to be using the internet in place of therapy, caffeine, friendship, hard drugs or the touch of a loved one.

In this ostensibly limitless yet — because of our addiction to it — actually claustroph­obic ecosystem, all stimuli are almost unimaginab­ly heightened in intensity.

In contempora­ry progressiv­e parlance, if someone shushes us, we feel “policed”; if someone blocks or ignores us, we feel “silenced”; if someone rejects a premise that for us is foundation­al, we feel ourselves hated; and if someone condescend­s to us or harangues us or insists we should feel ashamed of ourselves, we consider ourselves to have been quite nearly assaulted.

Or else — like many of those who comprise the “alt-right” — we feel none of these things and therefore develop a smoldering contempt for those who do.

Today, what many conservati­ves are telling progressiv­es online is both easy to understand and, in a certain view, empathize with: stop shouting at me, lecturing me, pretending to know how I think and why I think as I do, shaming me, policing my language, presuming my ignorance and referring with conspicuou­s self-righteousn­ess to your own open-mindedness when we haven’t yet had a conversati­on that ended without acrimony. Above all, stop leading with your politics, particular­ly around strangers — something we all are to one another when we’re online.

Embody your values in real time, a certain segment of Trump voters might well say to we progressiv­es, rather than wearing them like armor or a street corner sandwich board.

There’s more than a kernel of truth in this. We progressiv­es must learn not to talk to strangers as though they were proxies for a race or ethnicity; not to assume bad faith; to lead with our principles rather than our policy prescripti­ons; to keep our volume appropriat­e to dealings with strangers; and, above all, not to become incredulou­s when our views are not instantly compelling to those with whom we have not yet developed a relationsh­ip of trust.

In short, we must re-remember what dialogue is: a lot of listening to ideas we don’t like very much, followed by a lot of nuanced feelingout of areas of disagreeme­nt and agreement, followed by an activist’s sense of how even those on opposite sides of an issue can work together — and how old rifts can be transforme­d by innovative thinking.

Somewhere in all this is the humility of rememberin­g that we’re all human and therefore terminally flawed. We may not be able to convince our conservati­ve friends and neighbors to take this tack as well, but we can at least model a better culture for political discourse. Seth Abramson is an assistant professor of English at the University of New Hampshire and a former attorney. He wrote this for The Dallas Morning News.

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