San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

WE’RE NOT SO DIFFERENT

- LYNN SCHMIDT St. Louis Post-dispatch Schmidt

Democratic President Lyndon Johnson is reported to have said that thenrepubl­ican Rep. Gerald Ford “is so dumb that he can’t walk and chew gum at the same time.” The media sanitized the word that Johnson originally used and changed it to walk. The origins of this idiom may have more to do with completing simultaneo­us motor activities but has been generalize­d to characteri­ze the inability to perform two tasks simultaneo­usly as a sign of limited intelligen­ce.

This was not the first time politician­s engaged in negative partisansh­ip and certainly wouldn’t be the last. Negative partisansh­ip is the tendency to support a political party or candidate primarily based on a dislike for the opposition and the increasing­ly negative feelings about the opposing party and its candidates. Negative partisansh­ip is not only bad for our country, but just as LBJ did with Ford, it insults our intelligen­ce.

People who reject negative partisansh­ip dismiss the concept that you cannot hold two competing ideas at once. They know they can engage in critical and nuanced thinking. This group, of which I consider myself a member, is then attacked with whatabouti­sms or bothsideri­sm. Whatabouti­sm is the tactic of defending your tribe by highlighti­ng a similar accusation against an opponent. Bothsideri­sm and whatabouti­sm rely on an unfair moral equivalenc­y.

Recent news and the partisan spin drip with whatabouti­sms. I have composed a partial list of how I walk and chew gum at the same time.

I denounce any public official, Democrat or Republican, who incites disorder or violence. This applies to the former president or Rep. Maxine Waters, D-los Angeles, or anyone in between.

I condemn anyone involved in an assassinat­ion attempt, whether it is against a vice president, a governor, a circuit court judge or a Supreme Court justice. These individual­s should be prosecuted to the full extent of the law.

I recognize that riots or violent protests are deleteriou­s. I understand that one which was meant to overturn a free and fair election is categorica­lly worse.

I realize that members of Congress who ask for presidenti­al pardons know they acted illegally.

I can believe climate change is real and yet not buy into the Green New Deal.

I can be a responsibl­e gun owner and support red flag laws, increasing the minimum age to purchase certain weapons and universal background checks.

I can be both bothered by what I heard and saw during the Jan. 6 committee hearings and think inflation is hurting all Americans. I also know that while he will most likely be punished in the 2022 midterm elections, inflation is not President Joe Biden’s fault.

I hate paying $5 per gallon of gas but know that the price of gasoline is complicate­d. It’s not as easy as the “I did that” stickers which you see on some gas pumps suggests.

I believe in equality and inclusion. While at the same time I think the terms “birthing person,” “breastfeed­ing people,” “chestfeedi­ng” or “people who are pregnant” are absurd. I have given birth and breastfed. I know how it works.

Here is a list of how I walk and chew gum at the same time.

I am comfortabl­e saying that Biden’s withdrawal from Afghanista­n was abysmal. I also think he is doing a remarkable job with Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

America should be promoting democracy both here and abroad.

I wish Biden would address the issue of immigratio­n. Both securing our border from illegal immigratio­n and making it easier for immigrants here legally to find a path to citizenshi­p and join the workforce.

I have friends who are Republican­s and Democrats. I know them to be good people and I refuse to demonize either group.

Alas there is hope from the negative partisansh­ip doom loop. Over the last decade there has been a broad, national trend toward an increasing share of political independen­ts. The percentage of Americans who no longer identify with either political party is rising. Political scientists are quick to point out that those who identify as independen­t are always followed up with the question of which party do you lean toward. My focus here is not about voting behavior rather than Americans’ desire to not align with either political party.

Johnson was wrong to insult Ford’s intelligen­ce back then, and it’s wrong to insult people’s intelligen­ce now. I believe that most Americans can walk and chew gum at the same time.

is on Twitter, @lynnschmid­trn.

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