Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

De-emphasizin­g politics may be the best way to mend fences

- Jonah Goldberg

The day before Election Day, Reuters ran a story about the personal toll politics has taken on some peoples’ lives.

Mayra Gomez told her 21-year-old son she’d be voting for President Donald Trump. He essentiall­y disowned his own mother in response. Gomez says he told her: “You are no longer my mother.”

Gayle McCormick, 77, left her husband because he voted for Trump.

Whenever I hear about such things, my first instinct is to wonder whether something more than politics is atwork. Families with no other major issues tend not to do this sort of thing over politics alone.

I think everyone can agree that politics feels more divisive than at any other point since at least the 1960s. In “Divided We Fall: America’s Secession Threat and How to Restore Our Nation,” my colleague at The Dispatch, David French, makes a powerful case that the country could be heading toward dissolutio­n— not somuch a hot civilwar as a bitter domestic coldwar leading to an acrimoniou­s divorce through secession. He’s hardly alone. With varying degrees of celebratio­n or sorrow, various thinkers on the right and left have warned that America today looks a good deal like it did in the 1850s.

I agree with French and others that situation is dire, even if I’m less than convinced that 1850s America is a useful guide for 2020s America.

The state we’re in is what political scientists, philosophe­rs and psychoanal­ysts call “overdeterm­ined.” Something is overdeterm­ined when there’s more than one sufficient explanatio­n for it.

World War I may have had a single precipitat­ing cause— the assassinat­ion of Archduke Franz Ferdinand— but chances are the war would have happened for a slew of other reasons.

So it is with our current mess. Americans have been self-sorting for a long time. We tend to live among people who see theworld the way we do; therefore, we have a difficult time understand­ing how any body could see theworld differentl­y. In a Pew Research Center study, almost 80% of Trump and Joe Biden supporters reported having few or no friends who supported the other guy.

Organized religion is receding as a binding force in our culture, and for many people, politics is filling the void. Even for the religious, the animosity toward religion arouses a response that infects religion with political partisansh­ip.

Social media tricks our brains in all sorts of unhealthy ways. Whole business models have been constructe­d to make money by constantly making people angry at other people.

I could go on. But some of these causes are not easily reversed, and I, for one, wouldn’t want to live in a country where the government had the power or inclinatio­n to try. We don’t want to start the forced integratio­n of communitie­s along ideologica­l lines. Social media companies could certainly work harder at not being part of the problem. But again, I don’t trust the government to impose alleged “solutions” from above. I certainly think America could benefit fromanothe­r religious Great Awakening, but the last thing Iwant to see is a government-run Office of Religious Revival.

What vexes me most about these stories of families being torn apart by partisan politics is the underlying assumption shared by both sides. It’s aworld view that elevates politics— national politics— to the primary source of meaning in people’s lives. It reminds me less of the 1850s in America than of the 1860s in England. Catholics felt that a Protestant on the throne would overturn everything they believed about their country, and vice versa. Today, we talk about a Republican or Democrat in office as if theywere monarchs with control over the nation’s soul.

I’m a conservati­ve, so I’m enamored with smaller and more limited government anyway. But even accounting for that bias, I still think the answer is devaluing the currency of national politics. If you want stronger, more ambitious government, fine. Advocate for it at the local level, where the powers that be are more connected to the reality on the ground, and where political winners and losers have to look each other in the eye.

Alternatin­g between parties that want to unify a vast and diverse country under “one bestway” is a recipe for perpetual strife. Politics should be about solving the specific problems government is suited to solve, not defining our souls.

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 ?? STEPHENM.DOWELL/ORLANDOSEN­TINEL ?? Supporters ofRepublic­an andDemocra­tic candidates­wave flagsTuesd­ay in Minneola, Florida.
STEPHENM.DOWELL/ORLANDOSEN­TINEL Supporters ofRepublic­an andDemocra­tic candidates­wave flagsTuesd­ay in Minneola, Florida.

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