The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Can we agree to disagree?

- Gracie Bonds Staples

There’s a lot of stuff bothering us. Politics. Social issues. Societal changes. You name it, there’s someone or something to loathe.

It’s safe to say that we’ve always been this way, but for Wes Parham, an organizati­onal analyst with WEEW consulting and author of “Be a Hater: A Polemic on the Hater Mindset,” our refusal to engage with our dissenters dates back at least to 2014 with the “shake it off ” in chief Taylor Swift.

That’s when the former country singer released the breezy, uptempo number of the same name about ignoring the haters.

‘Cause the players gonna play, play, play, play, play

And the haters gonna hate, hate, hate, hate, hate

Baby, I’m just gonna shake, shake, shake, shake, shake

I shake it off, I shake it off The song won Swift nomination­s for record of the year, song of the year and best pop solo performanc­e at the 2015 Grammy Awards.

“If you listen to her music, it’s all about how she is proud to dismiss dissenting views,” Parham said. “She’d rather celebrate her mistakes. The idea is she’s going to do what she wants to do, regardless. I argue that leads to malleable ethics.”

Whether you agree with that assessment or not, it’s hard to dismiss the role social media has played and is playing in driving a wedge between us. It’s the fuel igniting much of the anger out there.

Behind the anonymity of a computer screen, too many of us feel empowered to say anything we want with no inhibition­s.

The Rev. Lyn Pace, chaplain at Oxford College of Emory University, believes more thought needs to be given to how we relate to one another, the effects of too much screen time on all of us, and the impact of too few real relationsh­ips in which we are physically, mentally, emotionall­y and spirituall­y present with one another in the flesh.

“Something is deteriorat­ing here, and I’m afraid it’s truly the underlying factor in what’s happening with school shootings and perhaps the other ways that we destroy each other with violence, prejudice, greed and hate,” Pace said.

Like Parham, he believes the deteriorat­ion of community and the rise of an angry society is a serious matter, and is further exacerbate­d by several factors, including the United States’ original sin of slavery, Jim Crow and segregatio­n, the decline in civic groups and associatio­ns, and the rise of both a diverse citizenry and technology.

“We can’t simply shake this off,” Pace said. “It’s incumbent on each of us to be courageous and intentiona­l with our relationsh­ips. A shift must happen individual­ly, but it will be even more important for already existing communitie­s of faith, civic clubs Wes Parham, an organizati­onal analyst with WEEW consulting and author of “Be a Hater: A Polemic on the Hater Mindset,” says our refusal to engage with our dissenters leads to malleable ethics.

and associatio­ns, schools and more to reach beyond themselves to be in relationsh­ip, especially with those who are different from them.”

If you tend to take your cues from political leaders, forget about it. It is up to each of us, he said, to model the peace that, as the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. once said, cannot be kept by force but only achieved by understand­ing.

Parham said he started to notice how angry we all seemed when “Shake It Off ” started its climb on the

charts.

“It had 2.7 billion views and I recognized there are 7 billion people on the planet,” he remembered recently. “Something in the song resonated with people.”

To be fair, it isn’t just Swift. Rapper Gucci Mane’s “Haterade” and the television series “Supergirl,” in Parham’s opinion, also perpetuate the “hater mindset,” preferring to dismiss any views that are contrary to their own. That way of thinking seems to be taking hold of the country, creating virtual echo chambers that confirm our biases rather than challenge them.

Indeed by its definition alone, he says that all of us have become haters often without even realizing it.

It used to be a “hater” was considered anyone trying to hold another person back or stop them from succeeding. Today, a “hater” is anyone who disagrees or dissents from your opinion.

But simply having an opposing view is not the issue. The issue is when we view people with opposite views as the enemy.

“You are no longer just a Republican, you’re a bigot,” Parham said. “No longer just a Democrat, you’re a fairy. All of a sudden now, you are not like us, and because you’re not like us, I don’t have to treat you with civility and respect.

“We see this all across the country. In politics, in particular, people are so used to dismissing alternativ­e perspectiv­es that they often dismiss the people attached to those perspectiv­es as well.”

Parham pointed to a college student who recently deleted friends who were Golden State Warrior fans.

“If they are Golden State fans, I don’t need them as friends,” the student posted on his Facebook page. “I have a thousand other friends.”

In another instance, he recalled, a colleague announced he wouldn’t be going home for the holidays because his mom voted for a different candidate.

“That’s what dissent is turning into,” Parham said. “It’s breaking relationsh­ips apart. Rather than handle the tensions, we’re deleting people from our lives. That’s a dangerous place to be.”

Are you guilty? Ask yourself these questions:

Do I automatica­lly stop listening to perspectiv­es I don’t like?

Do I expose myself only to views I already agree with?

Have I destroyed a relationsh­ip over a dissenting perspectiv­e?

If you answer yes to these questions, Parham said, it might be time for some introspect­ion.

Find Gracie on Facebook (www.facebook.com/ graciestap­lesajc/) and Twitter (@GStaples_AJC) or email her at gstaples@ajc. com.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? The Rev. Lyn Pace, chaplain at Oxford College of Emory University, believes more thought needs to be given to how we relate to one another. “Something is deteriorat­ing here,” he said.
CONTRIBUTE­D The Rev. Lyn Pace, chaplain at Oxford College of Emory University, believes more thought needs to be given to how we relate to one another. “Something is deteriorat­ing here,” he said.
 ??  ??
 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ??
CONTRIBUTE­D

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States