Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Meeting in the middle

- DEMOCRAT-GAZETTE ONLINE John Brummett John Brummett, whose column appears regularly in the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, is a member of the Arkansas Writers’ Hall of Fame. Email him at jbrummett@arkansason­line.com. Read his @johnbrumme­tt Twitter feed.

Aging rocker and neo-sage Bruce Springstee­n appeared in a two-minute Super Bowl that was cringe-worthy in its naïve self-seriousnes­s, but on target in its moral and political prescripti­on for a country in crisis.

I say that as a 45-year fan of Spring- steen and his music who has always believed he takes himself too seriously.

Maybe the commercial sold a Jeep or two, since Jeep was the vague sponsor. And maybe a few people in the vast expanse between the ever-angry, ever-resentful, ever-demonizing political extremes were moved in an attitudina­l way if not to action.

The commercial invoked the very center of the country, a rural church in Kansas, and said that America needed to put divisions aside to meet there metaphoric­ally for a scaling of the mountain and to travel together on a brighter road ahead.

It was politicall­y naïve truth wrapped in overwritte­n hokey.

But, as I have written recently, our nation’s debilitati­ng political and cultural disease needs a period of healing. And healing would best be served by sane and reasonable people entering not into bipartisan­ship by which they try to split the difference­s of their ideologies, but into nonpartisa­nship.

We need to put ideology aside for a while to rescue and revive a functionin­g nation with a narrow focus on credibilit­y and competence.

It’s a process that must circle wagons against the criminal insurrecti­onists of the right. But it also must pay no mind to the zealots of the hard left who say such things as that Joe Biden betrays them by meeting with moderate Republican­s on maybe trimming around the edges of the size and scope of a covid relief package.

Critics on both extremes professed to be aghast that the commercial was telling them to meet evil in the middle. But the message was that evil is not the middle. It’s that evil can’t survive in the middle.

And, of course, the right pointed out that Springstee­n is an affirmed celebrity liberal who has called Donald Trump a “moron.” But there is no hypocrisy in offering an accurate descriptio­n of the obvious past along with a hopeful prescripti­on for the uncertain future.

Trump is the enemy of the middle. If you don’t see that, then don’t join us in the middle, because you won’t like it and you will not be of any use to healing.

After a half-century of refusing to make any commercial endorsemen­ts, Springstee­n agreed to Jeep’s overture because he saw the message as a “prayer for America.” And that, of course, got him attacked on social media by non-Christians who deplored the commercial’s church imagery and said that any middle-based unity ought to mean that America belonged to them as well.

Freedom of religion means America belongs to them, of course. It also means Springstee­n may freely pray from a Christian church in Kansas if that’s the message and venue he chooses with Jeep’s money.

It is not an affront to a non-Christian that an old guy can’t shake his Roman Catholic roots as he contemplat­es the modern world. That he gets ostracized for it is precisely what he’s praying can be overcome in America.

Let a grown-old altar boy from New Jersey bring his innocently unescaped Roman Catholic perspectiv­e to our American family interventi­on.

And you bring your secular perspectiv­e.

And I’ll bring a self-styled and unescaped if reformed fundamenta­list-value perspectiv­e from backwoods Arkansas.

And let’s see where a well-meaning, non-demonizing discussion might lead us.

If it happens during our discussion that Joe Biden and Susan Collins agree on some bill language that leaves out Bernie Sanders and AOC one way and Rand Paul and Tom Cotton on the other, then great.

Inclusiven­ess can only work among those willing to include and to be included.

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