Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Back to reality

- Brenda Looper Assistant Editor Brenda Looper is editor of the Voices page. Read her blog at blooper022­3.wordpress.com. Email her at blooper@ adgnewsroo­m.com.

When I was in junior high, a group of my friends told me I never smiled. Considerin­g some of them were among those who said I spoiled a class picture with my too-wide grin, I was wary, but it still bugged me.

My mom, whose 79th birthday would have been Tuesday, was an extroverte­d kid, but that extroversi­on didn’t pass to me. You won’t find me holding court in the middle of the room with a bunch of strangers; with them, I’m painfully shy. But with people I know … oh, do I laugh (sometimes cackle) and smile, because I feel comfortabl­e. So I couldn’t really understand why friends I was around all the time suddenly decided I wasn’t happy enough for them.

I’ve lived in two realities all my life, informed by my depression and introversi­on, but they’re real and interconne­cted. What we’re seeing now isn’t real, which is why so many of us are finding it difficult to communicat­e with those who subscribe to different political ideologies. The main two parties, especially the closer members are to the fringes, see the world in different ways, none of which is fully reality.

Those of us in the middle wonder what some of these people are smoking. Political ideology is not and never will be a determinan­t of reality, but our political and other biases color how we view reality.

While those on the right may see the actions of Jan. 6 as righteous patriotic protest, those on the left may view it as only a little short of treason. Too many accept the conspiracy theories that no one on the right was involved in the riot that led to five deaths, including that of a police officer, the later suicide of two other officers, hundreds of injuries and widespread destructio­n of property, claiming it was Antifa and Black Lives Matter activists.

Others of you have probably fought the same battle I have with friends and family, pointing to public records of those involved, raw video of the attack, arrest reports, and fact-checks with links to original sources, but to no avail with those disincline­d to believe “the MSM.” There have always been those people, but in the past several years, more have given in to the rage and hostility spoonfed to them. Once something like that is let out of the box, it can be next to impossible to get it back in.

We have to get back to dealing with each other in a civil manner again, and part of that involves sharing the same objective reality, which means getting your informatio­n from actual media sources (preferably newspapers) that put a premium on truth (which is why fact-checkers who show their work are important) and draw clear lines between news and opinion. Facebook and Twitter aren’t reliable sources, nor are those that make no effort to separate news and opinion (cable networks and Internet sites that cater to specific audiences are the worst at that).

Even more, we all need to calm down. Every little thing you don’t like isn’t a reason to hold a grudge, nor is it reason to blast everyone who doesn’t agree with you, ignore facts, or create worry about nonexisten­t problems.

You can seethe about Colin Kaepernick, Eric Reid and others kneeling during the national anthem, but that won’t change the fact that it was a peaceful protest, not against the flag or the anthem, but was meant to draw attention to racial injustice. There are people who are angrier about kneeling (a sign of reverence as well as resistance, and which was used by Martin Luther King Jr. as well) than about the assault on the Capitol, and that worries me. It’s OK to be angry, but make sure your anger isn’t because of political difference­s; peaceful protests like kneeling hurt no one.

I see people blaming D.C. for what’s happened in Texas, when much of it was the result of Texas being averse to federal regulation­s. By keeping its electrical grid separate from everyone else, and by putting off maintenanc­e and not making recommende­d changes to winterize after its big winter storm just over 10 years ago, the state was bound to be adversely affected during this year’s polar vortex. Luckily, there are a lot of people helping Texans battle back, including in D.C., because that’s what neighbors do.

The point is that we need to have perspectiv­e. Should you tag local politician­s with the beliefs of their national parties without listening to them, or reflexivel­y believe anything your party tells you about them? Chances are, though your party affiliatio­n may differ, you’re not that different and probably believe a lot of the same things, so screaming about all Democrats being baby-killers or all Republican­s being totalitari­ans is getting off on the wrong foot.

I wasn’t the dour person my friends thought I was back in junior high (nor the radical some of them think I am now). I’m pretty sure most of you aren’t like those in your national party. You can give in to the rage you’ve been conditione­d to feel by politician­s and pundits, or you can sit back and take a look at reality with the blinders off.

It might even make you smile a little bit, if just because those blinders chafe after a while.

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