Baltimore Sun Sunday

You’re guilty of ‘lies and disinforma­tion,’ not I!

- — Susan Sachs Fleishman, Baltimore

The sad thing about the state of our nation is that both sides — the staunch liberals as well as the die-hard conservati­ves — would agree with the headline of Dan Rodricks

Nov. 9 commentary, “This democracy won’t survive ignorance, lies and disinforma­tion.” Both sides believe, at this moment, that each election, most legislatio­n, the disseminat­ion of each fact (or what we choose to accept as the truth), is a battle for the very soul of our country.

The Dems want a nation, a world, that moves ever forward, that allocates money and resources to medicine, technology, climate control, social services and more, often demanding sacrifice, not only on a commercial/economic level but from their families as well. Republican­s are equally passionate about a country that is totally safe for their loved ones and their communitie­s, where business thrives and is the engine of progress. Many remember with great longing a simpler era when they had reliable, long-term employment and moved steadily upward in society. The bad guys were severely punished, and the economy wasn’t compromise­d by expenditur­es that apparently have little or nothing to do with them, like programs for immigrants or climate change. While I may not agree, I recognize the depth of their commitment.

Both sides are equally invested in and emotional about their world view to the point that they each think that ignorance, lies and disinforma­tion sits at the other side of the table. Except that no one is sitting at the table anymore.

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