Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

2020 is the Year of the Apology

- Mitch Albom Tuesdays With Mitch

It’s only taken a month, but I think I know what 2020 will be the year of: Apologies. They’re coming fast and furious. Celebritie­s. Politician­s. Teachers. Corporatio­ns. Countries. Even churches — which, ironically, is where you used to go to apologize.

I base my prediction on recent trends. Here is just a small list of apologies that we have heard since last summer.

Iran apologized for shooting down a plane. Actress Rose McGowan apologized to Iran.

A Georgia lawmaker apologized for saying Democrats are “in love with terrorists.” A Michigan lawmaker apologized for saying male high school students “could have a lot of fun” with a young female reporter.

Talk show host Wendy Williams apologized for mocking Joaquin Phoenix’s looks. Joaquin Phoenix apologized for outtakes from “Joker” that were shown on a talk show.

An airline in Hong Kong apologized for making a woman take a pregnancy test before she got on an airplane.

Walmart apologized for using deceased actor Paul Walker in a tweet.

A Buffalo-based food truck operator apologized for sending food to a detention center. Then, a week later, it apologized for apologizin­g.

Even Greta Thunberg, the 16-year-old climate change activist, apologized for a comment that sounded like a threat against her detractors.

And she was Time magazine’s Person of The Year.

Speaking of time, it apparently has no bearing on when you have to apologize.

Pop star Camilla Cabello apologized for old posts. Singer Shawn Mendes apologized for old tweets.

A Philadelph­ia acting police commission­er apologized for an offensive T-shirt she wore — in the 1990s. New Zealand’s prime minister apologized for the government’s handling of a plane crash — 40 years ago!

And actress Rosanna Arquette actually tweeted she was sorry for being “born white.”

Can’t go back much further than that.

On Instagram, Justin Timberlake apologized to his wife, Jessica Biel. Also on Instagram, Antonio Brown apologized to New England Patriots owner Robert Kraft, and later to fans in general.

Instagram itself apologized to pole dancers — yes, pole dancers — for hiding some of their posts.

Twitter apologized for misusing people’s personal informatio­n.

And Facebook has apologized so many times it should have its own page labeled, “Yep, sorry again.”

Joe Biden apologized for comments about segregatio­nists. Elizabeth Warren apologized to Native Americans.

An Alabama governor apologized for once wearing blackface. An Alabama mayor apologized for a Facebook post suggesting LGBTQ people should be killed.

An Alabama superinten­dent apologized for his high school baseball players yelling slurs at a gay couple. And an Alabama police department apologized for a post about mass shootings.

Lots of apologies coming out of Alabama.

Schools also do a great amount of apologizin­g. A North Carolina school system apologized after a teacher gave an assignment on slavery that asked the question, “How many slaves would be needed to equal at least four white people?”

A Kentucky school superinten­dent apologized for an employee who said a rival school’s kids “can’t even count to 100.”

A Babson College staffer apologized for a Facebook post suggesting Iran list 52 U.S. cultural sites it could bomb.

The University of Kansas apologized for having Snoop Dogg perform at an athletic rally.

And the Zac Brown Band apologized for using a person with dwarfism in an onstage skit. That one just stood out. What is behind all this apologizin­g? You would think, by the sheer numbers, that the world had developed a highly sensitive conscience.

I fear it’s something else. Apologizin­g has become the new defense, a pre-emptive block against a tidal wave of criticism, or a cureall wall if you are too late to stop it.

Apologies — public ones — have become the pound of flesh that activists demand, and the springboar­d used by celebritie­s and politician­s — who need others to like them — to get back into their followers’ good graces.

Social media has given us a million new ways to embarrass ourselves, and the raft of apologies over posts, tweets and photos is proof. But it’s also a quick way to write a few remorseful words without anyone being able to see or hear the contrition you really have.

And then there’s the actual wording of these apologies, which often follows a template of “I’m sorry if anyone was offended,” which is not far from “it’s too bad you’re so easily offended,” which is not far from “it’s your own stupid fault you’re so easily offended.”

Apologies should be sincere, or they aren’t really apologies. Ben Franklin once said “never ruin an apology with an excuse.” Today, the apology often IS the excuse. I apologized, therefore my actions clearly aren’t me anymore.

Maybe we’re saying sorry too much. Maybe we’re saying it for the wrong things. But with 2020 being an election year, you can bet we’ll be saying it a lot more. There will be more apologies, and more calls for apologies, and more apologies for not apologizin­g sooner.

And I realize, in looking it over, that this column has gone on much longer than intended.

And I apologize.

Mitch Albom is syndicated by Tribune Media Services.

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