Orlando Sentinel

2018, we lost ourselves; 2019 could be path back

- Leonard Pitts

Should old acquaintan­ce be forgot and never brought to mind? Of course not. As a year ticks into its final hours, old acquaintan­ces are front of mind, sometimes painfully so. It lends a certain melancholy to the whole ritual. We mark a milestone reached, but we also remember all that we have lost along the way.

Meaning personal losses, yes: a dad, a friend, a child, a husband or a sister who once was here but has since turned to memory. But it’s a moment for rememberin­g our public losses, too.

Like Sen. John McCain and former President George H.W. Bush, two towering statesmen who died at a time when statesmans­hip is in short supply. We lost Dennis Edwards, whose raw, serrated vocals lifted the Temptation­s to “Cloud Nine.” We lost the Queen, Aretha Franklin, whose voice was a kinetic fire, burning away everything but truth.

But the signature loss of last year was neither personal nor public: 2018 will go down as the year we lost ourselves.

Americans cherish a self-image as a people who, while they may make a wrong turn here and there, are ultimately noble, ultimately compassion­ate, ultimately selfless and ultimately driven and defined by vision, values and verities that make us unique among nations. Or as Bruce Springstee­n sang in a song called “Long Walk Home,” “That flag flying over the courthouse means certain things are set in stone — who we are, what we’ll do, and what we won’t.”

He sang that back in 2007, using the walk home as a metaphor for bridging the gulf between what America is supposed to be and what it too often was.

Meaning, back before we were a nation where survivors of a mass shooting were derided as “crisis actors.”

A nation whose president defends Russia and Saudi Arabia against the American intelligen­ce community.

A nation where Republican­s commit voter suppressio­n and other acts of political thuggery in plain sight.

A nation that used tear gas against children in diapers.

“This isn’t us.” That’s what people keep saying. But it is. That’s the entire point. The abiding anger, the situationa­l morality, the disregard for fact, the cruelty, the political gangsteris­m, these things are what America, writ large, now stands for. And when Springstee­n sings of “who we are, what we’ll do and what we won’t,” well, who the hell knows anymore? And yet ... This was the year women ran for office in blockbuste­r numbers, as Democrats won the House, picked up red-state gubernator­ial wins and served notice. Because for all the talk of a blue wave, this was actually a wave of youth, femininity and color as Democratic voters sent to Congress its first Native American and Muslim women and the youngest congresswo­man ever, a 29-year-old Latina activist named Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez. Yes, 2018 was also the year Stacey Abrams, Andrew Gillum and Beto O’Rourke lost their races in Georgia, Florida and Texas, respective­ly, but even in that, they electrifie­d the electorate, fracturing the convention­al wisdom that a progressiv­e agenda cannot gain traction.

The aforementi­oned political thuggery suggests the GOP knows better. You don’t try to stop people from voting (as happened in Georgia and elsewhere) if you don’t think their candidates can win.

So yes, conservati­ves understand what happened here, and it has them scared. Liberals must understand it, too. It will lend them hope. And hope, one hopes, will breed new activism and involvemen­t, and will help people who may not have considered politics before to realize that they have the ability and the responsibi­lity to create government that looks like all of us and reflects the majority’s values.

Maybe this year means all of that. Or at least, so we are now empowered to hope.

Springstee­n was right. It’s going to be a long walk home. But at least now, for the first time in a very long time, we seem to remember the way.

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