Washington County Enterprise-Leader

Timeless Truths For Trying Times

- Jim Hightower

What’s wrong with people? Has the savagery, selfishnes­s, and raw, animal hatred within the human species finally come out of the darkness to devour our society?

We’ve seen fanatics in MAGA caps rabidly cheering a tyrannical, lying, insane president. We’ve seen gangs of “Proud Boys” strutting around in militia costumes beating protesters whose politics they dislike.

Seemingly every day we hear from wackadoodl­e extremists who advocate violence by promoting the group hallucinat­ion that Nancy Pelosi is leading a fiendish Democratic cabal of child sex trafficker­s and cannibals.

And we saw all of these people sack our national Capitol building in a vicious attempt to overturn a democratic election.

But is that really who we are?

Given the media and political focus on all things awful about people, you would think so. But consider a couple of little discussed truths about humanity — two maxims might help all of us get a grip, step back from hopelessne­ss, and push ahead in our political work with a fresh perspectiv­e on what is possible.

Warning: These truths are so contrary to our presentday convention­al thinking — and so at odds with our recent sojourn through the dark jungle of Trumplandi­a — that when some people are first exposed, their brains whiplash.

So, brace yourself. Here goes:

Truth No. 1: Most people are fundamenta­lly fair minded, kind and generous.

Truth No. 2: The basic human instinct is not dog-eat-dog selfishnes­s, but social cooperatio­n and sharing.

You might holler in disbelief: How can such happy “truths” jibe with the litany of horrors we are experienci­ng?

Well, although there are obvious exceptions to the rule, decades of behavioral studies, recurring surveys, in- depth conversati­ons, cultural histories, real-life experience­s, and every other kind of group observatio­n have by and large produced the same finding: The great majority of people are guided in their daily actions and relations by deep values of fairness and sharing.

It turns out that humankind is, well, overwhelmi­ngly kind.

That’s the deep, promising virtue that we should highlight. In these angry times, we need to make people’s innate desire for an equitable, cooperativ­e society the basis for every one of our economic, political, and social policies.

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