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Real Answers™
rw57
Copyright: ©2007 Rusty Wright
600 words

CIVIL DISCOURSE?

By: Rusty Wright

Ever get tired of TV talking heads yelling at each other?  Are you exhausted or disgusted with debates and discussions that become food fights?  Lanny Davis, President Bill Clinton’s Special Counsel and scandal spokesperson, has written an important book with sound advice for putting the “civil” back into “civil discourse.”  He confesses his own past participation in the “Gotcha!” culture.

Politics, religion, sex, or sports can ignite passion that can spill into incivility – on radio and TV, in workplaces, universities, neighborhoods, and families.  Wouldn’t it be nicer – and more productive – to disagree without being disagreeable?   

Davis, who served in the Clinton White House, is a prominent Washington attorney and now-ubiquitous television figure.  Some folks consider Bill and Hillary Clinton to be Mr. and Mrs. Antichrist.  If you do, may I ask you to please segment your emotions about the Clintons momentarily to consider their former coworker’s passionate appeal for civility in public dialogue?

A liberal Democrat, Davis authored Scandal: How “Gotcha” Politics is Destroying America.  He says, “The politics of healthy debate have been replaced by the politics of personal destruction, and the media, politicians, lawyers, and the Internet revolution are all complicit,” as are the American people who reward the politicians and consume the media.

With admirable transparency, he admits concerning parts of his past, “I am ashamed to say all this today—but I was just as much caught up in the gotcha culture as partisans on the Republican right.”  He regrets having jumped into “food fight” TV on occasion and admits to some past blindness to “politically expedient hypocrisy.”

Davis often seeks to build bridges.  During the 1992 Democratic National Convention, Pennsylvania Governor Robert Casey “had been barred from delivering an anti-abortion, ‘pro-life’ speech to the convention.”  Davis, who is pro-choice, asked some of his fellow liberal delegates to join him in a resolution to allow Casey to speak, in the name of freedom of expression and tolerance of dissent.  Alas, he was shouted down.

In 2000, his longtime friend Senator Joseph Lieberman – Democratic vice presidential candidate and an orthodox Jew – garnered liberal criticism for “bringing up God too much.”  Reflecting on a famous Abraham Lincoln speech invoking divine assistance and encouraging prayer, Lanny wondered, “Would my liberal friends have regarded Abraham Lincoln as ‘bringing up God too much?’”  He decries intolerance and “contempt or disrespect for the deeply religious and those who believe in the power of prayer.”

At the 2006 National Prayer Breakfast, rock star Bono – advocating bipartisan cooperation to fight poverty – cited Jesus’ statement, “Do to others as you would have them do to you.”  “You cannot believe in Bono’s words,” comments Davis, “without being tolerant of those whose religious faith leads them to political views vastly different from that of a pro-choice Democrat.”

May his tribe increase.  Consider three suggestions for cultivating civility:

1.  Learn about views different from your own.  Read what others believe and ascertain why they feel and think as they do.  Ask yourself how you might feel in their situation.

 

2.  Discover Common Ground.  Starting where you agree can help overcome many emotional barriers. 

 

3.  Befriend people with differing views.   Friendly conversation or shared meals can help open hearts.  Conservatives, take a liberal to lunch, and vice versa.

Paul, an early follower of Jesus, had good advice on how to deal with those who differ.  It applies in many contexts.  He wrote:

”Be wise in the way you act toward outsiders; make the most of every opportunity. Let your conversation be always full of grace, seasoned with salt, so that you may know how to answer everyone.”

 

Rusty Wright is an author and lecturer with Probe.org who has spoken on six continents.  He holds Bachelor of Science (psychology) and Master of Theology degrees from Duke and Oxford universities, respectively.

"Real Answers™" furnished courtesy of The Amy Foundation Internet Syndicate. To contact the author or The Amy Foundation, write or E-mail to: P. O. Box 16091, Lansing, MI 48901-6091; amyfoundtn@aol.com

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