…The
president talking to the Thanksgiving Turkey before he pardons it
I’m
thankful for those that aren’t so caught up in politics.
Perhaps it is an odd thing for a political obsessive to say, but in this season of gratitude, I give thanks to all those who are not consumed by politics.
They are the people who spend much of their free time with family and friends; who make, invent and repair things; who create music, play sports, write novels, heal the sick, understand higher mathematics and science; who come up with new recipes, produce movies and videos, choreograph dance, think philosophically and theologically. They offer help to fellow humans in trouble not to make some ideological point, but just because it’s the right thing to do.
Those of
us who believe passionately in democracy and the obligation of citizens to join
the fray risk leading ourselves and others astray by acting as though we think
that politics is all that matters, that attending meetings, knocking on doors,
marching in demonstrations, voting and consuming the news, they are part of
humanity’s callings.
I do not want to risk unfaithfulness to my own worldview here: I admire all these activities. I’m a political obsessive because I think politics matters. At a moment when democracy is under challenge, politics demands more of us than it might at other times.
It’s also important to recognize the habit of the privileged to urge everyone to savor private life without acknowledging that, for those left out of material abundance, those facing discrimination, oppression and violence, there is no alternative but to organize, demonstrate, unionize and fight back. The killings at Club Q in Colorado brought home how hatred married to readily available weapons can destroy any semblance of a private life insulated from prejudices and political decisions. We cannot escape politics, and we shouldn’t try to.
But
between a flight from politics and a view that politics is everything lies not
some soggy middle ground but a sturdy basis on which to live our lives with,
and if we’re lucky, some joy and fulfillment.
All of us find solace and just plain fun from activities that are not political, including a night out with friends and family that doesn’t descend immediately into raging conflict over, say, a certain former president. I could fill the rest of my allotted space with expressions of gratitude toward those who have gifted my life with, for friendship, music and indelible moments that lifted me up.
You often hear words of impatience from very political people with those who are less than fully engaged in politics. I suppose I’m pretty demanding myself, since I believe everyone should be required to participate in elections as a matter of civic duty. But beyond that, democracy has to mean that citizens are free to back off from other forms of participation whenever they wish, to skip the endless meetings and even give up on the news for a spell.
We political obsessives should appreciate how those who don’t always make public life their priority can save us from ourselves. They underscore the costs of reducing everything to the controversies that rage on cable television.
A popular chant at demonstrations declares of the assembled: “This is what democracy looks like!” They’re right, of course, and bless them for their engagement. But democracy also involves the less boisterous souls whose right to private, less political lives deserves defense. We political obsessives should express appreciation for them, too.
Copyright
G. Ater 2022
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