Having friends who don’t share your political views is very inconvenient. It requires you to think in terms of individuals, rather than lump everyone you disagree with into a tidy group that is (pick one:) stupid, greedy, evil, brainwashed or out to get you. It means you have to get your news from multiple sources and that takes so darn much time. It’s much easier to know there are only two types of people in the world: us and them. Then we can use our critical thinking skills for other things, like deciding who deserves our vote on "The X Factor."
Last week I
ran into an old, dear friend. The last time we met was almost 30 years ago when
we were still basically kids. She was the kind of person who made you smile
just to look at her. Bright eyed and curious, she always led with her heart; I
remember that most vividly after all these years. The person I met last week
was no different, except perhaps more settled and confident – the lovely patina
that comes with age. My friend told me that since we last met, she had become
born again and involved with the local Tea Party group.
To a
typical tree-hugging lesbian, this combo rarely suggests "ally," and yet here I
was with my old friend who has only ever been someone I’d consider an ally. And
this week she gave me no reason to think that’s changed. I don’t actually know
what she thinks about things like same-sex marriage, abortion, immigration, or
whatever. I do know that she was genuinely happy to hear that I’m happy. It’s
mutual and I’m glad we found each other again.
So, like I
said, most inconvenient. It would be so much easier to think my friend had
become a fundamentally different person or was under the insidious influence of
some nutty political propaganda. I could maintain a nice us/them view of the
world...and nothing would ever change.
This is the
problem when we get lazy about our politics and opinions. If we stay in our
respective camps of people we agree with, we lose the opportunity to find
common ground. And maybe "common ground" is too common a term. When I think
about my friends, it feels more like common humanity.
As I watch
so many right-wing talking heads on TV railing about the gay agenda, I always
feel like they turn us into cartoon versions of people – two-dimensional
characters intent only on dismantling what’s important to other, "real"
Americans. Yet when I think about LGBT rights, I imagine a million ordinary
people who only want what everybody wants:
family, love, and security. I picture closeted kids in small towns
wondering if they will ever get to truly be who they are. It makes my heart
ache. "Why is this so frickin’ hard to understand?" I keep asking the TV.
Then I fall
into that trap myself, thinking that those talking heads represent all of
"them," the other side that is so firmly against "us." Where does my friend
fall into that narrative? Is she one of the few exceptions? Those exceptions I
keep meeting? Is it really possible that each one of my conservative friends or
family is a very rare outlier? Am I that good at sniffing people out? Or are
they hypocrites? Am I?
Frankly,
we’re all probably hypocrites on some level. Lord knows I thought Bush’s tax
cuts were obscene. And in the few ways they extended to me, I was happy to take
full advantage of them.
But calling
people hypocrites and then expecting change is unproductive and, well,
hypocritical. My friends and I, by definition, have each other’s back.
Disagreement between us is painful sometimes, so I must remember what I know
for sure: They too only want family, love and security. In pursuit of these
things, we are all guilty of having irrational fears and blind spots, and we
are each doing the best we can in a confusing and loud world. This is our
common humanity – recognizing it is a lot easier than maintaining the false
dichotomy of us and them. How about we start right there?