I believe the rights and responsibility of the individual are the core fundamentals on which western government was founded. Having winners and losers is important to society, so long as there are buffers to prevent the extreme ends of this dynamic. The creation of a utopian equal outcome society is a dangerous pursuit, yet it seems to be the pursuit of recent infiltrators within the far left wing of the Democratic Party (mainly educators and entertainers). This idea is pushed forward through identity politics...the idea that there is a group/s (community?) of persons that are oppressed, and the soul purpose of this political maneuver is to overthrow the oppressors and make the oppressed community whole. Is there oppression? You bet! Are certain communities feeling more of this burden than other communities? Absolutely. Is there a conscious or unconscious effort by one community to hold down another community? Absolutely not! There are individuals that should be held accountable for their actions. The idea that someone is inherently your enemy because they are white is just as propostorous as the idea that someone is your enemy because they are black. Forcing this divide through ideas such as white fragility, institutionalized racism, and white privledge creates a self-fulfilling ideology in which the oppressed shouldn't speak to the oppressor because the oppressor is not competent to understand the issue. This is further pushed forward through the attempt to shut down free speech by creating safe spaces, claiming everyday language is a microagression, and general PC policing. Thus far, the outcome of this ideology has been the election of Trump.
If we can get past identity politics (where your group is more important than your individuality), and define the boundaries in which we wish to solve problems, then we can come to some middle ground and work on real issues like what to do about the poor, education, economics, and the threat of terrorism. Until that time, the chasm that divides the two party system will continue to be insurmountable.
If we can get past identity politics (where your group is more important than your individuality), and define the boundaries in which we wish to solve problems, then we can come to some middle ground and work on real issues like what to do about the poor, education, economics, and the threat of terrorism. Until that time, the chasm that divides the two party system will continue to be insurmountable.
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