Sue U wrote:It may be that our system needs a fundamental overhaul in both structure and process. It may be that the U.S. is too large an entity with too many people holding fundamentally incompatible views of government to continue operating as a single entity. Greater empires have collapsed under similar stresses. It may be time to look seriously at planning for alternative arrangements rather than having chaotic change thrust upon us.
Bingo.
It has become fashionable to decry accusations of unpatriotism. And to a substantial degree, that is a sound viewpoint. But it sensibly goes only so far. For me to disagree with the editorial positions of the
Wall Street Journal (or for a conservative to disagree with the editorial positions of the
New York Times) is one thing, and such disputes can be resolved (though not frictionlessly) without recourse to accusations that those on the other side do not love America.
But what about the Westboro Baptist Church? What about the inhabitants of towns such as Elgin, Oregon, where, as I have mentioned before, simply being homosexual puts one at risk (if anyone there finds out) of being beaten or even murdered? What about the people, of whom there are apparently millions, who want to censor books -- on one side, proposing to ban
The Wizard of Oz because it includes "good witches" (and the Bible says that all witches are bad), and on the other side, proposing to ban
Huckleberry Finn because it includes the word "nigger"?
(For that matter, there are also the people who think that all private property should confiscated and made the subject of collective ownership implemented by the government, but they are so few these days that we can safely lump them in with the people who think that we should be devoting our energies to preparing ourselves for the coming of the extraterrestrial aliens who are riding the tail of some nearby comet.)
It is one thing to think that the recently enacted health-care-reform law is bad policy; it is quite another to think that it is deliberately evil and that its supporters are in the thrall of Satan. It is one thing to think that fortifying the US-Mexico border is bad policy; it is quite another to think that the US southwest is an occupied territory of Mexico and that supporters of fortifying the US-Mexico border are instruments of imperialism.
"Things fall apart; the centre cannot hold ...."
It may be that the extremists love America as much as I and most of us do. But if so, they love an America very different from the America to which my devotion attaches. And I see no way of reconciling their conception of America with mine.
Perhaps it is time -- perhaps it is long past time -- for the US to divide itself into several separate nations. In my opinion, that result is coming sooner or later, and I would far rather see it brought about by civilized discussion, negotiation, and compromise than by another bloody civil war.
Reason is valuable only when it performs against the wordless physical background of the universe.