I am re-reading Jane Addams’ wonderful memoir, Twenty Years at Hull-House. In explaining the spirit with which she
founded her settlement house in 1890s Chicago, she wrote that it was driven, in
part by “the conviction, in the words of Canon Barnett, that the things which
make men alike are finer and better than the things that keep them apart, and
that these basic likenesses, if they are properly accentuated, easily transcend
the less essential differences of race, language, creed, and tradition.” Addams, of course, was speaking about
the importance of integrating into American life the millions of immigrants who
had been attracted to the United States at the height of the Industrial Revolution. However, her words also set an
expectation for us today.
American-style democracy thrives on our ability to find a
workable middle—a place where are “basic likenesses” outweigh the things that
keep us apart enough for us to fulfill the purpose of our federal government as
declared in the opening sentence of the Constitution: “. . . to form a more
perfect Union, establish Justice, insure domestic Tranquility, provide for the common
defence, promote the general Welfare, and secure the Blessings of Liberty to
ourselves and our Posterity . . .” I would like to think that I could identify
some “basic likenesses” with the Tea Party members of Congress. However, it does not come easily.
The Tea Party, which declared its purpose during the last
election as being “to take back our country” (they did not say from whom), can
be expected to become even more radical and less prone to compromise now that
they have won a big victory. These
rightwing extremists have set themselves so arrogantly apart from the
mainstream of our country, that, right now at least, I cannot find common
ground with them. They, in turn,
seek no common ground with anyone who does not share their ideology.
I hope that our politicians are able to find a way to build
a workable middle ground in this environment.
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