traditional thought with a contemporary twist
the brass tacks
Published on October 14, 2008 By Joan of Arc In Politics

Here we are at the brink of another important presidential election.  We are at war, our economy is in a shambles and many of us our holding on by a shoe string and true to our nature as Americans, we are still all trying to "have it our way".

America, a country characterized by liberty and more human rights than any other nation EVER on the the face of this earth is struggling and I think it may be about time for us to "grow up".  I say this as a mother of six, with 3 teenage daughters at home, all of which are trying to figure out what it means to be an adult.  It is not a magic number, 18 or 21, it is the ability to know what is right and to do it, two very difficult tasks.

First, knowing what is right.  How does one know these days when our convensional wisdom is completely up for grabs.  I am not touting some particular moral code, I'm saying simply that it is impossible to maintain a family, never mind a nation if we are not willing to all lay down a few things for the greater good.  We can't even agree on what the "greater good" is.  Our governmental process has become so bogged down by special interest groups that no matter who gets into the White House in November it will be difficult to employ any change and no matter how you look at it, things must change.

Second, the abilitiy to do it.  Sounds simple right?  How many of us will govern ourselves better for the sake of our country when we haven't for our immediate communities, our families or our God.  Seriously. who will use less, spend less, do less, have less, give more, stand up and take it like a grown up person without whining,  follow through with consistancy, be honest.  This "selfless" kind of living requires choices that don't make self interest the hub of all activity and are foreign to this rights inebriated land. 

Consider the following as an outline for adult behavior.  This is what we are using with our kids.  It did not originate with us, they got it at their public school.

 

Individual Responsibility:  fulfilling one's responsibilities to family, friends, and others in one's community and nation.

Self discipline/self governance:  obeying reaonable rules and laws voluntarily and not requiring others to force one to do so.

Civility:  treating other people with respect regardless of whether or not one likes them or agrees with their viewpoints, being willing to listen to other points of view, not being insulting when argueing with others.

Respect for the Rights of other Individuals:  respect for the right other other people to hold and express their own opinions, respect for their right to a voice in thier government.

Honesty:  telling the truth

Respect for Law:  willingness to abide by laws, even though one may not be in complet agreement with every law.

Open Mindedness:  willingnesss to consider other points of view

Critical Mindedness:  the inclination to question the truth of various positions, inclding one's own

Negotiation and Compromise:  willingness to try to come to agreement with those with whom one may differ, when it is reasonable and morally justifiable.

Persistence:  willingness to attept agains and again to accomplish a worthwhile goal

Civic Mindiness:  concern for the well-being of one's community and nation.

 

These are basic concepts that provide the structure necessary for our community to flourish if EVERYONE participates.  They are unbiased and apply no matter what one believes.  The only way that we can continue to exist is together as we can afford no islands in these United States if we want to heal as a nation.

 

Joan of Arc

 


Comments (Page 2)
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on Oct 14, 2008

As long as you happen to agree with them all rulers are benevolent.Very true!  I was thinking of myself as the benevolent ruler.

 

uh oh--now we're in trouble

joa

on Oct 15, 2008

This is interesting (and may now change) I've noticed that only people I would consider to be conservative (I may be making an incorrect assumption here, but I'll go with it) have commented on your article Joan. Why no liberal comments either yay or nay? Just a curious observation on a piece that is obviously non-partisan. IMO I guess quiet can speak volumes.

on Oct 15, 2008

EL-DUDERINO
It would be so nice if any of those principles were possible.  Unfortunately our political system has boiled itself down to a simple "us vs. them" mentality. 

I'm not saying that we shouldn't attempt to get back to those principles, it's what our founding fathers would have wanted, but in the current political environment it just isn't going to happen, neither of the two major parties would want it, which is why I am a big advocate for voting against incumbents and voting for third party candidates whenever given the chance.

Boiled down? When was it ever not us versus them?  It has been that way since the founding of the country.  Look at things like the first Supreme Court case, or even just the politics to sign the Declaration of Independence.  We haven changed in the big picture mate, just in what we argue about.

on Oct 15, 2008

Why no liberal comments either yay or nay?

an excellant Q Nitro, I don't know.  i am sure that there are folks on both sides of the isle that share these sentiments or for whom they raise conserns.  it would be nice to hear from all even if they just plain disagree.

 

joa

on Oct 15, 2008

[quote]It has been that way since the founding of the country. Look at things like the first Supreme Court case, or even just the politics to sign the Declaration of Independence. We haven changed in the big picture mate, just in what we argue about.[/quote

I find this interesting because sometimes, when I hear about the foundations of America, I get the idea that everyone was in total agreement about everything.  Historically, I find this to be inaccurate. Regardless of the our founding, we have come a long way (baby)

joa

 

on Oct 16, 2008

Boiled down? When was it ever not us versus them? It has been that way since the founding of the country. Look at things like the first Supreme Court case, or even just the politics to sign the Declaration of Independence. We haven changed in the big picture mate, just in what we argue about.

The "us vs. them" in the declaration of independence was this country vs. England.  The problem today is that our country is extremely divided and every single issue is immediately boiled down to some sort of black or white issue.  Examples:
1) You are either for the war in Iraq and want to stay until someone determines that we have "won" or you want to concede defeat and hand the country over to terrorists.
2) You are either for the sanctitiy of life or you are an evil baby killer.

I'm not saying that everyone in the country feels this way but it seems that more and more every single issue gets turned into this rather than seeing all of the areas of gray in between.  I will agree that isn't necessarily anything new, it just seems that the pervasiveness of this "us vs. them" mentality seems to be at an all time high.

on Oct 16, 2008

like I said, Have it Your Way America-

joa

on Oct 16, 2008

like I said, Have it Your Way America-

joa

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