Blog

In Defense of Decency: Political Correctness and the Treatment of Others

I’ve always been overweight. Looking back, certainly as a child and a teen I wasn’t nearly as overweight as I thought at the time, but it was enough.  In second grade, there was a spat of particularly hurtful things that were said to me—sometimes by some of the older students, sometimes by my peers.  At times it felt relentless.

That summer, I decided that I needed to do something about it; that I didn’t want to be fat any more and didn’t want anyone to make fun of me.  I figured out that if I just ate less, I would be able to lose weight. So I did.  A lot less.  Anytime my family offered me something, I would tell them I wasn’t hungry.  I would wait until I was absolutely starving, and only then would I try anything.  I vividly remember going to the New York State Fair at the end of summer and the day being consumed by my parents insisting every time we walked by a food stand that I have something to eat, that they were really worried about me.  It was a long struggle of a day for all of us

An Introduction

The election of Donald Trump to the presidency has brought upon the nation a wave of introspection, retrospection, elation, concern, fear, and hope. The diversity of feelings and opinions mirrors the diversity found along cultural, socioeconomic, and political lines—lines that often run very deep.

For me, this presents an inflection point, one that motivates me to shift from personal, internal thought to a more open forum and exchange of ideas. The problems facing our nation—ones that get to the very heart of who we are as a people and how we live together every day, are ones upon which I have spent a great deal of time reflecting.