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Pro/Con -- Are Americans more divided than ever? Yes: Unprecedented division is conquering our national politics

The United States' political landscape is more divided than it has been since the Vietnam and civil rights era some 50 years ago and in many ways is even more polarized. The style and content of Donald Trump's presidency is a major factor in this...

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Denfeld’s 1947 boys basketball team is the only Denfeld basketball team to win a state title. The team’s head coach was Lloyd Holm. Team members were Rudy Monson, Larry Tessier, Paul Nace, Kenneth Sunnarborg, Eugene Norlander, Howard Tucker, Tony Skull, Jerry Walczak, Bruce Budge, Keith Stolen and student manager Bob Scott.

The United States' political landscape is more divided than it has been since the Vietnam and civil rights era some 50 years ago and in many ways is even more polarized. The style and content of Donald Trump's presidency is a major factor in this division, and our country is suffering as a result.

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Don Kusler

Division is nothing new in politics or in personal life. Since the formative years of our nation, differences existed and infiltrated our earliest political debates.

Each one of us is divided in simple or perhaps complex ways in our most basic life functions, too. At school, at work, and in our neighborhoods, we take sides and defend our positions. We divide ourselves into tribes in many aspects of our lives.

There are those in private and public life who seek to gain power and profit, though, from our natural inclination to tribalism. We must understand this and should tread carefully. Most of us do not, however.

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Citizen, candidate, and now President Trump has spent a life adhering to the "divide and conquer" philosophy. By breaking up and dividing folks to consolidate his power and scatter the power of his adversaries, Trump plays a dangerous game with our democratic society. The lists of Trump tactics and topics on this strategy are long: Race, economic status, gender, political party, social issues, and more all have been on his menu, often in ugly ways.

The division spills out into our voting, our social-media feeds, and, perhaps most notably, into how Congress conducts the people's business.

The marches, protests and riots of Vietnam and civil rights era have given way to marches and protests now. The deep division, partisanship, and distrust of the Nixon and Watergate era echo eerily in the questions about Trump and his campaign's potential involvement with a hostile Russian government.

As a result, we live now in a nation where each and every morsel of information is filtered through the lens of our divisions. Anything that contradicts the established view of our tribe is immediately cast aside or even labeled "fake" to feed our tribalism and division.

Along the way, Trump tweets away, fueling this division. And we largely play our role as the faithfully divided. Democrats and liberals recoil at every turn. Republicans and conservatives cheer or, in the most repulsive moments, remain silent in approval.

The division even exists within tribes. Conservatives are split between the Trump loyalists and those who, even in their frequent silence, find Trump's tactics distasteful. Progressives are divided between the more moderate and more liberal wings. These subdivisions are making it even more difficult to rally against those seeking to divide us.

Open and honest debate of our differences great and small can actually be an empowering process. At different points in our history we have come out of periods of deep division stronger while in others we have come out weaker from the fight.

Time will tell how we as a nation move forward from our current division. What do we do to break the trend and refuse to be conquered?

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Only when we begin to listen, question, seek understanding, and break down the walls of prejudice that are impeding us will we take the first steps in a more positive direction.

 

Don Kusler is National Director of Americans for Democratic Action, a progressive advocacy organization based in Washington, D.C.

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