From schools to shopping malls and retail and grocery stores, to parades and festivals, inside of state fairs and during other events—you can't even call it a zoo anymore. Even zoos have much more order and calm than all of this that's going on.
It's also the level of anger that is increasingly alarming, and typically over things that would not normally cause anger at such levels. A simple overcooked hamburger or getting an order wrong at a fast-food restaurant could launch someone into a violent tirade, terrorizing other customers and staff in ways that are almost unimaginable.
It has simply gotten out of control and seems to be getting worse, and the question becomes why is it happening and how do we fix it? What's the solution to it all? How do we restore law and order at this point? How do we restore a sense of humanity and community? Where is all the anger coming from and why the intensity, especially over very small issues?
At some point it does have to end. Because if it doesn't and only gets worse, there may come a point where there is no going back to the way things were. Sometimes once a particular disease takes hold, there is no cure. There is only treatment for the symptoms.
There is one thought that I do have, and that's a political one. Unfortunately, it just is. We have been largely polarized as a people—and dare I say that's been something of a product of the democrat party and their constant campaign to divide people from all walks of life and pit them all against each other.
Whites vs. blacks, blacks vs. Asians, rich vs. poor, gay vs. straight, trans vs. binary. Everyone hates everyone.
And let's face it. Whites have become an extreme target as well. And white seems to check more boxes. Privileged. Rich. Part of the "establishment." Supremacists. Racists. And the list goes on.
The word entitlement comes to mind as well. Another culture bred from the democrat party over many years of so-called "advocating for the less fortunate." When you breed into the minds of people the idea that they are victims of everything, everything and everyone becomes an enemy. A target. And a reason to lash out.
A reason to be angry at the world and everyone and everything in it.
Whether it's about being underpaid or unappreciated—even if these things are just a perception—the culture of the idea has been firmly planted and is creating part of the chaos. You owe me something and therefore I have the right to demand this, that and the other thing.
I made the comment more than once on social media like Twitter that listening to the democrat party anymore is like watching that now-famous episode of Oprah when she gave away those cars. "You are a victim, and you're a victim, and you're a victim. Everyone's a victim."
Rather than promote togetherness and strength through unification, targets are being promoted as something to lash back at and attack.
You can't have a world like that and expect it to be peaceful. You can't live in a world like that and expect it to be successful. From employees not wanting to do the job they are asked to do, feeling entitled to simply take their money and run to people demanding reparations, tuitions to be paid, free healthcare and whatever else one can think of. Everyone feels entitled to something that frankly, they are not entitled to at all.
But that's been what's been infused into their mindsets. And there's no getting through anymore. There's no logical way to logically explain why they're wrong.
As well, beyond what the democrats have done to incite all this unrest, it is also the breakdown of the American family that I think is fueling some of this. Kids are left without any real structure. They lack guidance and principled parenting. And in many inner cities especially, kids are taught victimhood like some kids in other circumstances might be taught to stay within the lines in a coloring book.
In many instances, the kids really don't have any parents at all.
Did some of this start with the doing away of corporal punishment? Another tenet of the democrat party and liberal ideology by the way. Did it start with "everyone gets a trophy?" Did it start with every normal childhood action being "treated" with a drug?
Lack of fear of consequences is a very real thing in this country right now. But where did that come from?
I asked before, what's the solution? And I still want to know. Because right now the only thing being explored is the apparent cause, not the actual cause. Just like with the gun argument. Is it the gun? Or is it something else? I think it's something else, but few people want to explore what that something else is and simply want to address the weapon of expression rather than what weaponizes the expression.
It is a rather depressing time, if you ask me, watching what was once a great country falling on such hard times emotionally, mentally, as a culture, and getting worse day by day. When you lose your sense of personal pride, of patriotism, of unity, of opportunity—how do you get these things back?
Because honestly, if you think about the struggles we have today, they pale in comparison to the struggles that our forefathers went through. Times were many times more difficult, many times more unfair, many times more trying than they are now. And yet, our unrest is as great as it has ever been as though our condition were much worse today than it was yesterday. Which is not true at all. We have it easier than we have ever had it. More people are free than were ever before. More opportunities exist than ever before.
As a nation, we are so much more divided than we have ever been in our past history, and it is a deep-rooted problem without a solution right now. Not only is it depressing, I find it to be downright scary. Like watching someone die before your very eyes a slow and painful, cancer ridden death, I fear we are watching the death of our great nation in much the same way. The fear is whether or not the cancer has taken hold so badly that we can't stop what becomes the inevitable outcome.
Like the way I write or the things I write about? Follow me on Twitter at @jimbauer601 or follow me on my Facebook page.
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