Gilithin, on 2022-October-06, 06:02, said:
The most danger for sure, both in terms of commercial and financial world dominance and in terms of its internal democracy. But I am not entirely sure it is right to say that the country is in more of a mess now than when 15% of the population were denied their voting rights and generally treated as second class citizens.
Yes, a good point. It was a different sort of mess but definitely a serious mess. It was a mess that a person could see at least some way to address. Pass laws that prohibited tests for voting that were clearly discriminatory, pass laws that said a person gets to sit at any open seat on a bus, pass laws that said if you serve meals you serve them to anyone that can pay for them and so on. Some of this is easier said than done. An upscale restaurant perhaps can have a dress code that allows them to not seat a person that comes in wearing a T-shirt, shorts and sandals. Education has been particularly difficult. So yes, there were and are problems. But this is the first time in my life that I feel the country has fundamental problems that I have no idea what we can do to solve.
As I said, I don't think secession by us (Maryland where I live or Minnesota where I grew up) or "them" (Texas or Florida as examples) is the solution and I strongly doubt it will ever happen anyway. But what to do? I am at a loss. Here in Maryland, I would like to say we should all listen to and respect other opinions. But Cox, the Republican candidate for governor thinks, or says he thinks, the 2020 election was stolen plus a lot of other stuff that marks him as a crazed zealot. I am truly sorry that he is the R candidate (and repulsed by the role the Dems played in helping him become the R candidate). I voted for Hogan, our current R governor, but Cox? At the risk of making a bad pun, only a sucker would vote for him.
So this mess is different, at least for me. And yep, I acknowledge that being white probably affects my views on which messes are worse than others. Be that as it might be, we are in one hell of a mess. I'll put aside which mess might have been worse, we are in one hell of a mess.
And oh, the bombing of Pearl Harbor was a little before my third birthday, and so the invasion of Poland was a little before my first birthday, and this all led to a mess of a very different sort. But the war ended before my seventh birthday so no one expected me to have an opinion about all of that.