Friday
was an important day for the students at the middle school where I
teach eighth grade English.
The
eighth grade teachers arranged a day that began with student debates on whether
the electoral collage should be retained or the president elected by direct
popular vote and continued with a number of guest speakers brought in to help
the teenagers understand the political process.
The
speakers ranged from a retired union leader to a state representative who has
sponsored right-to-work legislation. The half-hour breakout sessions also
included a longtime TV anchorman who is making his first try at elective office
at age 59 and two high school students who have spent the last several months
volunteering for a candidate for statewide office.
The
media was also represented- by a veteran reporter from a local television
station and by a 20-year-old college student whose political blog is a
must-read in the Show-Me State.
The
students heard from Democrats and Republicans and had the opportunity to watch
them interact in a positive way.
Sadly,
the day came to a close and the four hours of civility were a thing of the
past.
It
does not have to be that way. As my eighth graders and I reflected on our
election unit Monday, I was asked about the presidential election and this was
the message I delivered to my students:
If
Barack Obama is re-elected president, no matter what some of you have been told
at home or have heard on television or seen on the internet, it will not be the
end of civilization as we know it.
If
Mitt Romney is the one who receives the majority of the electoral votes
Tuesday, the nation will not collapse.
Those
things have been said about every presidential candidate since this country began
and we are still here and will be here for a long time to come.
And
no matter what you have heard, this is not the most important election we have
ever had, at least it’s not the only “most important election we have ever
had.” We had one in 2008, 2004, 2000, 1996, in fact, every four years for as
long as I can remember.
I am
willing to bet that the 2016 election will be “the most important election we
have ever had,” and that the same thing will be said in 2020 and 2024. It is
comforting that we always look on the presidential election as an event of that
magnitude.
I
have heard students, usually parroting their parents, talk about how evil
Barack Obama or Mitt Romney are and how they are just running to ruin our
country. Sorry, but that is not how the system works.
In my
56 years on this planet, I have never seen a political candidate whose platform
was to get elected and do the most damage he could do. Whether the candidates
were Republicans or Democrats, or representatives of some third party, I have
never seen anyone who did not genuinely want to improve the lot of their
constituents.
Their
methods of how to accomplish that differ, sometimes dramatically, and at times
they are led astray by mistaken policies or by listening to the siren songs of
people whose motives are not so pure, but all of them strive to be the best
public servants they can be.
What
makes this country great is that the final decision on who runs our government
is not made at the point of a gun, but in the sanctity of a voting booth. For
all of the flaws in our system, and there are many, it is that truth that has
made our nation one of the most remarkable political experiments in history and
one that will keep it vital and energetic far into the future.
No comments:
Post a Comment