America is currently sitting on a powder keg, and it’s filled with a substance much more potent than gun powder. The destruction effected by a normal powder keg is localized and can be contained. A powder keg filled with an intangible substance isn't containable.
What is that intangible substance? Division, sewn with hate and violence.
Who is filling this powder keg? The answer is there for everyone to see: America’s right wing leaders are the verifiable culprits. No more false equivalencies. It’s time the right wing’s actions are not only called out, but tackled head-on.
First, it’s necessary to understand the pathology of the right wing’s leaders. Not only are they very intelligent, but they know exactly what they’re doing. They understand that the policies they support are anathema to a society with a vibrant middle-class. They know that an educated populace is a clear and present danger to their existence. They know that an educated population will find their existence untenable. But they also know that one's primitive fear sensors, those sensors meant to maintain life itself, are much more powerful than educated and calculated logic. Hence, the right wing’s modus operandi.
Esquire political blogger Charles Pierce wrote a probing article titled "The Powder Keg" that laid out one aspect of America's right wing-induced heartburn. He subtitled the article, "The seething racial resentment of the Obama era is of an altogether different kind," which made the article a bit limiting.
The ultimate premise of Pierce's article is that America's angst is being caused by the false belief of white people that they are falling behind, or are the victims of reverse racism. Of course in every quantifiable statistic from health to income to wealth and much more, whites continue to be better off in the aggregate.
Charles Pierce pointed out a snippet from an article about the beliefs of a large percentage of white people.
You will note that the reporter above presents a welter of empirical evidence that what half of white Americans believe—that they are the primary victims of racial discrimination—is utter bollocks. You also will note that this does not matter a damn to the half of white Americans who believe it. Why should they? For the past 60 years, as a result of the gains made by the Civil Rights Movement, they have been fed this line by people and by politicians who have profited handsomely from the dark energy of racial reaction. They all have discovered uncles who lost jobs with the county road crew because of affirmative action, or nephews who didn't get into law school because of a "quota."
Pierce then writes a chilling few sentences that may explain why police violence against minorities is met with such disregard by the majority population—the population who feels falsely aggrieved.
That poll is chilling in its detachment from actual empirical reality. The people polled in it are chilling in their certainty. That certainty makes them believe that the police are their Myrmidons holding back the power of their fellow citizens who happen to be black, and who wield so much power that any means of resisting that power is wholly justified. That certainty makes them believe that protesters on a campus in Missouri are some kind of threat against the dwindling promise of a real American middle class. That certainty makes them jump at shadows, predictably. That certainty eventually curdles into a rage that lashes out blindly at all the wrong targets. For too long, too many people have been willing to believe that which is not true.
If the dynamic in the country was solely white people feeling angst over losing their privilege and supremacy, that could be mitigated with education. Others gaining access, rights, equality, justice, humanity, and the permutations thereof does not diminish people who already have those. But for those pilfering the masses, it presents an irrational but perfect scapegoat.
AIDS was brought under control by forcing it to fight on many fronts for survival, hence the drug cocktail. The leaders of the right wing are well aware of that.
Racism has always been a tool for the powerful, as the population at large executed that evil for the gain of a few. But as people become more educated and live in a more mobile and integrated society, racism by itself becomes an ineffective tool. Right wing leaders know this. And that’s why they provide a cocktail of hate, with a chaser of division.
Divide by fighting against same-sex marriage, and calling it a danger to heterosexual marriage. Divide by using Planned Parenthood to incite violence between pro-choice and anti-choice supporters. Divide by making support of the environment a detriment to some. Divide by using the religious extremism of a few as a blanket attack on many. Divide by making the poverty of some the fault of others. And on, and on, and on.
So what is the solution? Exposing right wing leaders isn’t enough. They are good at what they do. There are some diseases that can be cured with an antibiotic or an antiviral drug. There are some diseases that cannot be cured at all. But In general, most diseases can be cured or managed.
The right wing’s leaders must be constantly exposed. But most importantly, those who have not yet caught the disease must be inoculated. Inoculation involves exposing them to the right wing's venom, along with education. For those already infected, some can only be managed with continuous therapy of knocking down their current fears. For some of the infected, heavy doses of political penicillin—meaning educated logic—will eradicate the disease.
Eradicating ingrained falsehoods isn’t easy. It requires a lot of one-on-one engagement, which is difficult but necessary. It also requires that one engage with compassion. It requires that the enlightened stop preaching to the choir and enter uncomfortable territory. That is where change occurs. That is how we destroy the powder keg filled with hate and fear: With a cocktail of education.