Remember the Chicago Riots? If you are under 40, you hadn’t even been born. When I hear younger people say they’re worried about this country breaking out in Civil War, it’s probably because they don’t realize what tough times we survived 40 years ago.
The riots, following Martin Luther King's assassination, resulted in 20 people dead and 500 injured. There
were 125 fires, 210 buildings destroyed, and 2,000 people arrested in Chicago alone, before the violence extended to Washington DC, New York City and 60 cities, altogether. If you
were around then, you felt as if the country was falling apart. Many young men moved to Canada and never
returned. It was a terrifying
time—Robert Kennedy was assassinated, and the Vietnam War was tearing this
nation apart. In the early 70's, there were protests and race riots in every city and state, and college campus.
So now, the political climate seems to many like everything is worse than it’s ever
been. Name calling, vulgarity, protests,
riots. The crisis at the border. Affordable care. Racial profiling, Tariff’s.
North Korea. #MeToo. But for those of us who
remember the late 60’s and the violent
domestic explosions in the early 70’s it’s deja vu.
Think of all the people you encounter during the day. Most of them are civil and polite. Yes, political disagreements are more
divisive than ever now, but I would bet
that sane, courteous, thoughtful, people still comprise what used to be called the “silent majority." It's nothing new to fear speaking out about
controversial issues.
Since that time, we have
lived through assassinations, wars in the middle east, recessions, more race riots, and the worst attack our
country has ever been through on 9/11 . So here we are again at the crisis
point. But. I believe that we share more values and common ground uniting us than tearing us apart. I don’t think we will have a civil war.
This nation will remain strong and we will survive.
Read my new blog, Living Well After 80 @ livingwellafter80.com
Read my new blog, Living Well After 80 @ livingwellafter80.com
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