We ain’t going anywhere. Neither are they.
“Who is ‘we’ and ‘they’ in those statements?” you might be
asking.
Well, “we” is whoever we are and “they” is whoever they are.
“We” is those who are like we are and “they” is those who are different than we
are. “We” refers to our kind and “they” to their kind.
I would tell you to fill in the blanks in the sentence “We
are ___________ and they are __________ ,” but your attitudes, thoughts,
opinions, words, and actions indicate that you already have. And how you fill
in the blanks depends on the answers to lots of questions, like: (1) Who’s your
mama and daddy? (2) Where do you hail from? (3) Where’ve you been? (4) What’d
you learn in school and in what schools did you learn it? (5) Do you only know
and talk to your kind or do you know and talk to other kinds? (6) Where do you
get your news? (7) How much do you read and what do you read? (8) How have you
experienced life? (9) How aware are you that other people haven’t had the same
life experiences as you? (10) How willing are you to expand your knowledge and
worldview while simultaneously acknowledging that no matter how much you know,
it’s a very small fraction of all there is to know?
People who would answer those questions differently than you
do would fill in the blanks differently than you would. And there are lots more
people who are different than you who are like you.
Like I said, we aren’t going anywhere and neither are they.
Some of us and some of them think that’s not the case, but they’re wrong. Some
of us think we can eradicate them and some of them think they can eradicate us,
but we and they are wrong, because there’s no way to do that without destroying
us all. Some of us think we can carve out an enclave made up of people like we
are and some of them think they can carve out an enclave made up of people like
they are, but we and they are wrong, because there’s no way to do that without
destroying ourselves or themselves. Some of us and some of them think the world
would be a better place if everyone was like we or they are, but we and they
are wrong, because, people being people, it wouldn’t stay that way for long—and
life would be incredibly boring if it did.
The great theologian Sly Stone summed up what I’m trying to
say way back in 1969 when he sang, “We got to live together.” That’s not easy.
In fact, it may be much more difficult than trying to stay apart or to beat
each other into submission. It’ll take people of good will from all places and
all persuasions committing themselves to peace and progress with the same
fervor that radicals do to conflict and regress.
It’ll require the vast majority of us coming to think in
terms of “all” rather than “us” and ‘them.”
And I mean “all,” not “all us” and “all y’all.”
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