Sunday, September 13, 2015

When did public personal attacks become OK?

What’s with the public personal attacks?

Attacks from one politician not criticizing an opponent on policy, but firing personal broadsides . . . words like stupid, dumb, ugly and so on . . . Pundits calling women “sluts” if they mention they enjoy sex and view birth control as an important issue. (The fabulously rich, successful and married four times Rush Limbaugh made the comment as one might expect. And joins a long list of men who see not a thing “equal” with women.)

In an interview in Rolling Stone Presidential GOP Donald Trump said of fellow Carly Fiorina "Look at that face!?"

"Would anyone vote for that? Can you imagine that, the face of our next president?!" He tried to backtrack a bit the next day by saying he was talking about her “persona” not her looks.

It was the same lame backtrack he tried when after he said FOX News debate moderator Megan Kelly had blood “coming of her wherever” during the debate. He tried to convince us he meant “out of the eyes, then the nose and the ears because it’s a very common saying.” Common in whose world? There's no mistaking his words.

When did this become OK? When did we start thinking this was all right?

It’s not just politics, of course. The internet’s anonymity allows people to hurl insults without consequences.

How about the “shaming” of women who show breastfeeding photos? “Disgusting . . . cover up . . . yuck” and other comments are routine. (Their mothers must be so proud of the commentators.) Restaurants, too, have been caught in the crossfire as their policies on mothers breastfeeding their babies have been regularly challenged by mothers insulted by staff and onlookers’ heavy-handed objections. So groups of nursing mothers have held “nurse ins” in stores, malls and restaurants to protest the negative public reactions. Hey, kids, breastfeeding is pretty normal. Get over it.

Fat, skinny, tall, short, pretty, not pretty, muscular, not muscular enough, pregnancy weight gain, fast post-delivery weight loss, in shape, out of shape . . . it doesn’t matter, it’s all fair game now apparently.

So we endure it . . . these anonymous personal attacks weave in and out of our everyday lives . . . online, on the news and in public. Often we do more than endure it . . . we embrace it.

What failures we have become. We find the lowest bar possible and lower it further. Our leaders can’t lead and our would-be leaders hurl insults, right beside the kid sitting at home and typing insults that spread around the world in a flash. It’s bulling, really, and while we say that’s not OK, we continue to be amused by people like Trump or Limbaugh because they “tell it like it is.”

Nah, they’re lazy and petty, eliminating discussion and dialogue for the sake of a quick hit and an attempt to “score points” with an audience.

Too bad we’ve accepted that.

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