Of politics and people

By Seth Boyes, News Editor

It would seem local politics is still a hot topic of conversation in our community — assuming that our opinion page is a remotely representative sample. I myself got a bit of feedback for my last opinion piece.

And that’s a good thing.

That’s why this page exists — the goal is to talk about the stuff that affects us. 

If we don’t share our views — if we keep them cloistered behind our teeth time after time — I don’t think we have any hope of understanding one another, let alone working together to make any sort of positive change. We need to be able to talk about divisive topics in a meaningful way so we can learn to disagree without losing our respect for one another. 

Obviously, that’s not as easy as pointing fingers at one another or making unfounded accusations. I’m sure we’ve all seen it at the state and national levels, but it can happen at the local level too — I doubt that’s a surprise to anyone either.

Now, when I took my first staff writer position nearly a decade ago, one of the first things I was told was that the job would make me a skeptic.

And I can say now with absolute certainty that it in fact did do just that. 

But that’s not a bad thing. You see, skepticism can be a good thing. Skepticism can pump the brakes during a tense situation. Skepticism can put a wet blanket on the embers of animosity. Skepticism helps one maintain the benefit of the doubt for a fellow human being who may have been unfairly labeled as being too far to one side of the aisle or the other. 

I’ll give you an example which I myself often refer back to — one that came from Decorah’s own Rob Sand.

It was July of 2017. Sand was still in his first year as Iowa’s State Auditor, and he was on a tour of the state. Plenty was happening in Iowa at that time, and locals were concerned about the legislature’s plans for mental health programs — a major mental health provider in northwest Iowa had recently been shuttered due to funding issues, and folks there were worried about cuts to state services.

Sand stood in a grove of trees and listened as someone said it was clear to them one particular party didn’t really care about the issue of mental health. 

But Sand wasn’t willing to go that far — said he wasn’t willing to paint with that broad of a brush.

Instead, he said it was hard to judge people’s motivations, and he said politics is fundamentally the process of deciding how scarce resources should be allocated. He pointed out that time itself is a scarce resource and said, just because a given lawmaker doesn’t spend time on a particular topic, it doesn’t mean they feel the issue isn’t worth addressing.

Those words still come back to me often. 

Years later, I found myself explaining the Iowa Caucuses to a campaign staffer touring with a presidential candidate one winter. The staffer asked me — well, it was more a statement than it was a question — but he asked if the caucuses were just a bunch of people. 

“Isn’t everything just a bunch of people?” I replied, surprised at how fast the words came out of my mouth. 

And that’s just it. Sometimes it’s difficult to see through all the red, white and blue bunting of our own arguments. We get so wrapped up in the process that we forget the purpose — the people. Politics is people, and people are just trying to figure out the best course of action with what scarce resources we have. We won’t always agree — that’s ok. And we’re all pretty much bound to step in it at some point — that’s ok too.

What’s important is what we do after that, and after that, and after that. 

Politics isn’t going away any time soon. It’ll last as long as people do. That’s the nature of it. 

So maybe it will behoove us to focus on each other as people, rather than part of a political opposition of our own creation.

Agree with Seth? Think he’s got it completely backwards or he’s missed the point entirely? Let your voice be heard. Letters to the editor may be emailed to editor@decorahleader.com or dropped off at 110 Washington St. Suite 4 in Decorah.

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Daniel Kirkeby
Guest
9 days ago

Nicely said. However at times we get elected officials who govern on their personal beliefs. While doing this they neglect a part of their constituents that also matter. Just because a larger percentage of your area agree with one side of an issue does not make it right.