The Value of
Opposition
Conservative, Liberal or What?
Conservatives bash liberals and liberals rant against
conservatives. The diatribes continue unabated in the media and often become
decidedly uncivil. Occasionally temporary exhaustion sets in and the rancor
cools, but inevitably it surges again, fueled by a new topic. While I plead for
civil conversation, the need for dialogue is very important.
It is easy to forget that we often gain the most from those
who disagree with us. Those who challenge our way of thinking open our minds and
create open dialogue. Without opposing views, civic conversation can easily
become bland, boring reiteration. Those who disagree with us render us great
service.
The willingness to evaluate, consider, and tolerate opposing
points of view is a sign of maturity. There is a critical purpose to differing
opinions—they give us choices, without which we grow narrow. They make us think,
and provide a springboard against which we can strengthen our own ideas and
convictions. It is an act of courage to put yourself “out there” with an
opposing point of view and then take the heat for your opinions.
In order for opinions to make a significant difference,
others must hear them. Writers write so that readers may read, and speakers
speak so that listeners may listen. They need not, however, agree with each
other. The exchange of ideas takes place to consider new information. We sift,
sort, evaluate, and keep what’s useful to us. Contrasting opinions, like
exercise, strengthen our mental, moral and psychological muscles as we push
against them.
Some fear contrasting voices. Unless the ideas presented by those
voices are debauched, that is unwise. Provincial and immature though it is, we
often want everyone to agree with us because we think we are right. In the end,
however, contrast heightens the look and feel of ideas and brings them into
focus. The strong are made stronger by contrast. Conservatives, for instance,
can become more secure in their conservatism when they nibble at the liberal
banquet fest.
For many conservatives, it is unlikely our well-tested,
tightly screened ideas will change. They are part and parcel of our life
experiences, woven into our core. There is, then, a real danger of sinking into
the boredom of sameness and apathy. We need people with opposite views to give
variety and expansion to our horizons. Not all of us take the same journey and
watch the same scenery, therefore we end up at different destinations. Who can
begrudge that—the world is full of destinations. We need not, do not want to
be, and must not be all the same. We can benefit greatly from asking ourselves,
“What is it about this opposisng opinion that unsettles me, and how can I
justify my disagreement?” That exercise is invaluable.
Ronald Reagan once said, ”This is a wonderful time to be
alive. We’re lucky not to live in pale and timid times. We’ve been blessed with
the opportunity to stand for something.” Those who challenge our conservative
opinions help us determine what we believe and why. There is a place in our
lives for gratitude to those who disagree with us. Without them, we would be
less than we are.
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