I’m tired. This day has been so tiring for me, even more so than the entire rest of the election. It’s ironically not for the reason people think, and I apologize if this post is kinda unorganized. There’s just so much on my mind. What’s worn me down and discouraged me so much today is not actually the fact that Trump won the presidency, it’s the way most (at least on my FB feed) Clinton supporters have reacted to the results.
I get it, I know, Trump is a bad person. But you know, at least his victory speech was decently respectable. And he called us to unite together and invited those that didn’t vote for him to help him make America better for all people. And as Clinton said in her concession speech, we owe Trump “an open mind and a chance to lead”.
But what saddens me more is that the mud slinging continues. And instead of taking this chance to understand why something they didn’t expect happened, most people have just gone with the flow of the liberal media (which lured people in the first place into believing Trump had no chance) and written off half of the American voters (60 million) as racist bigots. But in doing so, they themselves have become that which they condemn others for.
People have written off white rural America (most of the Trump supporters as well as half of the country falls under this category btw) as a bunch of racists and bigots. But they know nothing of those people. They know nothing of their plight. Instead of judging them and ignoring their opinions, if people had taken the time to actually listen to their stories and the very real struggles (http://www.cracked.com/blog/6-reasons-trumps-rise-that-no-one-talks-about/) they’re going through, if Hillary had done this, maybe the election results would be different.
But by condemning and marginalizing this population and offering no real avenues of dialogue or aid, other than to ridicule or judge them, Clinton supporters have become racists and bigots themselves. They continue to sling mud at these people, even after their candidate lost the election, without stopping for a second to understand the people they’re targeting. And this is what happens when you marginalize a people who are hurting and who’s lives are being threatened, and receive no empathy, but are instead blamed as the problem (wow, doesn’t this rhetoric sound familiar?). They vote for the guy who’s actually willing to listen to them and says he’ll fight for them, even if he’s a sociopath, because what choice do they have.
Don’t let the liberal media deceive you again, like they did with saying Hillary had the election in the bag. Yes, there are racists and bigots and inequality in this country. These are issues we need to work on. But that’s not what this election was about, it ultimately came down a hurting people who were rejected by one candidate and her camp, and had no choice but to vote for the crazy guy willing to listen to them and promised them change (wait, wasn’t that someone’s platform back in 2008!?). And moving forward, even with regard to overcoming racism and bigotry, YOU CAN’T FIGHT HATE WITH HATE, IT ONLY CREATES MORE HATE!!!! And you become a racist and bigot when you do that.
As I close, what hurts the most about this, is there are my Christian brothers and sisters who are partaking in this. Not only slinging mud at half the populace that they’ve written off, but also at their own Christian brothers and sisters. Since when did allegiance to a political candidate outweigh being a family in Christ? It breaks my heart.
Thankfully, most of my brothers and sisters are doing what we’re supposed to be doing. Being peacemakers. Whether that’s calling for both sides to be understanding of one another. Or offering space and support for those who are hurting. Or most importantly, pointing people to the ultimate hope we have in God.
Sigh,I’m tired, and I don’t know how much more my heart can take of seeing the church allow itself to be torn apart by these earthly things. I’m sorry if I got a little too sarcastic or heated during this post. But it’s so important.
As a nation, we must learn to reach for understanding before hate, and learn that we aren’t always going to agree, but we can find common ground and we need respect each other’s differences despite our disagreements. Something that President Obama reminded us of last night (I’ve grown to respect this guy a lot).
As a church, we need to reach for God and our shared identity in Christ and the Gospel before reaching for being popular with the current trends. Being a peacemaker means sometimes both sides will hate you, but so be it. This is not our home, and our goal is greater than a mere presidential election, it’s the eternal salvation of people’s souls!
It’s ok to be mad, it’s ok to mourn, it’s ok to need to let it out. But don’t do it at the expense of others. Please stop slinging mud…be a peacemaker…