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POLITICAL COMMENTARY

Two Problems

A Commentary By Susan Estrich

America has two problems to deal with in the health care debate, and only one of them relates to health care. The other is our increasing inability to have a conversation with each other without screaming, vilifying, threatening and boycotting.

It's getting scary out there, and I'm not just talking about death panels or whatever they are.

I'm talking about the civility that is the essence of democracy.

Liberals and conservatives have been busing people to each other's events since I started working in politics. They've been hiring professionals to promote "grassroots" involvement since long before the Internet made it easier. Are the protests at staged events staged? Maybe. Who cares?

Nancy Pelosi was plainly wrong to attack the protestors as "un-American." The White House strategy of dismissing them has long since been proved unwise.

But that's no excuse for turning civil discourse into something ugly.

Increasingly, I find myself hearing from people who say they hate Barack Obama. And Nancy Pelosi.

Not disagree with them. Not plan to vote against them.

Hate them.

There are serious and credible stories about the increased threats to the president's safety.

Of course, it's not just the right doing this. Only yesterday, a friend asked me whether I had read the disgraceful op-ed by the founder of Whole Foods in The Washington Post. Actually, it was in The Wall Street Journal, and I had read it. While I took issue with a number of points in it, I was actually pretty interested in how he manages to provide health insurance for his workers.

Today I read that because of the article, his stores are being boycotted. How dare he offend his liberal customer base? Hello? Liberals should boycott a business that provides health insurance to its workers because its founder doesn't agree with the Obama health care plan? And then maybe conservatives should boycott businesses run by Obama supporters. And then what? Warring grocery stores? It would be silly if it weren't so serious.

Obviously, there are town meetings where no one screams, and they don't get covered on television. You can always blame the media for covering us when we're at our worst, but that's the nature of the beast. It's a reason for everyone to lower their voices, lower the temperature and resolve that, one way or another, our differences will not destroy us. It's also the only way we stand a chance of working through any kind of reform effort that will be acceptable in the long run.

COPYRIGHT 2008 CREATORS SYNDICATE INC.

See Other Political Commentaries

See Other Commentaries by Susan Estrich

Views expressed in this column are those of the author, not those of Rasmussen Reports.

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