Tuesday, February 21, 2012

Those "Hot Button" Issues...

There are times I can't help but wonder about the country in which I live...

You might be wondering why I put it that way, and the answer is actually fairly simple, though it reaches back pretty far into the history of civilization for my unease.

It happens pretty frequently that certain issues come up in the news... Especially during election campaigns, which are full of empty promises and a lot of hot air.

So where is the historical tie to this? Think back to Rome... The phrase "panem et circenses" might not mean much unless you know Latin, but you might recognize "bread and circuses."

What does this have to do with elections? Then let me ask you, "What do the so-called 'hot button issues' do?"

They galvanize people because of their emotional impact but they can also be used to mask integral problems because of that emotional impact.

Thus, bread and circuses.

In Rome, the whole idea was to keep the masses happy with cheap wheat (bread) and entertainment in the form of games in places like the Coliseum (circuses). So what does that have to do with heated or controversial issues being tossed into the ring?

Distraction. (To quote a song from "Chicago" - "Give them the old razzle dazzle!")

The whole point behind bread and circuses, and also quite likely the "hot button issues," is to keep the people focused on something other than real, tangible concerns. Basically it is creating public approval through diversion!

So what are some of the hot button issues that so rile the people as to mask integral problems within the system by keeping them fired up about something else?

There are several I can think of, though I am sure there are others to which other people would apply this status. Some of the ones I'm thinking of include abortion, gay equality/marriage, and nuclear power/green energy.

For those first two, some people protest against them based on their religion. But since the United States doesn't have, and doesn't need, a state religion, I find those arguments to be somewhat spurious.

However, such people as do use these topics to rally the religious sector to their cry don't seem to pay much attention to such historical precedent. They are so busy prating through certain catch phrases like the sanctity of marriage, pro-life and whatnot that all they hear is the roars of their faithful. I don't think any specific names are needed here from the current campaign trail.

To me, it seems these people are taking a secular event and turning it into a fanatical zealots ball.

The heat surrounding such issues as abortion, or as certain people put it, the murder of innocent unborn children... That fire blinds the people to whom the arguments are made. For when there is a fire before your eyes, why look into the shadows to see the dangers that readily lurk?

I know you are not necessarily interested in my opinion with regards to this issue, but it is almost physically impossible for a fetus that has not gestated for six months to survive outside the mother's body. So, for me, that means a child before that point is not yet an individual.

And I can't help but be quite disturbed by some of the arguments thrown out there for public consumption, especially considering that some pregnancies end naturally with miscarriages, accidents and still births. Why? Because these instances seem to be completely ignored.

Then there's the whole debate surrounding the various forms of birth control. Some religions are diametrically opposed to birth control in any form. But part of what many forms of contraception do is make the woman's uterus inhospitable to a zygote, a fertilized egg. So that could be considered a form of abortion by certain groups as noted in news last year out of Alabama regarding "personhood" legislation...

There is so very much to this issue, I could probably keep on going... But there are other points to make at this time.

Of course, the whole issue of religion in this country is another hot button issue through which people can get quite riled and even turn violent. People have used religion for centuries as a prop, or even a ruse, to get a rise out of others.

But even history shows that religions rise and fall, just as Christianity was once nothing more than a heretical cult that was not well accepted by the culture of civilization at the time.

So Christians may call me a heretic or claim that I am a member of a cult, or even insult me by proclaiming I must worship something I don't even believe in. But it is only if I rise to those goads that I give their attacks any credence.

And even in Rome, Christians were once the source of the circuses, or at least the poor bait thrown into the ring to distract the people from their pressing concerns.

So they thump their Bibles, proclaiming that such things as allowing two people of the same sex to express their love for each other are wrong. I believe that two people who love each other in that way should be allowed to be together as long as it is not incest, rape or abusive.

However, the issues that pull religion into them are among the most heated and thus the most distracting. Which is why they are the most frequently pulled cards out of the deck of potential stumping ideas. What tattered Jokers are these...

When it comes to these sorts of instances, they are so frayed from overuse, I can't help but be sometimes surprised at how vehemently people continue to rise to them. Still, if you feel that strongly about a particular issue or you prattle about it enough, I guess anyone will "rise to the occasion" in support or opposition of any idea.

Still I say that using religion and/or other hot button issues as a rallying cry is a little hypocritical, especially on such issues as abortion.

Abortion has existed for as long as civilization, if not longer. And it will continue to exist no matter what laws are passed supporting it or making it illegal.

It is a hot button issue because the people make it one, and politicians can make all the promises they want regarding it... Unfortunately for them, they can't legislate morality, no matter how much they try.

So, in my opinion, it would be better and safer to legalize such things. That way they can be regulated and monitored. Otherwise, we have people "breaking the law" to prevent an unwanted pregnancy... And we certainly don't need a resurgence in "red blanket" calls in area emergency departments.

The same could be said for something like gay marriage. Regulate it, through such things as marriage licenses, tax filings, divorce lawyers, health coverage and everything else that goes into the supposedly "sacrosanct" marriage the people who use this as a hot button issue profess to be protecting. All you have to do is look at cultural history to see how "recent" a development truly monogamous marriage is...

And don't get me going on the whole push to keep gays out of the military through the "don't ask, don't tell" policy, which I was so very glad was repealed. Or on the opposition to allowing gay couples to adopt children... In short... They care enough to try! So let them!

People sure do get loud when they get riled up about some topics.

Even something like "green energy" can bring out some people that just get absolutely insane about it. Especially those people who are against it, like the ones who protested the restarting the North Anna nuclear power plant following the earthquake that rocked the region in August 2011.

I think part of this argument is just the money involved, especially regarding political campaigns and lobbies in Washington, D.C. Unfortunately, it will be the people who pay in the end, not the politicians.

I'm not saying that coal power is necessarily bad, especially in a country like the U.S. where power plants are required to have all kinds of scrubbers on emissions. Most of the time, when you see a cloud coming up from a U.S. coal-fired power plant, it's nothing but water vapor thanks to improved technology.

However, I don't think hybrid and electric cars are going to really help all that much. Why? Because most of the electricity in this country still comes from fossil fuels. So if you are using an internal combustion engine car, a technology that has been around for a very long time and is somewhat better known, or an electric car, which must be plugged in and is a less well known technology, you are still using a fossil fuel.

Fossil fuels are by their very nature limited resources. We cannot use them indiscriminately and injudiciously. Do people even realize how many products they use every day that are derived from or contain ingredients from fossil fuels like petroleum? Plastics were an accidental discovery, but there are ingredients all around us including in makeup and clothing.

Fossil fuels will eventually run out, any version of them that is being used including oil sands, natural gas and coal.

So while some people will use this as a hot button issue, it's going to become an imperative, not for environmental extremists or oil barons, but for the people.

And it an expensive issue because of what it will take to reduce reliance on ALL fossil fuels and their products, but in the long run, which a lot of people appear to be ignoring for immediate comfort, something will have to be done about energy needs and meeting them.

For many so-called hot button issues, they boil down to nothing more than money. Who has it? Who is spending it? Who is spending the most for or against a particular issue?

That's what people need to be paying attention to, not the political or religious hyperbole.

I'm not even just talking about the U.S. on some of these issues. Europe and Asia are also dealing with them.

Some countries in Europe provide power for citizens through trash incinerators that have requirements similar to coal-fired power plants in this country.

And don't forget about the "Third World" countries, also known as developing countries, that are not yet regulating how their people affect the environment, from power production to water purification.

In Europe, some countries have legalized abortion and made it part of the health care system. But then again, they tend not to have rabid religious voices we have here...

The issue of gay equality is also a global one. I have seen stories out of several countries regarding it, including this recent one out of Russia.

In the end, we ourselves must make these issues into something other than triggers or switches that can be hit to get people emotional. When we are emotional, we are less rational and can thus be distracted from other matters.

These kinds of issues don't need to be emotional in public. Keep that private.

Nor do they need to be religious. You don't want to use birth control? Fine, don't use it. But please don't try to make it that women who do want to use it or need it to handle health issues can't.

The same could be said for gay marriage. You don't want homosexuals to have the right to marry? Then don't marry them. But if someone else does want to let them marry, don't make it so that person or group can't.

I feel and I hope that we will someday be able to look at issues like the ones I have discussed and others I haven't mentioned without getting so riled up. Until we do, they will continue to be hot buttons that are pounded by people trying to get a rise out of the general public for a given purpose. That could be a distraction, like the bread and circuses, or just for passion, a rallying cry at a stumping event.

I can't say I don't get upset about certain things, especially certain issues. I do, because I am a passionate person. However, I try to learn as much about the issue as I can before coming out with my own hyperbole. I like to use facts when ever possible, not buzz words.

4 comments:

  1. A perfect example of that I'm talking about in this post... http://gma.yahoo.com/video/news-26797925/rush-limbaugh-calls-a-woman-a-slut-compares-her-to-a-prostitute-on-his-radio-show-28487671.html

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  2. And the debate continues... http://news.yahoo.com/obama-rebukes-limbaugh-thanks-contraceptive-advocate-182807457.html?fb_action_ids=10150562617012130&fb_action_types=news.reads&fb_source=other_multiline&code=AQAU-QPqGCkmRxzHRuVAXEKaWKI9BgBbj1JQz8A1xb4zMQs15KXtx75Ft7dLO4Gmcj3LVBbcpWhx-3x8lHXftTJ0jKH4zj3-va8oSd6ha89A5gFrcU4FFuozsBkMJgBneT9_0mhrLy1c7hv7CESA56MGnJRUqGF_FdCmPJmf_fs6sBqdETRuehz3St_n3yFkKew#_=_

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  3. Here's one that is ongoing... http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/the-fix/post/is-rush-limbaugh-hurting-republicans/2012/03/02/gIQAX43HnR_blog.html?tid=sm_twitter_washingtonpost

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  4. You sure sound like you could be an awesome columnist, op-ed, opinion writer, etc. I look at some of the (ignorant) comments on online media outlets' sites and realize how society can make a topic hot, even when it is not, for which they tend to go off topic when doing so. Love this post.

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