In light of some of the feedback I received on my last Happy Trails (titled “A riot speaks a thousand words but one voice speaks millions“) published in the June 4 edition, I thought it best to add a follow up because I think I missed the mark with its point for some readers, which is what I get for writing half-asleep at 2 a.m. the night before (or morning of) production.
First, I do NOT condone or support the use of excessive police force. Nor do I condone or support rioting, looting, the destruction of property, or violence of any kind as a way to amplify oneās voice. Frankly, I donāt understand rioting and looting at all, especially in the case of George Floyd. The math simply doesnāt add up.
If people are upset and they burn down a Minneapolis police station in response, fine. While I DO NOT support that, I get it. But, for example, during the Chicago riots, my friendās car and the door to his condo building were vandalized (spray painted and bashed in, respectively). Just like all the shops on Michigan Avenue, heānor his car nor his doorāhad anything to do with the killing of George Floyd. In fact, like 99.99999999-and-so-on% of people out there, my friend didnāt know George Floyd or Derek Chauvin existed until a few weeks ago. But he paid part of the price for one manās death and anotherās flagrant actions. One has nothing to do with the other. Rioting and looting are not a way to be heard. In fact, for me personally, if you start to riot and loot, Iām going to call you a Viking and Iāll start to not listen to you. Itās, as the youth today say, ābasic.ā
I also donāt think humanity is as immature as a three-year-old, though given my above statement, I do think you could argue the case for some individuals!
My point with my last Happy Trails was first to assure Sun City residents that they had place in the Sun Day to have a voice. A place where readers/residents can be heard. While what you say may not make it into print, we do listen to EVERY thing that is said to us. Literally, EVERYTHING. Everything that comes into us by phone, email, or standard mail is read and considered, sometimes discussed, and certainly taken into print consideration. And if we can do something about āit,ā we will. Thatās a promise and thatās a guarantee. Itās how newspapers are supposed to operate.
Now, does that mean weāre on your side?
No. It does not. Because that would mean weāre bias, and while that may disappoint some, let me take a second to briefly explain why a newspaper picking sides (even the RIGHT side) is wrong.
Simply put, if you pick a side and only project that side, then you silence another and therefore lose knowledge and perhaps ultimately a lesson to be learned. A newspaper is also acting as judge and jury in matters such as this, and I donāt know about you, but more often than not, I donāt know whatās right. Iām not omnipotent. And I surely wonāt have any clue if I donāt hear both/all sides of an argument, even when the āwrongā seems obvious. We have trials and people are considered innocent until proven guilty for this reason.
Iāve been a journalist for over twenty years. I have literally held every position you can hold in a news organization, and if thereās one thing (or two things, I guess) Iāve seen time and time again itās that the truth, the REAL truth, is impregnable and will hold up to severe scrutiny. Itās also not malleable (the way some people describe it). And if you can manipulate it, youāre not getting the whole truth. And also people, if given the opportunity, will always hang themselves if they have something to be āhungā over, if you give them a chance to speak. Thereās absolutely no reason to interfere with bias. If you step aside and present all sides equally, the truth will come out.
My main point with my previous Happy Trails was that when you take a voice away from someone or limit his/her ability to speak, he/she will begin to plot. The right to be heard is our most basic and important right as humans, as people, as Americans. People do not like when that is taken away in any form.
When Iām not heard, I pick up a pen. When someone else isnāt heard, they may pick up a brick. One may seem tempered while the other more rash but that doesnāt mean one is less damaging than the other.