Politics & Government
Family Feuds: Agreeing to Disagree

The most difficult conversations for most activists happen with family. Particularly with parents or aunts and uncles, and cousins who disagree with a politically progressive perspective. My parents and I stopped talking about world events long before they died. I think that is a fairly normal behavior choice — just stop talking. When I visit with cousins who live in red states or the red parts of blue states, I almost always try to avoid any discussion that could lead to conflict. And I think they do too.
On the other hand, such difficult discussions are sometimes hard to avoid. Late last fall I received a screed forwarded by a cousin who lives in one of those red places on the map about an issue I thought had long gone the way of most such topical conflicts: the President’s birth certificate. I knew this was still a hot issue in some quarters during the President’s reelection, I just had no idea anyone continued to talk about it. But there it was, demanding that four challenges to the authenticity of the president’s citizenship must be answered.
Usually I put these in the delete file. This time, I responded, but carefully.
“Oh,” I wrote, “I think this issue is a distraction from the real questions facing our country.”
She wrote back almost immediately, “And what might those questions be?”
Now I was stuck. I had clearly opened a box loaded with risk. So I had to think about the issues, choose carefully which ones to raise and frame them in a thoughtful manner that would not offend her and might actually elicit a dialogue. So I wrote these:
- How will we shift our behaviors and policies enough to survive, even thrive as global climate changes?
- How will we protect the world economy from a series of bubbles that collapse one after another, threatening everyone’s capacity to survive economically?
- How will we narrow the difference between extremely wealthy and extremely poor while rebuilding the middle so everyone can have a place to live, enough to eat and some kind of health care?
- How will we create enough work for everyone to have a life that meaningfully contributes to the human community and gives them a sense of personal worth?
I thought I had written these questions with enough blandness to elicit a measured response and without making my cousin angry or rigid or unresponsive. I also picked questions out of the many I could have asked that I thought were ones she might have reflected on. I was wrong. For a long while there was no response. Then a month or so later I received an email that apologized for not responding sooner and said that she was not going to answer – because if she did, I would know how “redneck” (her word) she was and would be the rest of her life.
I sent her a note back. “Oh, my dear cousin,” I wrote, “In my experience as a minister no one has to remain who they are now for the rest of their lives. The human heart has an infinite capacity for change.”
If I could have said it better or more kindly or more generously, I would have. But except for an obligatory Christmas card, I have heard nothing from her since. Which makes me sad. It also underscores the difficulty of discussing controversial issues with kin. Even online.

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