What the Hell Happened to Us?

 

What the Hell Happened to Us? A Common-Sense Look at the Mess We’ve Made

Let’s be honest: something feels wrong in the world today. You can turn on the news — left, right, center, whatever — and it all sounds like one big shout-fest where everyone’s more interested in “owning” the other side than actually fixing anything. Somewhere along the line, politics turned into a full-contact sport, and the rest of us regular people are stuck in the stands wondering who the hell the game is even for anymore.

And here’s the part nobody wants to admit: both sides love to point fingers, but neither one seems very interested in actually making life better for the people they claim to represent. The “team sports” mentality has gotten so bad that half the time, people aren’t even voting for what’s best — they’re voting for whatever upsets the other team the most. That’s not leadership. That’s not public service. That’s pettiness dressed in a suit and tie.

Somewhere in all this, we forgot something important: we’re supposed to be a republic, not a pure democracy.
Let me break that down real simple — no textbook needed.

A democracy is basically: whoever has the most votes wins everything all the time.
A republic is: the people elect representatives who are supposed to use their brains, listen to their communities, and make thoughtful decisions — not just rubber-stamp whatever their party tells them to.

In a republic, leaders are supposed to think. In a democracy, leaders just follow the crowd.
Right now? Feels like we’re not getting much thinking from anybody.

Kids don’t recite the Pledge in a lot of schools anymore, and honestly, that’s one of those things people can argue about all day. But it does raise a bigger point: somewhere along the line, we stopped having shared values. We used to at least agree that we were Americans — even if we couldn’t agree on anything else. Today, we treat each other like opponents instead of neighbors.

And faith? That’s gotten complicated too. We’ve gone from “freedom of religion” to “everyone walk on eggshells.” People should be able to practice their faith without getting side-eyed — and that goes for Christians, Muslims, Jews, atheists, everyone. Somehow we turned “respect everyone” into “be afraid to express anything.” That’s not progress; that’s confusion.

Then there’s the whole situation with kids and identity and who gets to make decisions at what age. Here’s the part that should be common sense but seems to get lost in translation: kids are kids. A five-year-old can barely decide what cereal they want for breakfast without changing their mind halfway through the bowl. If a kid asked to drink beer or get a tattoo, every adult in America would shout “absolutely not,” and probably at the same time. So maybe we should slow down on expecting little kids to understand life-changing decisions before they can even tie their shoes.

We’ve gotten so caught up in trying not to hurt anyone’s feelings that we stopped asking the simplest question: Is this actually good for the child? That should always be the starting point — no politics needed.

What’s wild is that we’ve built a society where everyone is terrified of being the “bad guy,” so instead of having honest conversations, we just whisper our real thoughts, nod along in public, and silently hope nobody asks us what we actually believe. And when people do speak up, half the country jumps down their throat before they’ve even finished a sentence.

Somewhere along the way, “being included” turned into “don’t upset anybody ever,” and that’s not realistic. You can’t make rules based only on the loudest groups. You also can’t ignore people just because they’re in the majority. We’re supposed to find balance — not swing the pendulum so far in one direction that nobody knows what normal even looks like anymore.

And here’s the kicker: we are all part of the problem. Every single one of us. We scroll, we argue online, we vote for “our team,” we distrust our neighbors, and we assume anyone who disagrees with us must be stupid, evil, or brainwashed. That attitude has poisoned us more than any politician ever could.

The truth is simple:
We don’t listen anymore.
Not to each other. Not to people with different views. Not even to common sense.

If we ever want things to get better, we’ve got to quit acting like enemies. We need leaders who stop voting down party lines and actually represent the people who elected them. We need schools that teach kids how to think, not what to think. We need adults to act like adults so kids can actually have a childhood. And we need to quit treating disagreement like a personal attack.

Because at the end of the day, the world isn’t falling apart because one side or the other “won.”
It’s falling apart because somewhere along the line, we forgot how to work together.

Maybe — just maybe — it’s time to remember.

 

Jason Hills

Comments

  1. I forget sometimes how smart you are. Great read brother. Miss you.

    ReplyDelete
  2. You are not wrong. I love the openness and not pushing an agenda from one side or another.

    ReplyDelete

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