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Benjamin E. Sasse

Autor von The Vanishing American Adult

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Beinhaltet den Namen: Benjamin E. Sasse

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In The Vanishing American Adult, Sasse diagnoses the causes of a generation that can't grow up and offers a path for raising children to become active and engaged citizens. He identifies core formative experiences that all young people should pursue: hard work to appreciate the benefits of labor, travel to understand deprivation and want, the power of reading, the importance of nurturing your body―and explains how parents can encourage them.
Our democracy depends on responsible, contributing adults to function properly―without them America falls prey to populist demagogues. A call to arms, The Vanishing American Adult will ignite a much-needed debate about the link between the way we're raising our children and the future of our country.… (mehr)
 
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wpcalibrary | 17 weitere Rezensionen | May 29, 2024 |
Senator Ben Sasse laments the loss of grit, resilience, and initiative in the emerging generation of today's young people. Perpetual adolescence is now commonplace. Entitled, coddled, soft, and intellectually fragile seem like more accurate terms to describe today's rising youth. But Sasse is no outdated, finger wagging codger. While some find it easy to pick on younger generations for various foibles, Sasse notes that some of the fault lies with the older generations for failing to intentionally approach the shaping and training of younger generations.

Drawing from experience as a university president and current U.S. senator, Sasse outlines a handful of macro themes which have contributed to the current state of affairs. These include the indulgence of more material goods than ever before, an increase in age segregated environments, collapsing households, the moral hallowing of schooling, and a fraying of a national consensus on goals and ideals (ch. 1). His insights are historical and insightful. While part 1 highlights the passivity problem, part 2 looks at a prospective way forward. Sasse's script calls it an active program, contrasting with the passivity problem from chs. 1-3. His approach includes habits to cultivate in order to train up more rugged, hard-working, persevering young people. He churns out the next 170 pages delving into ideas such as fleeing age segregation, embracing work pain, consuming less, traveling, building a bookshelf, and making America an idea again.

Regardless of where one aligns along partisan lines, children are important, Sasse says. Once the goal of fully formed, vivacious, capable adults is agreed upon, solutions can be debated over. There is a far bigger divide in America between an engaged vs. unengaged citizenry than mere right vs. left. For a democracy to work, an engaged and informed citizenry is required. Sasse brings these points to light in his helpful postscript.

I really like a lot of things about this book and hope to champion some of the same ideals working as an educator.
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joshcrouse3 | 17 weitere Rezensionen | Sep 17, 2021 |
Watching the U.S. Capitol being under siege on January 6, 2021 by supporters of the outgoing President points out just how polarized our Country has become. Disputing election results is something which I think of as occurring in third world countries or emerging democracies, but not in modern, established democracies. The peaceful turnover of the Presidency had been, until this week, a hallmark of U.S. elections.

This recent election, and the fight to overturn the results got me wondering when and how did the United States become so politically polarized? Why does half the country believe that president-elect Biden won the election, and the other half remain convinced that the election was stolen from President Trump?

I recently found three books written in the past couple of years which look at how and when the U.S. became so polarized. The books are "The Red and the Blue: The 1990s and the Birth of Political Tribalism", by Steve Kornacki; Ezra Klein's book "Why We're Polarized"; and Republican Senator Ben Sasse's book "Them: Why We Hate Each Other - and How to Heal". Each looked at the causes of our current polarization, and each had a somewhat different take on the question. Kornacki looked at the influence Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich had on polarization in Congress starting around the 1990s. Ezra Klein had a somewhat broader look, pointing out how the switch of the Dixiecrats in the South from the Democratic Party to the G.OP after passage of Civil Rights legislation allowed the two political parties to better align ideologically. And Senator Sasse looks beyond one man or one group of politicians, and takes a broader view, examining how society has changed in the past 50 years. People, in his opinion, are becoming more isolated, more captive to social media and cable news - all of which is making voters more blind to similarities among friends, neighbors, and fellow Americans.

I can't say that any of these books totally answered the question about polarization conclusively, but each contains insights which helped me gain a better understanding of the issues. Unfortunately, none gave me the sense that polarization will diminish or politics will be getting less combative in the short term.

I initially considered trying to discuss all three books together, but because of the length that would take, I felt it was necessary to look at each one at a time. I'll starting here with "Them: Why We Hate Each Other - and How to Heal", by Nebraska Republican Senator Ben Sasse. He links the current political polarization to the changes in society over the past 50 years. Senator Sasse points out that instead of the close-knit society of the past, where neighbors knew neighbors, doors were left unlocked, etc., people today have become more isolated, more distracted by technology such as cell phones, cable TV, electronic games, etc. Personal connections and interactions are now done via twitter, facebook, ZOOM, and any number of other social media sources. We've become more isolated within those social media spheres, deal less with those outside our self-identified groups, and deal more and more only with like-minded people. We interact in person much less, whether through organizations like Elks Clubs or Rotary, or through organized activities such bingo nights, bowling leagues, etc. Today, there are less shared activities and more isolation.

With our busy lives and busy jobs, we find more and more reason to simply stay home. And while fifty years ago, staying home meant most people saw similar programming on their TVs, since most had only 3 or 4 stations, now we have hundreds to choose from. Previously, people saw the same shows and chatted around the water cooler about them with people they knew. Even if people disagreed about elements of the shows, the conversations were between and among people we knew, and it wasn't as easy to "hate" them if they held different beliefs or opinions. Today, with so many movies, cable shows, and streaming shows to watch, we're hearing and seeing much different forms of entertainment and news.

Another change is how people get their news. Fifty years ago, people watched Walter Cronkite on CBS, Huntly and Brinkley on NBC, or Frank Reynolds on ABC, and had their local newspapers. These news sources were from journalists who tried to give it to us straight and factual. Now, most people get their "news" from social media on their phones or tablets, supplemented by their favorite cable TV politicized commentators. You can select your personal programming from far left sources or far right sources, and never hear a contrary point of view. Sasse points out what most of us already know, e.g., that clicking on a particular news item on your laptop or tablet links you in to more similar "news" articles. Opening articles and sharing them with like minded family and friends makes you a good consumer of electronic media, and you're fed more and more similar articles by the computer algorithms. Before long, we're seeing and hearing more and more "news" stories from a particular perspective, sources which comfort us in our beliefs and feed our biases. Before long, we're only seeing information from one perspective, and sharing that with a small circle of like-minded friends and family. We become isolated in our own bubble, and people outside the bubble become "others", "them", and "not like us".

Sasse points out how group identity is important to us as humans, and we are protective of our groups. People not in our group are outsiders, wrong, and unwelcomed. Politically, we become more polarized simply because of our lifestyles and behaviors. He also emphasizes that as we consume a certain brand of news, we become less and less tolerant of other's perspectives. Cable news shows, by design, are meant to excite us, entertain us, reinforce our beliefs and biases, and demonize the other side. That's what gets people talking, e.g., "did you see what so-and-so just said on his program?" Sasse has criticisms of outlets from both the left and the right. He points out a number of instances in which liberal shows have ignored or downplayed news which favored a conservative position, but does admit and point out situations in which Conservative talk shows did the same about liberal positions. He also provides a nice explanation as to why so many conservatives have come to think of the media as being biased and "fake news".

He leaves us with a few thoughts, things which we all can consider, each simple steps. First, he points out the danger of adopting an "US" vs. "THEM" mentality. He gives a simple example of being a sports fan as an eight year old boy. Passions ran deep watching the home town football game playing against the cross town rivals. It was "us" vs. "them", and hostility in the air. That was the norm until he went to a Nebraska vs Utah State football game. Suddenly, his hated opponents from his cross-town rival's school were sitting with him in Nebraska red colors, jointly rooting for their team against their common opponent. It opened his eyes to the fact that he actually had a lot more in common with his cross-town neighbors than he thought. One lad, he became friends with, was actually an (oh the horrors) Oklahoma football fan. So he realized that "the other" can be much more like ourselves than we realize if we get to know them. Bears vs Packers; Yankees vs. Red Sox; Alabama vs. Auburn; Ohio State vs. Michigan; etc. shouldn't lead to fist fights in the stands, vandalizing cars in the parking lots, etc. Rivalries are OK, and can be good in motivating us to play better, work harder. But don't let less important differences swallow up the more important things we share. We're all Americans. We're neighbors. Getting spun up by media personalities on talk radio should make you stop and think. They have an agenda, and their program manager knows that outrage sells. Don't buy into that. Debating policy differences with someone makes sense. Demonizing your debate partner does not. Also, he points out, we need to stop holding political candidates on "our" side to lower standards than we expect from candidates on the "other" side. If your candidate has been committing election fraud, campaign financing offenses, sexual harassment, etc., you don't have to vote for the candidate simply because you habitually won't vote for the other party. Facts matter. Truth matters. Lying matters. Stop absolving bad actors on "our" side simply because you can't or don't want to vote for someone from the "other" side. And learn to separate fact based journalism from opinion commentary / entertainment.

Another reminder he offers is to put politics in its proper place. He talked about going on a fact finding mission as a Senator to Afghanistan with a member of the opposing political party. In the Senate, they didn't agree much on policy positions, But in a war zone, they found that they weren't so different in many ways. Soldiers in war zones, when you need each other to survive, can find out that you're not so different after all, regardless of which political party you belong to. He advises us to look at what's important, commonality, shared values. Another worthwhile tip is to read George Washington's Farewell Address and what he said about Political Parties. I Googled it, and felt it was well worth reading. It complements Sasse's book very nicely.

And lastly, another take-away is get out and get involved in your community. Volunteer, join a local club or organization, get engaged. Introduce yourself to your new neighbor down the hall or across the street. It's good for you, and good for your community. If you interact more with others in your community, you may find that they're not all that different from you. Log off of Facebook, put away cell phone, take a walk outside, and get to meet your neighbors. Prioritize the important things - be a more involved parent, spouse, partner, or neighbor. Political party shouldn't be the main thing we're concerned with. There is dignity in all people. Policy divides are not most important thing, and taken to extremes can lead to events such as what just occurred when protesters took over the Capitol. People, spouses, parents, friends died.

One item Senator Sasse mentioned, and this may not be something each of us can or will do, did prove beneficial. He mentioned two individuals from opposing parties who agreed to listen to a political entertainment show from the other side, e.g., a progressive / liberal listened to Fox talk shows for a week, and the conservative listened to MSNBC talk shows for a week. When this happened, both individuals had a better understanding of the others' position, and both ended up watching much less political talk shows.

So, as mentioned above, while Steve Kornacki's book "The Red and the Blue" and Ezra Kline's book "Why We're Polarized" give insights as to how society today became much more polarized, Senator Ben Sasse's book "Them: Why We Hate Each Other - and How to Heal" looks at the question from a more personal viewpoint. He concludes with practical ideas which are well worth doing, even if it had nothing to do with politics or polarization. They are good for the individual, and good for the community. And if they help bring people together and make liberals and conservatives more understanding, more compassionate, so much the better.
… (mehr)
 
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rsutto22 | 7 weitere Rezensionen | Jul 15, 2021 |
This was a generally well researched and written book. I didn’t agree with the author in many of his conclusions but the path that he took to reach them was clear. And despite his prominent position as a Republican Senator, he avoids proscribing solutions based on political grounds.
 
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jugglebird | 17 weitere Rezensionen | Feb 18, 2021 |

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