March 26, 2010
Rights Vs. Responsibilities

Posted by Jim Lichtman | What do you think?

The level to which anger-driven passion has risen in recent days has become yet another example of individuals who feel that their right to challenge any issue allows them to act in ways that are appallingly irresponsible.

From Representative Neugebauer shouting “baby killer” during a House session to the bricks thrown through the windows of political headquarters, the anger demonstrated by many has escalated from heated rhetoric to threats of violence.

Sadly, some people are so focused on rights that they forget about the corresponding responsibilities.  The right to free speech carries with it the responsibility to speak in a civil manner. The right to march in protest carries with it the responsibility to do so in a peaceful and respectful way.

The ethical value of responsibility, ethicist Michael Josephson affirms, “is about our ability to respond to circumstances and to choose the attitudes, actions, and reactions that shape our lives.”

Too many people have chosen to not only ignore common sense but common decency.

How can we claim to be “the land of the free” when individuals declare that their right to free speech includes calling a black congressman n****r?  Where is the exercise of responsibility for “the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances” when people curse and spit on another?

“Responsible people,” Josephson says, “not only depend on themselves but show others that they can be depended on. This breeds trust, and trust is a key that opens many doors.”

We need to demonstrate that kind of responsibility not only to each other, but more importantly, for the next generation of citizens.

Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.

Too many have fought and died for these principles and many more are fighting at this moment.

In his book, Man’s Search for Meaning, Holocaust survivor Viktor Frankl recommended that “the Statue of Liberty on the East Coast should be supplemented by a Statue of Responsibility on the West Coast.” His idea was that “Freedom is only part of the story and half of the truth. Freedom is but the negative aspect of the whole phenomenon whose positive aspect is responsibleness. In fact, freedom is in danger of degenerating into mere arbitrariness unless it is lived in terms of responsibleness.”

It’s time for all of us to act responsibly and be the example we wish for our kids.

 

 

  Reader Comments

Comments by Mark, New Hampshire, March 27, 2010

Well spoken.

Since you are not on talk radio and didn't defame anyone, will your words of wisdom be picked up? It seems that wisecracks are more valued than wisdom. Decency is the forgotten starting point. Not a show of decency but a belief that acting decently towards others is simply how one goes about doing things. How can you or I get the voice of decency back into the process? The lack of decency is shameful, but shame matters not these days.

Whatever the outcome on physical health that results from the new law - and since it will be tied up with deceipt, law suits, and worse for some time we may never really know - it is clear to me that this bill will be marked as a watershed for the further decline of American Political Health. As measured by the vitriole of what counts for public discourse (too few people with too much airtime spouting opinions not hindered by truth or fact), we are very, very sick.

We are upended someone has to be brave to show care and co  nsideration; I don't see such politicians on the federal scene. Instead, we have the weak - the ones who shout liar, baby killer, and racial epithets - and who are lauded by some as simply speaking their mind and the consequences be damned. Profanity gets more press than wise practice. What to do, what to do, what to do: writing about this seems to contribute next to nothing towards any kind of betterment. It is just talk. I am really stymied by the present state of things.

 

 
 
  HOME | about-jim | archives | articles | be-honest | books | excerpt | fame-shame | hero | quotes | suggested-links | Site Map | FAQ  
  copyright © 2010 Jim Lichtman