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Things we can agree on

TRAVERSE CITY — Last week, I asked readers to send me examples of things, no matter how basic, that most people, no matter who they are, can agree on.

I did this for me. I’ve been truly dispirited lately about how angry and divided the country seems to be right now – more so than any time in my adult life. (I was a kid in the ’60s – that seemed worse.)

We, of course, don’t agree on politics. People seem to have flocked to the fringes and don’t seem terribly inclined to come back to the center, where compromise lives.

Maybe that’s not surprising. The internet has brought us wonderful things. Think of it: the entirety of human knowledge is right there in the cell phone in the palm of your hand. It’s amazing.

But it’s also fractured us as a society. We don’t watch the same TV shows anymore. We don’t read the same newspapers. (No wonder we don’t agree on politics – we’re all singing from different hymnals.) We don’t listen to the same music. We don’t consume the same anything anymore.

So what is there to talk about then?

Viva la difference? Yeah, sure. I’m all for everyone marching to the beat of their own drummer, but there’s something to be said for having things in common with everyone else.

That’s what I was looking for with my request – just something, anything, that we can more or less agree on.

In response, Carole C. said, “Summer is here, fall is next, then winter and spring. Can you agree to that?”

Yup, I can. It’s not much, but it’s a start. And that’s what we need – a start, a baseline of things that are truly inarguable.

Marshall B. says this qualifies: “Ex-Lax in the PM yields a BM in the AM.”

Um, OK, I think we can all agree that’s funny but crude. Thanks, Marshall. I needed that. Not ExLax. I mean the joke.

C.B. says the following are inarguably true:

1) “We all need to belong to some kind of subset, either a tribe, a group or a club. This primal need transcends culture.”

2) “We are most likely to welcome different ideas and cultures when it comes to us in the form of new foods or music. Our senses are designed to reward novelties in the form of nutrition and entertainment.”

3) “None of this current political discord is new. It ebbs and flows in predictable cycles. This climate of juvenile bantering will pass.”

I agree. But could we hasten its passing by finding common ground? I think so. And I suspect a lot of you do, too.

Ann P. says she knows where the common ground lies for Michiganders: 1) Nothing beats a good hot dog in the summer, especially a Flint-style Coney; 2) The Detroit Lions need ownership to support a winning team; 3) You can’t beat a long summer evening around a campfire in Michigan; 4) Freedom and the right to vote; 5) Ice cream cones on a warm summer day; 6) The look of pure joy and wonder on a child’s face as he/she learns a new skill.”

Let’s keep this going. Please send me your list of things you think we should all agree on. No politics, please. Send them to andrewhellercolumn@gmail.com.

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Andrew Heller, an award-winning newspaper columnist, appears weekly in the Daily Press. He graduated from Escanaba Area High School in 1979. Follow him at andrewheller.com and on Facebook and Twitter. Write to him via email at andrewhellercolumn@gmail.com.

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