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A subtle eclipse, a reminder of what we’ve lost

20 Smoky Mountain News

Opinion A subtle eclipse, a reminder of what we’ve lost

As Lori and I walked our dog through the roads in our subdivision this morning before sunrise, Election Day, we hoped for no fog and no clouds so we could witness the lunar eclipse. It was indeed crystal clear, the stars were out, and for most of the walk we watched as the Earth’s shadow slowly moved across the full moon near the western horizon. It’s a subtle celestial show, the darker orange/yellow slowly covering the brighter yellow/white. Otherworldly.

The slight difference in color was surely noticeable and gorgeous, but totally unlike a total solar eclipse when the sun is blacked out by the moon.

Being a journalist and having been bombarded over the last couple months by election coverage, that concept of subtle differences was stuck in my head as I sat down to finish a column after our walk. As it turns out, what I’d started writing yesterday was put away for another week. I wanted to write about all the subtle differences in American political beliefs versus the chasm that exists over a handful of issues. How has that middle ground become so ignored and elusive, while the issues that divide are always front and center?

As a teen and young adult in the 1970s and 1980s, it seems the big political fights were over welfare and social programs, how much to spend on the military, what were the income tax rates that were fair for most Americans. There was much to agree on: most support the military, most are OK with paying our fair share of taxes, most are considerate and generous enough to support welfare for those in need, and most are not racists or bigots. Certainly the cultural issues were also important then, and there were hard-fought battles over race, drugs, guns, women’s rights, abortion, immigration, sexuality and more. But there was a middle, and it was seen as admirable and honorable to be able to compromise, to give in a little on one’s heartfelt beliefs, to sacrifice in order to reach common ground that kept the country moving forward. Now, cultural issues are center stage and it’s an all or nothing game. For instance, as we reported a couple of weeks ago, the safety net entitlement programs so important for most Americans could become a bargaining chip as Congress and the president argue over raising the debt ceiling. Truth is both parties have run deficits since the last balanced budget in the Clinton Administration. If you’re red, your party helped contribute to the deficit. If you’re blue, well, same thing; your party helped create the deficit.

Today, though, it’s what differentiates us that grabs all the headlines and fills the vacuum that is the internet. Now, even talk about secession and splitting the country has become — if not commonplace — at least a topic of conversation, one born out of the frustration of not being able to find shared values.

I often run into a long-time friend at the gym, and we exchange small talk. Just last week the subject turned to politics on the agenda. He’s a smart guy, is well read and up to date on news and politics.

“It might be OK if we just split the country up, give the Republicans part and Democrats parts. I mean, there just doesn’t seem to be any middle ground anymore,” he said.

We joked about how both sides would want some of the warm parts of the country and how that might shake out. It all sounds far-fetched, but Rich Lowry, editor of the conservative icon National Review, recently reported on a survey by the Center for Politics at the University of Virginia.

“That poll found that about 50 percent of Donald Trump voters and 40 percent of Joe Biden voters agreed to some extent with the proposition that the country should split up, with either red or blue states seceding,” Lowry wrote.

When this edition hits the streets on Wednesday, Nov. 9, we could be headed toward a crisis regarding election results that could turn up the heated rhetoric we’re all tired of hearing. If that happens no or during the 2024 presidential election, I’m just not sure what the future holds for the U.S.

Me, I’m thinking back to that eclipse, the oranges and yellows. So many hues mixing beautifully together. Perhaps leaders and the rest of us can recapture the middle, the give and take of politics, the subtle art of compromise with compassion. Perhaps. (Scott McLeod can be reached at info@smokymountainnews.com)

Scott McLeod Editor

We’ve got to control kudzu

To the Editor:

Whether we like it or not, tourism sustains a quality of life for all WNC residents. This tourism naturally comes from living in area with a bounty of visual beauty that people come to see and experience. Fall is just one great example of this visual beauty and is also one example of the economic lifeblood that tourism provides for WNC residents as people visit and spend money to see the fall leaves change.

This make me wonder what happens when our beautiful fall colors provided by the hardwood trees are increasingly overtaken and killed off by kudzu? Fall is the perfect time to see our region’s future given the exponential growth of kudzu. And what that future looks like is vast expanses of gray dying kudzu leaves which is not a pretty sight visually and hence not a pretty sight for the future our tourism-based economy.

However, when I mention kudzu to people who live here and people who represent us I often get a shrug of the shoulders as if it doesn’t matter or that a solution is not possible. Or, even worse from our elected officials, a lack of understanding of how important what an area looks like and its crucial connection to tourist wanting to visit an area.

I would like to think that as kudzu continues to spread exponentially with no action and overtakes views on the Blue Ridge Parkway, Smoky Mountains and Clingmans Dome and other major tourist sights that people will take action. If this is true, then why are we waiting?

Where are the elected representatives discussing and teaming up with conservation groups, universities, residents and the government to come up with solutions? I don’t see that happening and I refuse to believe that there are no answers from a country that could engineer a successful Coronavirus vaccine in under a year but can’t invent a kudzu herbicide or some other solution for the visual blight of kudzu? In closing, I don’t think there will be many people in the future coming to see kudzu leaves change to gray in WNC or drive the future renamed “Kudzu Parkway,” and that spells trouble for the residents of WNC. Tim Holloran Sylva

LETTERS

Air the laundry. The Smoky Mountain News encourages readers to express their opinions through letters to the editor or guest columns. All viewpoints are welcome. Send to Scott McLeod at info@smokymountainnews.com or mail to PO Box 629, Waynesville, NC, 28786

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