… I’d give it to you.
So goes the phrase, often expressed and laughed over.
The only problem is … it’s not funny anymore.
I’ve found myself in a few interesting debates as of late, discussing some heated subjects with others.
What I have found interesting is that in many of these debates, there were a couple of things prevalent:
1. There was anger on the part of the other person (sometimes a lot more than the subject warranted)
2. There weren’t a whole lot of facts being used to defend the other person’s position, just the afore mentioned emotion.
I found this intriguing and puzzling (and frustrating, to be honest) to observe until one person finally enlightened me yesterday when he said:
You have no right to say this.
It finally hit me.
We weren’t taking opposite sides in the debate I thought I was participating in.
I was in fact, defending my right to have a contrary opinion at all.
I just didn’t realize it and hence I had brought the wrong facts to the table.
Many cultures in the world have developed and flourished because of the open exchange of ideas. Such exchanges are often passionate and sometimes anger filled as people agree and disagree. However, we have always embraced the right to the exchange and we grow as a result of it.
When we lose the ability to explore all sides of something, when a particular side is automatically right “just because”, then one of the foundational elements of our culture is lost.
And as with any structure, when the foundation falls, the structure won’t stand for long.
Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi once told Americans that if they disagreed with national healthcare then they were un-American.
President Obama recently told a number of college students to stop paying attention to social media as the opinions being circulated around were creating too much confusion.
That is their opinion.
However, the truth is that your opinion matters also.
So does mine.
And when we embrace this belief, we embrace making something better.
Any idea that is properly debated will be stronger as a result of the vetting and exploration process.
I would rather my idea be made stronger through such a process or proven that it is a bad idea, so that I can abandon it before I waste too much of my time or someone else’s.
What do you think - do you agree or disagree?
Or do you think I’m not entitled to my opinion at all? :-)
In service and servanthood.
Harry
To see my detailed version of “If I Wanted Your Opinion ….”, please click here.
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