opinion
Imagine walking downtown on a beautiful summer evening to meet some friends for dinner. Suddenly, an angry mob of protesters chases you down, surrounds you, and starts screaming at you! Because you are accompanying an elderly individual, you can only walk so fast.
The protesters keep you surrounded, shouting every step of the way. After a few minutes that seem like hours, you reach your destination and are finally able to escape the mob.
If that happened to you, would you defend the right of the protesters to do that?
That did happen to me and I shared that experience in both the Senate Judiciary Committee and on the Senate floor. But not, as some in the national media reported, in order for me to complain about noise or the act of protesting. It is just the opposite: I defended the right of the protesters to do what they did.
At the very heart of our republic is our constitution’s First Amendment, that protects the right of people to say what they want to say. Even if we are the target – even if we do not agree.
Shouting is just noise that gets tuned out
It is easy to champion someone’s First Amendment right when we are on their side. However, when we disagree, or when we are the object of protesters, we often become strangely silent about their rights. It is understandably difficult to defend someone yelling at you when you are surrounded by a mob.
After defending the protesters’ right to free speech, I pointed out one of life’s great lessons: if the goal is for meaningful dialogue to take place, shouting is not the way to achieve that goal.
Hear more Tennessee Voices: Get the weekly opinion newsletter for insightful and thought provoking columns.
In everyday life, there is nothing controversial about that statement. Most of us learn at an early age that shouting does not tend to accomplish our goals. Shouting will get us heard, but is anyone listening? Is a dialogue taking place? Are meaningful thoughts exchanged? Are ideas discussed? Are problems identified? Do solutions emerge? If not, the shouting is just noise; noise that is often tuned out, discarded, or ignored.
The right to speak does not guarantee that someone is listening.
We need to find ways to respect people who disagree with us
What does it take for one person to listen to another? We tend to listen to people we respect. My comments were part of a larger conversation involving a bill being presented by one of my Democratic colleagues.
The presenting Senator and I are on opposite ends of the political spectrum. Even so, we decided early on not to let our ideological differences prevent us from being friends; we respect each other.
Consequently, we listen to each other and have intellectually honest conversations. Sometimes we agree, sometimes we don’t. But our doors and our minds are open to each other.
Being surrounded by a mob was a tense and threatening situation. Even so, I absolutely defend a protester’s right to free speech. That said, how a protester uses that right will largely determine whether anyone is listening. Any voice loud enough can be heard, but isn’t the goal of protesting to have someone listen?
Tennessee state Senator Kerry Roberts, R-Springfield, chairs the Senate Committee for Government Operations, which provides legislative oversight of the State of Tennessee’s departments, agencies, boards, commissions, and councils.
"right" - Google News
September 11, 2020 at 05:03PM
https://ift.tt/3inj5cn
Protesters have a right to speak, but shouting won't get people in power to listen | Opinion - Tennessean
"right" - Google News
https://ift.tt/32Okh02
Bagikan Berita Ini
0 Response to "Protesters have a right to speak, but shouting won't get people in power to listen | Opinion - Tennessean"
Post a Comment