Our culture is a mess right now. Every day I read about or experience another
episode that tells me how this place is swirling straight down the toilet. And I also found the common denominator:
inconsideration.
Look at the two airline incidents where passenger squabbles
over reclining seatbacks were so severe, the flights had to be diverted and
landed. With the first one, a guy was
using a device designed to prevent the seatback in front of him from being
reclined.
Note: As a tall guy, I am completely on his
side. In fact, I think they should bring
out a model that has a taser setting built right into it. I’m completely sick of people jamming their
seats all the way back, so that my knees are trapped in place.
Anyway, my point is that the person in front, the recliner,
assumed it was her unalienable right to recline, regardless of rights of the
person behind her to maintain the minimal space he was assigned. “Me
first.”
Look at the problems I had at the Boston concert, (and
numerous other concerts and sporting events) where certain people claim because
they bought a ticket, they have the right to stand up whenever they please,
regardless of what’s going on around them.
They paid their money, so it’s “Me
first, screw you people behind me.”
Look at the myriad of traffic incidents that happen across
the country on an hourly (if not minute-ly) basis. People who don’t use blinkers, or who cut you
off in traffic, or who pull out right in front of you going 10 mph slower than
you were going are saying, “Me first,
screw you. I don’t have time to wait
five seconds for you to pass, but you can certainly wait behind me while I
drift along 5 mph under the speed limit.”
I’m convinced that the reason so few people use their turn
signal is that there’s nothing in it for them.
It’s all to benefit others, so why bother?
Look at the people riding public transportation, and take up
two seats on a crowded vehicle, with by lounging across both seats, or spreading
out their shit and daring you to say something.
“Screw you. I need a place for my giant bag far more than
you need to sit down after a long day.”
After which, they get on the escalator, pull up on the left
beside someone else, and stop, forcing everyone who has someplace to go or
little time to get there, to cool their heels while they enjoy the ride. “Screw
you. I don’t have to take a step to my
right and let you pass, because you need to dance to MY tune. In fact, I’m not even aware you’re there.”
Look at the retail experience, where customers abuse clerks
because they disagree with a price or the return policy, or clerks ignore
customers so they can finish a texting session with their BFFs. “Screw
you, my concerns are far more important than yours.”
If you look at it, most criminal activity has
inconsideration all over it. Theft,
violence, destruction of property… it’s all a big “Screw you.” They’re saying,
“I get to do what I want or take what I
want, no matter how badly it hurts or affects you.”
All of this is why we keep seeing stories in the news about
long “Pay it Forward” chains, 6-year old girls who raise money for animal shelters,
or other random good deeds… because they’re so rare. If it happened all the
time, in proportion to our population, it wouldn’t be noteworthy. When someone does something nice for someone
else, it goes against the grain of what our culture has become: a breed of people
obsessed with ourselves, and utterly convinced of our own inflated worth.
Now I’ll admit, I could be under the influence of the East
Coast Effect. I seem to remember people in
the Midwest looking out for one another a little more. Or, maybe that was just a different time.
So what’s next? Beats
the hell out of me. But I know we’d all
be a lot better off if we looked around once in a while, and cut the people
around us a break.
3 comments:
And what of the nine year old with an uzi who accidentally killed her instructor. Her parents weren't too concerned with consideration or manners, I fear.
I don't know that it was as much being inconsiderate as it was supremely stupid and reckless.
AMEN and hold the ammunition
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