We must set aside our preconceived notions and biases
Some things are just foolish. There’s an old Jim Croce song that lists a few examples:
“You don’t tug on Superman’s cape. You don’t spit into the wind. You don’t pull the mask off the old Lone Ranger.” And, as the song chorus continues, “You don’t mess around with Jim.”
But I’d like to add to that list, “You don’t try to make sense of City Councilman James Green’s rantings.”
Oh, I know, that may not be the right approach either.
For example, in Stephen Covey’s bestselling book, “The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People,” Habit number 5 is, “Seek first to understand, then to be understood.” The principle here is that by empathically listening to one another, we create an atmosphere of caring and positive problemsolving, whereby the other person then reciprocates the listening, and a win-win outcome can be achieved. In other words, if we just understood one another better, we would all be happier with one another.
But when the Rev. (and Council President) James Green says, during a Shreveport City Council meeting
that, “We, as black folks, we ain’t ever messed nothing up. We’ve never
messed it up. What you see in the city is not because you had a history
of four blacks (on the city council) who messed this up,” you have to
wonder how there could ever be “winwin” outcome with him or an
“atmosphere of caring” if all he really sees is your skin color?
There
can’t be. If we are unwilling to set aside our preconceived notions and
biases to create space for another person’s perspective (without
blaming them), there can be no greater understanding of one another. If
we cannot acknowledge we’re all infallible, that our knowledge is
limited, and that we may not have all the facts, we cannot build bridges
or find solutions that otherwise would have remained buried. It’s a
reminder that personal and community growth stems from a willingness to
evolve, learn and adapt.
And
no, that doesn’t mean erasing our convictions, but expanding our
horizons, because at the end of the day, we all have much more in common
with one another than not.
Where we are as a community is not because of “black folks” (as he put it). And it’s not because of “white folks” either.
For some reason (or maybe no reason at all), the Rev.
Green doesn’t want us to be reminded of what we have in common because
he is still dividing us all up in the most uncivilized, elementary and
ignorant way: by our skin color (and, as Green is a reverend, that
really makes no sense, as I’m pretty sure St. Peter doesn’t have two
lines formed at the gates of heaven based on skin color).
Even
with that said, Councilman Green is right about one thing: Where we are
as a community is not because of “black folks” (as he put it). And it’s
not because of “white folks” either.
It’s
because we’ve elected men and women whose ideas weren’t the right ones
for too long, and we’re worse off for it. Good ideas don’t have wings.
They don’t just take off. They require leadership abilities to bring
them to fruition, and far too many of our elected officials haven’t had
it in them despite their arguably good intentions.
Many
didn’t have the temperament to concentrate on large-scale
organizational change. They weren’t secure enough in their own beliefs
to deliver the changes needed because they folded when faced with almost
any political resistance to those changes.
And look, leadership is not for everyone, but we don’t have to elect them into office, either.
According
to Fortune magazine, 70% of CEOs fail because they cannot execute. They
don’t get things done, are indecisive and don’t follow
through. And yet, we keep electing these same types of folks
(irrespective of skin color) to lead our communities and country, year
after year.
I
know, I know, these politicians tell us how they are “working for us,”
that “now is our time” and that “our children deserve better.” They tell
us how our streets will be
safer, our schools will be better, garbage pick-up will be on time, our
water bills will be accurate, and our future will be brighter. And many
times, we fall for the rhetoric without any reward.
But
Councilwoman Ursula Bowman perhaps said it best: “Every single time
it’s not about black and white, sometimes it’s about wrong or right.”
And too much of what’s been going on has been wrong.
Rev.
Green, consider that maybe what we see in this city isn’t the result of
the color of skin, but the content of character – and the competency –
of those “certain persons” we’ve been foolishly electing (and
re-electing) for too many years now.
Louis
R. Avallone is a Shreveport businessman, attorney and author of “Bright
Spots, Big Country, What Makes America Great.” He is also a former aide
to U.S. Representative Jim McCrery and editor of The Caddo Republican.
His columns have appeared regularly in 318 Forum since 2007. Follow him
on Facebook, on Twitter @louisravallone or by e-mail at louisavallone@mac.com, and on American Ground Radio at 101.7FM and 710 AM, weeknights from 6-7 p.m., and streaming live on keelnews.com.