Will Braun in one of his classes at CMU, referred to something he called, “the darkness within.” And he wanted to take a peak at that darkness within each of us. No one is all sweetness and light. We all have some cruelty inside us. It is a part of us. Part of our nature.
Braun quoted a part of vicious attack on Charlie Kirk, a right-wing influencer much loved by the MAGA right particularly after he was shot. This is what the left-wing poster said about Kirk:
“He was an unrepentant racist, transphobe, homophobe, and misogynist who often wrapped his bigotry in Bible verses because there was no other way to pretend that it was morally right, as do many vile people.”
Braun asked us to consider what is the point of posting such a harsh diatribe about a dead man, who left behind a wife and children? I have to admit that when I read it, I agreed with it in large part, but acknowledged Braun had point. Braun said that “this was like posting, ‘God thank you for not making me like Charlie Kirk.’” Like the Pharisee Luke had talked about. Yet should I think the guy who posted this complaint about Charlie is dumb and thank God that I am not like him? That would be bad too. Superiority always comes natural to many of us, including me, sadly.
At the funeral for Charlie Kirk, his widow Erica said she forgave the man who killed her husband, the father of her children, who now don’t have a father. That is no small thing to forgive in such circumstances. Could I do it? Trump on the other hand, immediately said he could not do it. He hated his opponents. He wanted vengeance and fought hard for it against not just the killer but everyone on the side of the evil left.
It is so natural for many of us to be judgmental. That is why we have to work hard to control the judgments.
A good friend of mine often reminds me of that wonderful comic where Homer Simpson prayed “Please God help me go to church regularly so I can learn to be more judgmental.” A lot of non-Christians of course are just as judgemental. Sometimes it’s hard not to be judgemental. I admire those who can avoid it. I would like to be like them.
As Braun said, “she [Mrs. Kirk] looked like the American evangelical Barbie and there she is forgiving Charlie Kirk’s killer when it was clearly not aligned with the mood of the event.” That took courage and strength.
The American right, including of course, J.D. Vance and Stephen Miller were out for vengeance against the left, which they called justice. But she looked like a shallow right-winger, but was forgiving him. Could we do that? Did we have any right to feel superior to her? I would suggest no.
Polarization is easy; empathy is hard. Or as Will Braun said, “It’s easy for us to enjoy the militant backwardness of others.”
That darkness within can get pretty ugly.