What would happen if we all took Spencer Cox’s advice? What if we turned off social media and worked together to solve our common challenges?

About the only thing I’ve heard in the two weeks since Charlie Kirk’s assassination that has made much sense to me was Utah Governor Spencer Cox’s encouragement to “log off, turn off, touch grass, hug a family member, and go out and do good in your community.” Wise words. So much of the rest of what passes for public discourse in America today assaults our senses.
Out here in normie-land, we do not want a civil war. We vigorously renounce political violence and its encouragement — period. We wish that political leaders of all stripes — but honestly, especially the hard right and all the “near-right” leaders who have been sucked into that vortex — would just put down their swords and work together to solve the grave problems we face. Those of us on the left are not members of a cabal of child-eating America-haters; those of us on the right are not fascist Hitler wannabes.
Who are we? We are most of the country, and by a very wide margin. But you would never know that from a glance at social media or even the pages of this newspaper. What would happen if we all took Cox’s advice? What if we turned off social media and worked together to solve our common challenges? What if we elected leaders who genuinely felt the same way and acted on that impulse?
Andy Calkins
Gloucester
Source: Utah News