• Skip to main content
  • Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
  • About Us
  • Contact
  • Advertising
  • Join PGM
Pepperdine Graphic

Pepperdine Graphic

  • News
    • Good News
  • Sports
    • Hot Shots
  • Life & Arts
  • Perspectives
    • Advice Column
    • Waves Comic
  • GNews
    • Staff Spotlights
    • First and Foremost
    • Allgood Food
    • Pepp in Your Step
    • DunnCensored
    • Beyond the Statistics
  • Special Publications
    • 5 Years In
    • L.A. County Fires
    • Change in Sports
    • Solutions Journalism: Climate Anxiety
    • Common Threads
    • Art Edition
    • Peace Through Music
    • Climate Change
    • Everybody Has One
    • If It Bleeds
    • By the Numbers
    • LGBTQ+ Edition: We Are All Human
    • Where We Stand: One Year Later
    • In the Midst of Tragedy
  • Currents
    • Currents Spring 2025
    • Currents Fall 2024
    • Currents Spring 2024
    • Currents Winter 2024
    • Currents Spring 2023
    • Currents Fall 2022
    • Spring 2022: Moments
    • Fall 2021: Global Citizenship
    • Spring 2021: Beauty From Ashes
    • Fall 2020: Humans of Pepperdine
    • Spring 2020: Everyday Feminism
    • Fall 2019: Challenging Perceptions of Light & Dark
  • Podcasts
    • On the Other Hand
    • RE: Connect
    • Small Studio Sessions
    • SportsWaves
    • The Graph
    • The Melanated Muckraker
  • Print Editions
  • NewsWaves
  • Sponsored Content
  • Digital Deliveries
  • DPS Crime Logs

Rogue Wave: Civilians lose their civility

November 3, 2012 by Ben Holcomb

As you must know by now, an important election is taking place in a few short days. In the weeks leading up to this historic event, your normal, opinion-less friends have probably turned into insufferable champions of issues you can only pretend to comprehend.

“Lilly Ledbetter? More like ‘Really LedWorst Thing Ever’ … no, but seriously I have no idea what that is.”

These past three years have been a wonderful de-militarized zone of policy discussions, everyone going about their days grumbling to themselves instead of spewing their venom onto others. But this is an election year, and it seems we have no time for civility with so much on the line.

I won’t tell you whom I’m voting for because I’m a journalist and need to remain objective. What I will say is that I think we’ve bastardized the entire political process by taking up sides like our candidates are contestants in “The Hunger Games.” When the debates are in progress, Twitter and Facebook blow up with cries of “Fight! Fight! Fight!”

Any time one of the candidates has a gaff, supporters from the embarrassed party work tirelessly to dig up dirt on the other guy that is equally or more damning. Half my friends are convinced an elongated Obama presidency will result in America turning into a 3,000 mile, smoldering crater where life can no longer exist. The other half believes the same to be true about Romney.

Don’t you think we’re all overreacting just a little bit? I don’t mean to imply the election of a president isn’t a significant decision we all must take time to think about. But I am saying that the way we’re going about it all, when you distance yourself from the vortex, is a little absurd.

I don’t know  President Barack Obama, but I can almost promise you he doesn’t want America to fall into a massive, metaphorical sinkhole. I’m sure Mitt Romney truly thinks his plan for America will result in a better life for everyone. Sure, anyone who has the thought come into their mind that they should be the leader of the free world, and then goes through with it, is a little insane, but that’s the nature of the beast.

I think we’d all be best served to realize both these men are vying to become our president. So treating the race like a fight to the death between Gandalf and the Dark Lord Sauron (whichever side you stand on) isn’t helping anyone.

It’s ok to have an opinion, but every four years we segregate ourselves into two snotty groups of adolescents who just trash the other group and laugh at how absurd and ridiculous their viewpoints are.

One of these men will be president, but the world will continue to turn. Four years from now we’ll all be having the same discussions, arguing about the “good old days of 2012.” We’ll get through this. We always do.

So by all means, converse with your friends in the days leading up to the election. But — I don’t know — maybe picture them as something other than a Dementor when they’re explaining their view on abortion.

Filed Under: Life & Arts

Primary Sidebar

Categories

  • Featured
  • News
  • Life & Arts
  • Perspectives
  • Sports
  • Podcasts
  • G News
  • COVID-19
  • Fall 2021: Global Citizenship
  • Everybody Has One
  • Newsletters

Footer

Pepperdine Graphic Media
Copyright © 2025 · Pepperdine Graphic

Contact Us

Advertising
(310) 506-4318
peppgraphicadvertising@gmail.com

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Twitter
  • YouTube
(310) 506-4311
peppgraphicmedia@gmail.com
Student Publications
Pepperdine University
24255 Pacific Coast Hwy
Malibu, CA 90263
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Twitter
  • YouTube