Etienne
A-List Customer
- Messages
- 473
- Location
- Northern California
I'd like to hear some comments on the long-standing social maxim to avoid speaking of religion and politics in polite conversation. It seems to me that those two things undergird our entire social context; our beliefs concerning both of them determine how we act privately and corporately and lay the foundation for our most important decisions. I understand, of course, that the concern is that people will not behave properly while addressing such subjects--and certainly we see evidence of that all the time. Guidelines, such as respect for the opinion of others and refraining from being hostile, are mandatory for these discussions to take place and it seems that we have lost this art along the way. Sometimes I wonder if we become hostile because our beliefs on either or both of the topics are more impassioned than reasoned, and we find it difficult to articulate why we embrace them. If we ARE able to articulate and support our reasoning, and we ARE able to be gracious and respectful to others, I cannot think of a good reason we should not engage in such discussions. To avoid them creates a void, in my opinion, in important, relative, civilized discourse. Any thoughts...?