TIME Magazineさんのインスタグラム写真 - (TIME MagazineInstagram)「"Us vs. Them" thinking is tearing America apart, writes Madeleine Albright, a former U.S. Secretary of State. But she's still hopeful about the future. "In today’s not-so-United States, we must acknowledge that our divisions extend far beyond matters of political affiliation to include religion, race, gender, education, ethnicity, sexual orientation, and urban vs. rural. Confronted by this reality, many citizens are tempted either to retreat more deeply into their respective group identities or to insist piously that such categories are irrelevant and should not matter. Neither approach works," Albright writes. "Exacerbating our differences is one road to disaster; denying them is another. Instead of fantasizing about a harmony that is out of reach, we should focus on ensuring that our inevitable disagreements lead whenever possible to constructive outcomes. Democracy was designed to aid such a process, based on the premise—severely tested in recent years—that voters will ultimately prefer builders to bullies and healers to heels. Read more at the link in bio. In this Jan. 15 photograph: Roses on the fence that surrounds the Capitol in Washington, D.C. Photograph by @gdemczuk」1月16日 8時25分 - time

TIME Magazineのインスタグラム(time) - 1月16日 08時25分


"Us vs. Them" thinking is tearing America apart, writes Madeleine Albright, a former U.S. Secretary of State. But she's still hopeful about the future. "In today’s not-so-United States, we must acknowledge that our divisions extend far beyond matters of political affiliation to include religion, race, gender, education, ethnicity, sexual orientation, and urban vs. rural. Confronted by this reality, many citizens are tempted either to retreat more deeply into their respective group identities or to insist piously that such categories are irrelevant and should not matter. Neither approach works," Albright writes. "Exacerbating our differences is one road to disaster; denying them is another. Instead of fantasizing about a harmony that is out of reach, we should focus on ensuring that our inevitable disagreements lead whenever possible to constructive outcomes. Democracy was designed to aid such a process, based on the premise—severely tested in recent years—that voters will ultimately prefer builders to bullies and healers to heels. Read more at the link in bio. In this Jan. 15 photograph: Roses on the fence that surrounds the Capitol in Washington, D.C. Photograph by @gdemczuk


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