No Politics Today … How ‘Bout Some Kindness?

I think that Robert Hubbell’s column from yesterday is something we could all benefit from, not only on this Labour Day holiday but every day …


Practicing civility and kindness on Labor Day.

September 2, 2023

By Robert Hubbell

No politics today. Just a plea to practice civility and kindness toward workers over Labor Day Weekend—and all year round.

          I wrote yesterday about Joe Biden’s kindness in phoning his friend Mitch McConnell after the Senate Minority Leader suffered a second “freezing episode.” That story generated many comments and emails, including one from reader Bronwyn F., who linked to a Harvard Business Review Study on increasing incivility toward “frontline workers.” See Christine Porath in Harvard Business Review, Frontline Work When Everyone Is Angry |  Incivility on the Front Lines of Business.

          The article describes the author’s studies showing that incivility is on the rise everywhere, but especially toward frontline workers. The reasons are obvious. Stress. Partisan politics. Covid. Technology. Social Media. Weakened family and societal ties. Increasing wealth gap. Lack of self-awareness.

          The article addresses the challenges faced by employers and employees in an environment where customers are increasingly uncivil and rude. The article will raise your self-awareness and I recommend it. The author concludes on this hopeful note:

Incivility is contagious. Fortunately, civility’s power to spread is just as great.

          As we enter the Labor Day Weekend, it is an appropriate moment for self-reflection about where we are as a nation in our treatment of workers. The pandemic recession was hard on everyone, but especially on frontline workers who deal with frustrated, unhappy, stressed customers who have exhausted their emotional reserves. Joe Biden’s kindness and civility in phoning a political opponent to express concern and empathy is a good model for us all.

           If we can muster the ability to be civil to frontline workers, that would be a vast improvement in the daily life of our nation. But we can go one step further. We can be kind—not only to workers, but to friends, family, and complete strangers.

          Here are two of my favorite examples, both from my wife (a.k.a. Managing Editor). Whenever we are driving on city streets and she sees workers laboring in the hot sun to repair roads, pick up trash, reconnect utilities, etc., she tells me to slow down and then rolls down her window. She waves to the workers and says something like, “Thanks for your service! The streets look great! Thanks for working on such a hot day.” The workers always wave back and smile, surprised that someone noticed and appreciated their work.

          A second example: When we walk into a restaurant and my wife sees an elderly woman sitting by herself, my wife approaches the woman and compliments her on something she is wearing. “Love that necklace! What a pretty top! Great shoes.” It is a small gesture that is not about clothes or jewelry. It is about paying attention to someone who is sitting alone in a restaurant. You can imagine the boost to the spirit of the person who thought she was invisible but suddenly feels noticed.

          When we approach frontline workers at retail establishments, medical facilities, and government offices, we frequently look through them as if they are not there. We are like heat-seeking missiles, locked on our targets: Acquire food, buy goods, obtain services, and leave. But those workers are just like the people they serve—struggling to make it through the day in a world that is becoming increasingly mean-spirited. They, too, are exhausted, frustrated, and stressed. They work at minimum wage jobs to pay for school, provide for their families, or scrape by in a world that dealt them an unfair hand.

          So, on this Labor Day weekend, let’s make an extra effort to be civil and kind to those workers who won’t get a vacation day on Labor Day. They showed up to work to serve you so that your life could be safe, healthy, convenient, and happy. Thank them for showing up to work on a national holiday!

          This Labor Day, go out of your way to be civil and kind to the workers in your life. And while you are at it, consider doing the same for family, friends, and complete strangers—just like Joe Biden would. Our nation will be a better place for it.

On Respect and Kindness – Redux #2

This is a post that I first published on November 3, 2016, five days before the presidential election.  It was a plea for people not to let their political differences come between friends and family, not to allow ourselves to devolve into something less than a civil society.  I re-published this post last October, two weeks before the mid-term elections.  Today, I am posting it again, because something specific made me remember it.

Donald Trump bemoans the fact that he is not respected.  In truth, he isn’t even respected by his own followers, though they would likely deny that.  They adore him, they cheer for him, they will gladly rip to shreds his perceived ‘enemies’, but they do not respect him.  What Trump fails to realize, and this is important, is that you cannot dictate respect.  Respect must be earned.  Let me just repeat that, for it is the most relevant sentence in this post.  Respect must be earned.

There are a multitude of ways in which one earns respect.  Being kind and compassionate.  Being intelligent.  Making wise and rational decisions.  Being honest.  Being a person who keeps their word.  Putting the needs of others before one’s own needs.  Being generous.  Caring more about people than money or material possessions.  Donald Trump does none of the above, and thus is neither respectable nor respected.

It is a misconception that being wealthy or powerful automatically entitles a person to respect.  Trump has both wealth and power, but he uses neither wisely, uses neither in such a way as to earn respect.

You do not gain respect by calling people nasty names.  You do not earn respect by screeching foul language.  You do not gain respect by treating children as wild dogs, isolating them in cages without basic necessities.  You don’t deserve respect for referring to anybody who has the temerity to disagree with you as “the enemy”.  You do not get respect by telling lies.  And you do not become respected simply because you demand it.

And so, I have dug up this old post, once again.


“This world of ours… must avoid becoming a community of dreadful fear and hate, and be, instead, a proud confederation of mutual trust and respect.” – Dwight D. Eisenhower

“I’m not everybody’s cup of tea. But sometimes criticism can be hurtful. Be respectful. I’m a good piano player, I can sing well, I write good songs. If you don’t like it, fair enough. But give me a break.” – Elton John

sad-turltleI was plugging away, working on the post for runner up Idiot of the Year Ted Nugent, when something went SNAP in my mind and I knew I had to write this post for this afternoon.  No worries, you will read all about Mr. Nugent tomorrow, but for today I need to talk about respect and kindness, or lack of, as it were.

cracked-shellIt is only Thursday, and already this week I have, either directly or indirectly, been called ignorant, thin-skinned, dumb, uneducated, a freak, a f—ing liar, and more.  Now, admittedly I take a strong stand on certain issues, and pull few punches in my writing, so I expect a certain amount of rancor.  I have a pretty tough shell, but there is a straw that breaks even the sturdiest camel’s back, and I am increasingly disturbed by the extent to which some are allowing the rhetoric of this election drive their own behaviour.

At the end of the day on November 8th, long after the votes have been tallied and a winner declared, there will still be life on earth.  Our day-to-day routines will not change, we will still have our families to take care of, jobs to attend to, meals to cook and homes to clean.  We will still need our friends and neighbors.  But at the rate we are going, will we have friends left?  Make no mistake, this election is very important and it is understandable that people are vociferously defending the candidate of their choice.  But I think this can be done without name-calling, without slurs directed toward individuals.  If not then we are less humane than even I thought, and I tend to be cynical about human nature to begin with.

respect-1I know I am not alone in saying that I have lost friends over this election, friends whom I have known for years.  I can say ‘good riddance’, but my heart remains sad.  Are we truly such shallow beings that we are willing to directly insult others just to make our point?  Can we not find ways to explain why we support our candidate without calling the other person ‘stupid’?  Are we truly not the same people we were two years ago, or were these traits always there, merely lying dormant waiting for the right catalyst? If we cannot converse, cannot share ideas without being verbally assaulted, insulted, and screamed at, what does that say about us as human beings?

The ability to have a respectful, engaged, and informed conversation about politics is essential for a society that prizes the ideals of liberty and freedom. It was what the framers of the Constitution intended when they wrote the document to be short and understandable by farmers and tradesmen throughout the thirteen states.  But the conversations I see today, the screeching, name-calling, ugly talk is more reminiscent of 1930s Nazi Germany where neighbor turned on neighbor, friend on friend.

The candidates in this election, one in particular, appear to have ‘inspired’ Americans to act in this manner, to call people names, to insult others and hurt their feelings.  One of my great fears is that long after these candidates have left public office, long after you and I have left this earth, this attitude of cruelty and disrespect will remain, will, in fact, have become the norm.

I cherish my friends and family, and do not take them lightly.  That said, I have a greater need for self-respect than I do the respect of others. You do not have to agree with me for me to like you.  You do not have to vote as I do, like the same foods as I do, or even put your socks on the same way I do.  But the one thing you must do is treat me with respect, for when you call me ignorant, my self-respect will no longer allow me to be your friend.  It’s as simple as that.  And you know the funny thing about self-respect?  We each have to live with ourselves 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.  We have to listen to ourselves, our consciences, at 2:00 a.m. when we cannot sleep, and we need to be able to like and trust ourselves all day, every day.  Others, we only have to deal with for short periods of time.  So in the long run, our self-respect is more important than whether others respect us or not.  Think about it.

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