War Is It Time to Stop Snubbing Your Right-Wing Family?

Source: New York Times - Archive
By David Litt
Not too long ago, I felt a civic duty to be rude to my wife’s younger brother.
I met Matt Kappler in 2012, and it was immediately clear we had nothing in common. He lifted weights to death metal; I jogged to Sondheim. I was one of President Barack Obama’s speechwriters and had an Ivy League degree; he was a huge Joe Rogan fan and went on to get his electrician’s license. My early memories of Matt are hazy — I was mostly trying to impress his parents. Still we got along, chatting amiably on holidays and at family events.
Then the pandemic hit, and our preferences began to feel like more than differences in taste. We were on opposite sides of a cultural civil war. The deepest divide was vaccination. I wasn’t shocked when Matt didn’t get the Covid shot. But I was baffled. Turning down a vaccine during a pandemic seemed like a rejection of science and self-preservation. It felt like he was tearing up the social contract that, until that point, I’d imagined we shared.
Had Matt been a friend rather than a family member, I probably would have cut off contact completely. As it was, on the rare and always outdoor occasions when we saw each other, I spoke in disapproving snippets.
“Work’s been good?”
“Mhrmm.”
My frostiness wasn’t personal. It was strategic. Being unfriendly to people who turned down the vaccine felt like the right thing to do. How else could we motivate them to mend their ways?

I wasn’t the only one thinking this. A 2021 essay for USA Today declared, “It’s time to start shunning the ‘vaccine hesitant.’” An L.A. Times piece went further, arguing that to create “teachable moments,” it may be necessary to mock some anti-vaxxers’ deaths.

Shunning as a form of accountability goes back millenniums. In ancient Athens, a citizen deemed a threat to state stability could be “ostracized” — cast out of society for a decade. For much of history, banishment was considered so severe that it substituted for capital punishment. The whole point of Hester Prynne’s scarlet letter was to show she had violated norms — and to discourage others from doing so.
But that was before social media. We live in a world of online fandoms, choose-your-own-adventure information and parasocial relationships. Few people who lost friends over the vaccine changed their minds. They just got new friends. Those exiled from one version of society were quickly welcomed by another — an alternate universe full of grievance peddlers and conspiracy theorists who thrived on stories of victimized conservatives.
There has been a sorting into belief camps, algorithmically and in real life. It dictates whom we match with on dating apps and where we live. We block those we disagree with online, we leave the group chat, we don’t show up for Thanksgiving. Recent data suggests that today, one in five Americans is estranged from a family member over politics. More points of deep disagreement will surely arise: over Trump’s immigration crackdown and use of the military in domestic affairs, over Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s MAHA mandates, over antisemitism, over a megabill that takes health care from the poor while cutting taxes for the rich.
No one is required to spend time with people they don’t care for. But those of us who feel an obligation to shun strategically need to ask: What has all this banishing accomplished? It’s not just ineffective. It’s counterproductive.
These days, ostracism might just hurt the ostracizer more than the ostracizee.
I wish I could say I learned this through self-reflection and study. What actually happened is that I started surfing. After moving to the Jersey Shore in 2022, I signed up for lessons. Despite my advanced age of 35 and lack of natural talent, I got hooked. Matt was the only other surfer I knew. I put my principled unfriendliness aside.
From the moment we began paddling out together, I could tell my cold-shoulder strategy had backfired. I’d spent the peak of the pandemic in a cultural bubble, and he had done the same. Driving to a break or changing into our wet suits, he’d often express opinions — about the merits of vigilantism, or the health benefits of Mexican stem-cell injections — that I found slightly unhinged.
Where is this coming from? I wondered. The answer was nearly always “Joe Rogan’s podcast.”
I assumed our surf-buddy experiment would either fail spectacularly or bring Matt over to my side. Neither of those things occurred. Instead, the connections we found were tiny and unrelated to politics. We agree that “Shrimply Irresistible” is the perfect so-bad-it’s-good name for a seafood restaurant, and that Taylor Swift’s “Love Story” is a classic. Although I still wouldn’t call myself a Rogan fan, we share an appreciation for his interview with the surf legend Kelly Slater. Matt and I remain very different, yet we’ve reached what is, in today’s America, a radical conclusion: We don’t always approve of each other’s choices, but we like each other.
It helped that in the ocean, our places in the pecking order reversed. Matt’s a very good surfer — one might call him “an elite” — and I am not. According to surfing’s unwritten rules, he had the right to look down on me. But he never did. His generosity of spirit in the water made me rethink my own behavior on land.
Three years after my first surf lesson, Matt and I haven’t really changed each other’s minds on major national issues. But we have changed each other. His fearlessness in consequential surf made me more courageous. His ability to go “over the ledge,” launching himself off breaking lips, helped me curb my overthinking. Ostracizing him wouldn’t have altered his behavior — and it would have made my own life worse.

I suspect that’s true for Matt as well. While I’ve never asked if our friendship made him more open-minded — we’d find that embarrassing — I’m confident the answer is yes. Last year, when I briefly considered running for office, Matt said he’d vote for me. When I asked why, his answer had nothing to do with party or policy. “You’re a regular guy,” he told me. “You walk the dog.”
When I share stories about surfing with my brother-in-law, people often tell me about relationships in their own lives pushed to the brink by politics. Sometimes, they’re proud of ties they’ve severed. More often, they’re hoping for a way forward. How can we pierce bubbles of misinformation? Can friendships fractured in the Trump era be repaired?
My advice is always the same. Our differences are meaningful, but allowing them to mean everything is part of how we ended up here. When we cut off contacts, or let algorithms sort us into warring factions, we forget that not so long ago, we used to have things to talk about that didn’t involve politics. Shunning plays into the hands of demagogues, making it easier for them to divide us and even, in some cases, to incite violence.
There are, of course, some people so committed to odiousness that it defines them. If Stephen Miller wants a surf lesson, I’ll decline. But are most people like that? In an age when banishment backfires, keeping the door open to unlikely friendship isn’t a betrayal of principles — it’s an affirmation of them.
 
He lifted weights to death metal; I jogged to Sondheim. I was one of President Barack Obama’s speechwriters and had an Ivy League degree; he was a huge Joe Rogan fan and went on to get his electrician’s license.
What a sneering, nasty piece of work you are. A person with any class would not think, never mind write this.What exactly are you compensating for with this diatribe?

millenniums
It's millennia Mr Ivy League midwit.

our places in the pecking order reversed.
In your opinion. To pretty much everyone but you, an electrician has far more value than a speech writer. Also he is an electrician, you were a speechwriter. What are you now but a whiny little ball of insecurities?

By the way, your in laws tolerate you because they love their daughter/sister. They are clearly much, much better than you and whatever spawned you. Behind closed doors they mock you and make in jokes about you. At your next visit I hope they put laxatives in your coffee.

You sound like an absolute cunt.
I detest him and I’m only a few paragraphs in.
I too had a visceral reaction in the first few paragraphs.
 
I jogged to Sondheim. I was one of President Barack Obama’s speechwriters and had an Ivy League degree
How do you make yourself this hateable this fast?

I wasn’t shocked when Matt didn’t get the Covid shot. But I was baffled. Turning down a vaccine during a pandemic seemed like a rejection of science and self-preservation.
You can't understand why someone wouldn't try medicine that has never been tested before for a disease that likely wouldn't be an issue for someone of his age and health. Are you retarded? Probably over half my friends never got the vaccine and I didn't give a fuck

This is a good strategy on the national stage, basically the bedrock of the conservative platform at this point, however you can take it too far (see how MAGA laughs about immigrants being tortured in concentration camps and now ICE's popularity flipped 30 points in a few months) and it's just retarded and also evil to try to apply in your personal life

Three years after my first surf lesson, Matt and I haven’t really changed each other’s minds on major national issues. But we have changed each other. His fearlessness in consequential surf made me more courageous. His ability to go “over the ledge,” launching himself off breaking lips, helped me curb my overthinking. Ostracizing him wouldn’t have altered his behavior — and it would have made my own life worse.

It's good you realized this, but the worst people on your side who caused the democrats to lose will see this article and call this 'fascist appeasement' or some shit like that
 
It's funny & telling that this writer goes out of his way to criticize Joe Rogan in the context of COVID shot denial, but doesn't acknowledge that Joe Rogan was right about avoiding the shot and taking Ivermectin. Literally 100% correct. Liberals will call him a conspiracy nut but never accept that he was fucking right.

Here's him and his brother in law
1752503464010.webp
I don't surf but if my skate experience translates over, I've noticed it's way easier to balance on a longboard vs. a smaller trad skateboard deck. Makes sense his board is bigger, training wheels effect I bet. Chad brother-in-law's smaller board probably feels like a pennyboard, super maneuverable.
 
I really don't like how the journo kinda "subtly" kept adding things that showed that he views the other guy as less than, as dumber, intellectually inferior. The "I'm an Ivy League faggot and he's an electrician" part pissed me off a bit.
Mr. Ivy League probably can't even change a light bulb.
 
I've met shed loads of cunts like this, they're everywhere.

This "article" fails to ask the important question; are those of us who were treated like shit for seeing covid as the pack of lies it is,ready to forgive the cunts who were all so foul to us?

I'm not and I don't think I ever will be. They showed me precisely who they are and I paid attention.
 
Ths author sounds like a total lunatic. UH DIFFERENT OPINION WUH HUH? ME HATEY YOU NOW! AAAAAAAA
What a sissy ass Nancy pants faggot the author is. So a neoliberal finally figured out he can't control other people. His behavior is that of a teenage girl. Literally this guys behavior is straight outta the movie mean girls. Only women go out of their way to shun people and purposely nitpick because of someone's different opinions. No wonder these shitlib men cut their balls off. It's one of those mental tantrums where, "if you don't do what I say I'm going to harm myself." These creatures are serious with their derangement.
 
Mr. Ivy League probably can't even change a light bulb.
It's crazy that these people live in houses that were built by the very same people they seem to despise.
Sounds like he's only changing his tune because he got no benefit out of it. There was no reward for shunning the evil conservative. Nobody else gives a shit. Maybe he realized people willing to hang out with his ass are in short supply, and he can't afford to just shun family for political differences.
Actually it's twofold, he wanted to get into surfing and his BiL was a capable surfer while he wasn't. So he decided to set aside his differences so he could benefit from his BiL. If Matt wasn't in to surfing this faggot probably would have kept shunning him. If the roles were reversed this guy would have been ecstatic while he cooly declined a request for help.
 
I was one of President Barack Obama’s speechwriters and had an Ivy League degree; he was a huge Joe Rogan fan and went on to get his electrician’s license.
What is this pattern-matching smoothbrained retardation? Are "Ivy League degree" and "electrician's license" supposed to be complete opposites or something? Matt sounds a lot more useful than this diminutive homosexual, and probably a more fun guy. Too bad he published "I'm a big gay baby and have held a grudge over The Science(tm), and even now that I realize I am a retard I refuse to acknowledge I was wrong, actually" in a way that's incredibly easy to search up. Holy shit, the next family gathering is going to be funny.

Is it like an option to beat this guy up, bang his wife, and hang out with Matt? I don't surf but I could learn, I bet Matt is a good teacher and a nice, patient guy.
 
What is this pattern-matching smoothbrained retardation? Are "Ivy League degree" and "electrician's license" supposed to be complete opposites or something? Matt sounds a lot more useful than this diminutive homosexual, and probably a more fun guy. Too bad he published "I'm a big gay baby and have held a grudge over The Science(tm), and even now that I realize I am a retard I refuse to acknowledge I was wrong, actually" in a way that's incredibly easy to search up. Holy shit, the next family gathering is going to be funny.

Is it like an option to beat this guy up, bang his wife, and hang out with Matt? I don't surf but I could learn, I bet Matt is a good teacher and a nice, patient guy.
Get a look at the author's photo:

https://www.davidlittbooks.com/home
1752544337345.webp

It's a face you'd love nothing more than to curbstomp hard.

Democracy in One Book or Less

“Democracy In One Book Or Less is a no-nonsense guide for how we, the people, can fix ourselves.”
— NPR
“David Litt, a former Obama speechwriter, brings Dave Barry-style humor to an illuminating book on what is wrong with American democracy — and how to put it right.”
— The Washington Post

“If you want to understand how our government really works without having a panic attack or a migraine, read this book. The way David tells stories about politics is funny, informative, and, most important, hopeful. David Litt dares to remain inspired, and that is what the conversation around politics needs most.”
— Ilana Glazer, co-creator and co-star of Broad City

“I’m so relieved to have this book at this moment in our political climate, a guide to our democracy when we so desperately need one.”
— Abbi Jacobson, co-creator and co-star of Broad City and author of I Might Regret This

“David Litt’s book is equal parts how-to, historical, and hilarious as he takes us through the trials and travails of how the electorate and democracy in general works—and sometimes doesn’t—yet still lovingly shows us that it’s worth it all the same. A warm, pithy, and inspiring read.”
— Keegan-Michael Key

David Litt is a "democracy is our greatest strength" feminist who uses female "comedians" (women in comedy is okay, men in comedy is cringe to David Litt) ...

What a diva David is.
 
There is no reality where the author is not gay. The receding hairline-1000 dick stare combo is simply too much, and his wife is an embarrassment for ever speaking to this "man."

Matt seems chill, though.
 
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