Beyond Partisanship: Polarization, Personal Responsibility, and the Seven Core Strengths

Beyond Partisanship:
Polarization, Personal Responsibility, and the Seven Core Strengths
Modern politics often creates the illusion that society is divided into two fixed camps: one side that believes it is morally enlightened, and another that believes it is practically grounded. In reality, people are more complex than slogans, labels, and party identities. Yet political culture increasingly rewards oversimplification. People are encouraged to sort themselves into tribes, defend every position of their chosen side, and treat disagreement as betrayal. The result is a society where nuance disappears, conversations become hostile, and individuals lose sight of their own independence.
Many people who once strongly identified with a political movement later describe a common experience: acceptance and belonging often feel available only as long as they remain in agreement. The moment they question a doctrine, challenge a narrative, or reject a favored talking point, they may face exclusion, ridicule, or suspicion. This pattern…





What goes around, comes around, just like Karma, God allows things to happen, if he stepped in every time, we wouldn't have any free will and be like zombies, I always think of God as giving us a stern look, pointing his finger at us and saying, I DIDNT DO THIS ,YOU DID
When things go right we forget God, when things go wrong, we run to God, the person we forgot. Alot of these problems would be corrected if we get rid of the ego, stop judging, start loving, work together, not against, a boat in the water goes nowhere if to people are pulling in different directions