The definition of “snark” from Urban Dictionary is as
follows:
noun Combination
of "snide" and "remark". Sarcastic comment(s). Also snarky
(adj.) and snarkily (adv.)
How did something grade school kids do get to be en
vogue? How did something grade school kids do get to be expected adult behavior?
How did something grade school kids do become a form of entertainment? How did
this get to be what we, as a Nation, think is funny?
I, for one, have had enough.
So, how did we get here? Is it a lack of tolerance? Is it
our politically correct world run amok? Because it is also en vogue to be
easily offended. Everyone can and should be offended by anything and
everything. And since we don’t know how to let things go, if we are offended,
we then must offer a snarky comment about the offense. I am a Christian and that offends people. I
don’t even have to do anything, or say anything, yet they are offended. They
will ask me my views on same sex marriage, knowing my answer ahead of time, and
then accuse me of being hateful or prejudice in the snarkiest way possible. Um,
no, folks. If you’re only response to my views is to call me names and vilify me,
isn’t that hatred?
Hatred (or hate)
is a deep and emotional extreme dislike, directed against a perceived evil.
And for the record, I believe in the Bible and it says
marriage is to be between a man and a woman. My belief in that does not mean I
hate homosexuals. I don’t like or dislike people based on their sexual
preference; I like or dislike people based on their character. Period. There
are some gay people I love dearly and some I don’t like so much, but, I’m sure
you can say the same thing, right? It doesn't have anything to do with anything
but their character, just like it is for you.
But, we have been taught that if someone disagrees with
us, it is okay to hate them, to say snarky comments to or about them, and to
get others to join in the snark along with us. They are the enemy. And even as
Christians, we fall into it, right? I don’t think Jesus is a Republican and the
snark some of my fellow Christians have toward Democrats and the snarky
comments that are said are horrible. Jesus followed the political system of His
day, the Romans, and told His disciples to do the same. We are blessed with the
right to vote, and should, but I don’t think that He would want us to be lambasting
those we disagree with politically (or on any other subject). I don’t think
Jesus is going to buy the defense, “I was mean to them in Your name, Lord!” That’s not what He teaches and as we go into this
political season, we would be better off remembering that.
Not that we can’t disagree with people. That’s not what I’m
saying. What I’m saying is that snark and the hatred that seems to go with it
are tearing us apart. Our nation seems to be “us” and “them”. We are placed in
categories and judged accordingly. If you believe this, then you are that, and
it is a sweeping judgment with no regards to the individual. If all we do is
resort to snark when someone disagrees with us, how are we ever going to get
along? The point of the Olympics is finding common ground between nations in
sports, right? But if all we are doing is snarking and judging each other, we
will never find common ground between us and our culture will suffer for it.
So, how can we stop the snark and the hate that tends to
follow? Maybe turning off the TV shows that do nothing but that. No one is
really buying the shows that pit two people from polar opposite views spitting
venom at each other as actual commentary are they? It's entertainment and a poor excuse for that,
I say. Maybe not judging someone
according to what the media says, but by finding out why they believe what they
believe. People will ask me my views on same sex marriage, but no one ever asks
why or how I became a Christian.
I think my friend Daphne Duke has a great idea. Today,
she posted on her FB page that we should only post nice comments about people
and she started it out by saying some nice things about some of her friends.
How cool is that? The change begins with us. My friend Bizzy Orr said that she
went to a conference and the speaker said that if you imagine standing at the
edge of a canyon and yell out something, it will bounce back to you. So, in
theory, if we yell out snark, snark will come back to us. Is that what we want?
What if we take Daphne’s idea and keep it going? Not just today, but every day. Our words can build up or tear down...and I wonder how our nation would change if we replaced the snark with words of kindness, encouragement, and thoughtfulness?
Let's find out.
Let's find out.
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