Friday, January 18, 2008
If you were to do some snooping to find out if someone you were interested in was liberal or conservative, the easiest route to take would be Facebook.
nutgraf
After many discomforting questions, conversations and exchanges, I gained respect from and grew affectionate for other enthusiasts and many retired farmers that I may have once dismissed as closed-minded, simple old fools.
If you were to go hunting in this manner for my political affiliation, you would see on my Facebook that I am “liberal.” But if you were a really dirty P.I., you might have been confused why I spent last weekend at the 38th Annual Missouri Valley Arms Collectors Gun Show, where “Dutch” VanKirk, navigator on the Enola Gay, the B-29 bomber that dropped the first atomic bomb on Hiroshima, shook hands and signed autographs.
Allegiance to a political party is an association that many young adults begin to feel strongly about as they become a part of a campus world of powerful ideas and entreaties to be the generation responsible for positive change.
It is safe to say (like many other public universities) that the University of Kansas is a very liberal one.
According to the Kansas Equality Coalition’s Web site, Lawrence was the only city in the notoriously Bible-belted Kansas in which the majority of voters opposed the Marriage Protection Amendment, and the Lawrence City Commission was the first in Kansas to pass a domestic partner registry.
Lawrence is surely an independent entity in a bubble within Kansas, and it can be easy to lose awareness of the world around us when the warmth, excitement and progressiveness of Lawrence become our reality.
The University, then, can be seen as another bubble world within Lawrence that can make us feel empowered and periodically aloof when academia and knowledge lend insight into lofty analyses of race, gender, art, literature, etc.
In this bubble, we can too easily overlook the fact that we breathe the same air as those we know of only in textbooks and lectures.
I have met some of the most interesting, warm, sentimental and generous people at National Rifle Association-sponsored events, behind display tables of cowboy guns.
I began doing photography for an antique gun collector/auctioneer when I was in high school and was initially uneasy about being near firearms.
The idea of me being comfortable around weapons, which were purposed for death, terrified me.
In time, I became comfortable handling firearms. After the initial shock of being one of only three or four women at a day-long auction seating hundreds of older men, I found my place in the world of gun guys.
After many discomforting questions, conversations and exchanges, I gained respect from and grew affectionate for other enthusiasts and many retired farmers that I may have once dismissed as closed-minded, simple old fools.
Although my gun-guy friends and I disagree frequently, they have taught me that you can connect with anyone through genuine sincerity.
We have come to obtusely think of conservative people like gun guys as closed-minded and liberals as open-minded.
But these groups of people with polar opposite political ideals can be equally accused of sealing shut their bubble worlds from ideas that can, at the very least, affirm their own. If you get too confident, it is sometimes easy to say “you are wrong if you don’t believe in what I do.”
This only segregates you further.
There are many stigmas about Kansas, and it is easy to feel as if we are constantly fighting conservative force, but in Lawrence, liberalism is the norm.
I am by no means passing judgment on any one group, but rather I am encouraging you to step outside of where you feel comfortable. This is in regards to any instance (although here exemplified by political stance) that you might find yourself sweating in.
I believe in uneasiness as it relates to being regret-free. Being aware of yourself in a situation in which you are uncomfortable or the minority only makes you and your ideas more informed and powerful.
And who in the hell wants to be contained and comfortable all the time?
Ryan is a Salina junior in art history.
Liberals and conservatives
Study found liberals more open to foreign cultures while conservatives are more ...
Letter to the editor: Column expresses a ...
Messer discusses the Kansan's need for a conservative columnist.
Compton: Politics inspire rumination
Columnist shares conservative view of recent events.
Shouting protesters no better than Ann Coulter’s ...
Greening it
Your guide to greener living
New conservative group forms on campus
Leaders want to focus on shared ideals instead of party affiliation.
Red and blue don't always mix
While U.S. politics are heating up headlines, politically mixed relationships are feeling ...
‘Big Religion’ marginalizing free speech
Auction benefits animal shelter
A live and silent auction benefitting the Lawrence Humane Society features a ...
Letter to the editor: Hall Center lecturer ...
Alexander McCall Smith kept humble opinions of writing style
Partisan hate doesn’t help discussion
Letter to the Editor: Defending conservatives
Liberal mindset may be too sensitive toward terrorist attacks.
Local artist converts trash to treasures
Local artist known as Honey Boy creates off-beat art by recycling anything ...
Don’t expect Catholic pope to advocate liberal ...
Student out to prove gay and Republican ...
Salina sophomore wants to run for GOP office despite homosexuality.
Williams: Pelosi’s visit highlights Dole Institute’s offerings
First female Speaker of the House one of many diverse speakers
Q&A with Congressman Kevin Yoder
Rep. Kevin Yoder, KU alumnus answers questions after a lecture at the ...
Veterans’ transition not always smooth
Everything from receiving educational benefits to socializing with civilians can be a ...
Opinion Desk: Add to political discussion
The Kansan Opinion Desk seeks your input in a new weekly column.
Riding the rollercoaster of religion
For some, religion is nothing but a blessing. For Chris Horn, it’s ...
University student sets sights on Kansas House ...
William Stewart-Starks, Whittier, Calif., senior will run as a Libertarian in the ...
Simmermon: It’s a bad day when you ...
Lots of people who live here feel invincible, like they can walk ...
CITIZEN DOLPH: A rare look at the ...
You may not recognize his name, but Dolph Simons Jr., chairman of ...
Letter: Concealed carry wrong approach
Students should tote guns on campus.
Don’t uptight high school administrators
Brinker: The great American rant
Everyone is angry, but where are the fingers really pointing?
One country's sex is another's taboo
See how America's view of sex compares to other opinions from around ...
There’s a group at the University for ...
Ducks Unlimited, Prison Ball Club and the Art of Living club are ...
Know your Student Senate candidates
Learn more about the candidates for Student Senate
Letter to the Editor
Draft is not a path to enlightenment
Brinker: Romney's conservatism a ploy to win ...
Republicans may find themselves disappointed if Romney ends up in the White ...
A generation ablaze
Forty years ago today, the Kansas Union burned during one of the ...
Bisexuals face additional challenges
Students struggle for acceptance in LGBT communities.
Williams: Guilty pleasures abound
From shopping to Ann Coulter, desires are prevalent for columnist.
Castle: Counter Facebook haters with knowlegable responses
We all get into those awkward, heated debates on Facebook. Here are ...
Keep it safe, sane, consensual
Charlene Muehlenard, professor of psychology and women’s studies, says those with fetishes ...
Stuewe: Define politics for yourself
Liz Stuewe asks readers to be creative in finding the importance of ...
Compton: Liberalism versus conservatism
Political differences may arise from where parties believe rights originate.
Sambaluk: Change should come from individuals
Making the most of college experience affects change in the world.
From left: Kimberlee Hinkle, Libby Johnson and Hannah ...
1 comment
Kansas Jayhawk fans hold aloft a reproduction of ...
2 comments
Erin Saupe, a Ph.D. student from St. Cloud, ...
1 comment
0 comments
Armed robbers continue to threaten.
3 comments
Comments
Use the comment form below to begin a discussion about this content.
Sign in to comment
Or login with:
OpenID