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Like many people, I have found this past year to be one of great societal stress. Our children seem under constant attack at schools nationwide and political tension continues to drive us apart.
For many, our political tension stays at the debate table and within our social media feeds. However, more recently we have seen our disagreements boil over into violent action.
Those identifying with President Donald Trump or the wider Republican Party watched your champion suffer two assassination attempts. Likewise, those aligned with the Democratic Party watched two public servants confront the threat and reality of death in Minnesota.
Even those operating outside the two-party system have felt the weight of these events, and the recent assassination of Charlie Kirk is the most recent example.
These events have built a political firestorm, forcing us to confront the growing reality of political violence and division in the U.S. today.
Unfortunately, this storm has found us because of how we view politics. We have constrained our minds to a binary left- and right-wing system. It has pushed us to view each other as more adversarial over the years, and it eats away at our democracy.