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It is easier to curse the darkness than to provide glimmers of light. The former fuels inaction in the face of threats and provides glide paths toward disaster.
America, writes Sen. Mitt Romney, R-Utah, in a recent essay in the Atlantic, is in unhealthy denial about what ails it. And "when entire countries fail to confront serious challenges, it doesn't end well," he warns, noting that inaction and gridlock on immigration and border security, drought and climate change and ongoing threats to our democratic processes are potentially cataclysmic.
We agree and would add gun violence to the list as we shed tears of anger and sadness after yet another incident of mass gun violence just days after Congress passed a modest but historic gun safety law. At least seven people died and dozens were injured as a gunman on a rooftop repeatedly fired on a crowd gathered in Highland Park, Ill., to celebrate July 4th, something communities across this country have done since our nation's founding.
Tragically, public celebrations and gatherings in schools, churches, and malls have become soft targets of violent opportunists. And in each instance, the violence steals something from within us and replaces it with fear.
The essence of Romney's warnings is the broader, systemic failures of leadership in the face of crisis, a level of abdication for which the political left and right bear responsibility. "Elected officials put a finger in the wind more frequently than they show backbone against it," Romney writes. "Too often, Washington demonstrates the maxim that for evil to thrive only requires good men to do nothing."
All of that is true but begs the issue of how to change the crippling dynamics of gridlock and complacency. Romney says, "We Americans have lived in a very forgiving time, and seeing the world through rose-colored glasses had limited consequences." But the nation faces an important reckoning that "will require us all to rise above ourselves — above our grievances and resentments — and grasp the mantle of leadership our country so badly needs," Romney writes.