Many voters cast their favorite politician as a bit of a hero 鈥 someone uniquely capable of fixing things or moving the country forward. We look at how extending that attitude may threaten democracy.听
The isolating notion of 鈥渢he other鈥 spiked again in a week dominated by news of improvised explosive devices.
The US administration weighs . Race flares as a in the midterms. A drops from the lips of a TV media star.
Islamophobia happens not to be the current centerpiece, even though it was stirred into the migrant caravan saga with a mention of 鈥渦nknown Middle Easterners.鈥 On that particular strain of fear-stoking, though, it鈥檚 worth knowing about one graceful teller of a counternarrative.
When Heraa Hashmi, a college student in Colorado, was told by a classmate that 鈥渁ll terrorists are Muslim,鈥 unchecked by others in the Muslim world, she began crafting a response. It took the form last year of a widely seen 712-page spreadsheet .
The feedback she got urged her to add nuance. Was she somehow just contributing to the idea of 鈥済ood鈥 vs. 鈥渂ad鈥 Muslims? She worried about promoting such 鈥渦nhelpful binaries,鈥 as recently. It struck her that, as she put it, 鈥淸w]e sometimes play into this by attempting to present ourselves as 鈥榤oderate Muslims,鈥 Muslims who only exist in a way that makes other people feel comfortable in their prejudices.鈥
That idea of blunt binaries bears watching in what seems to be a season of anger. Matt Grossmann wrote this week in FiveThirtyEight that more voters now are running to parties that 听rather than reflecting ones that they鈥檝e formed themselves. That can feed 鈥渙therness鈥 too.听
Now to our five stories for your Friday.听