Technical glitches aside, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis is known for a disciplined approach that has fueled his rise and steered his state to the right. Now he鈥檚 focused on Iowa as a key to the 2024 primary race.
A week ago, a British researcher published聽聽鈥淪tories of kindness may counteract the negative effects of looking at bad news.鈥 As you might imagine, I was intrigued.
Kathryn Buchanan of the University of Essex shared four main takeaways from her research: Stories of kindness remind us of our shared values. They support 鈥渢he belief that the world and people in it are good.鈥 And they provide 鈥渞elief to the pain we experience when we see others suffering.鈥
It was her fourth point that stuck with me. She defined kindness and heroism as 鈥渕oral beauty,鈥 which 鈥渢riggers 鈥榚levation鈥 鈥 a positive and uplifting feeling鈥 that 鈥渁cts as an emotional reset button, replacing feelings of cynicism with hope, love and optimism.鈥
The study suggested this happens when one watches a news story about kindness after watching ones about bombings, cruelty, and violence. That is a good start. But can this elevation only happen with stories of kindness? Must the rest of the news abandon us to despair?
The world is asking us to consider that question deeply. Mental health is at crisis levels. People are聽. What is the media鈥檚 responsibility?
Author and anti-apartheid activist Alan Paton once said of the Monitor, 鈥淚t gives no shrift to any belief in the irredeemable wickedness of man, nor in the futility of human endeavor.鈥
In addition to reporting acts of kindness, perhaps a next step is to see the world through a lens of kindness. Never to excuse or ignore cruelty or crime, but to recognize that how we view the world shapes the world. Even when the world is unkind, we can be unmoved in our determination to love, to build, to seek credible hope. That is an awesome responsibility and a revolutionary opportunity.