Does this ever happens to you? Some issue pops up in the news or there’s some new action in society — by government or a company or a private organization — and you instantly know what you think about it. An action is completely wrong. It’s clear-cut. Nobody with principles could see it differently.
But then you talk to somebody else who’s obviously intelligent and informed, but he sees it completely different from how you see it. Then you talk to someone else and discover that this person has an entirely different point of view from either you or the other guy.
“Those idiots!” you mutter darkly to yourself. “It’s so obvious. How can they be so blind?!”
This happens in politics all the time. I hear people saying that their opponents are dishonest, stupid, crazy or evil. The opponents tend to be equally sure that you’re dishonest, stupid, crazy or evil. How can we come to such different conclusions?
I think the people who disagree with me about politics or social policy tend to be simply wrong, not evil or stupid or crazy. My thought has been that if you can understand their assumptions and their ways of looking at the world, their conclusions will at least make sense, even if you still think they’re completely wrong. You can understand that people of good will and sound brains can disagree.

Today’s group hatred says world hasn’t learned Auschwitz lessons
Anarchist vs. minarchist debate misses the shift to post-statist world
I can’t find the balance between expecting too much and too little
‘What are we Christians to do?’ Jesus has already answered that
In a culture that worships youth, we’re scared to look in a mirror
Tuesday’s Senate vote reminds me of German ‘Enabling Act’ of 1933
Family seemed perfectly typical, but I felt envious of their lives
I’m terribly sorry to break it to you, but straw polls mean nothing