Most people have no idea what they stand for, but they know very clearly who and what they hate. That makes me very uneasy, because I feel it from people of every political position — and this isn’t the way things ought to be.
When George W. Bush was president, most Democrats hated him far more than they liked any Democrat who might take his place. Since Barack Obama has been president, most Republicans hate him with a passion, but only a tiny percentage of them actually like Mitt Romney, who won the GOP contest to be their standard-bearer. Why is this?
I think part of it is a modern form of tribalism. We like to think of ourselves as past such crude ways of acting, but that’s wishful thinking. If you arbitrarily divide people into a Purple Party and a Yellow Party, both groups will soon develop all sorts of “reasons” why their sides is wonderful and the other is evil and wrong. (And they’ll each declare that their reasons are rational.)
Beyond that, though, I suspect there’s another very important reason. It’s simply easier to feel and express hate than it is to articulate something good and find the character to stand for that instead of the hate.
Ghost of Richard M. Nixon haunts Obama administration’s IRS fiasco
If you believe petitions truly matter, here’s one we can really get behind
A president can be dictator if he claims it’s for national security
THE McELROY ZOO: Meet Munchkin, the dog who vanished without a trace
World is an insane roller coaster and I need this insanity to stop
If the state didn’t wither away for Marx and Engels, is there really a post-statist era ahead now?

Brush with high-speed blowout leaves me thinking about death
If you made an error yesterday, it’s ‘foolish consistency’ to stick with it