Pick a Hill Worth Dying On, America

If your eyes are clear and open right now you can see it: this is a pivot point for us, America.

It is the place we collectively turn toward back toward our best selves or slide into the abyss of the very worst of us. We are, in real-time crafting our shared legacy, and the world is watching to see who we will be. Our children are too.

These are historic days and they will be recorded, and they will tell the story of this country, as either the time good people crossed lines of political party, faith tradition, and racial divide, and course corrected us out of abject disaster—or the days we all stopped giving a damn and fully consented to the darkness for good. These will be marked as the moments we succumbed to a thousands small assaults on decency—or when we decided to stop the bleeding altogether.

There is no question anymore for those not deluded by supremacy or religion or self-preservation: this thing currently steering us is an abomination.
It is an abandonment of empathy, a rejection of personal liberty, a human rights violation, a squandering of radiant lives.
There is nothing redemptive or life-giving in it.
The only question remaining is if you’re 
okay with it—and you get to answer for yourself, by your movement or your inaction.

In these very seconds, you and I get to decide whether our children and grandchildren will inherit something beautiful or grotesque. It’s really that simple, that elemental, that close.

This is not about waiting for God to do something, or a political party, or a social media celebrity, or some faceless people you imagine will rescue you.

No, friend, there is no superhero flying in to save the day—you need to save it.

And the way you will save it, is by finding whatever it is that is that pulls you out of the paralyzing funk of grief and sadness and disbelief you’ve been in—and into the jagged trenches of passionate resistance.

You save it by deciding what matters most in this life, and whether it matters enough to do more than you’re doing to defend and protect it right now. In the presence of such great hatred, you are either an activist or an accomplice, the vocal opposition or a willing partner.

You and I need to pick a hill worth dying on right now, and we need to ascend it without delay. We need to speak and write and work and protest and vote, and do all the things we’ve been waiting for someone else to do.

This movement may cause friction in our families.
It may bring turbulence to our marriages.
It may yield collateral damage to our careers.
It may cost us financially and personally.
It may alienate us from our neighbors.
It may push us from our churches.
It may be inconvenient and uncomfortable and painful—but that is the price of liberty and you and I need to pay it because other people paid it before us.
No excuses will be good enough to the generations that follow us, about why we did nothing, so we need to stop trying to find them.

I don’t know what matters enough to move you from complacency or indecision or selfishness or apathy:
the human rights atrocities,
the perversions of Christianity,
the pillaging of the environment,
the Constitutional violations,
the cries of migrant children,
the Supreme Court hijacking,
the dismantling of healthcare,
the school shootings that go ignored,
the LGBTQ teenagers being harassed,
the assaults on women’s autonomy over their bodies,
the malice of our public servants,
the twisting of truth,
the nazis marching in our streets,
the dumbing down of our discourse.

Is it love or equality or compassion or diversity or humanity?

I don’t know what is worth you doing something right now—but you do.

So instead of lamenting how horrible it all is, accept the invitation to make it less horrible.
Instead of looking to the sky and wondering why no one is doing anything, you do something.
Step out of the cloistered place of your private despair, and into a jacked-up world that you can alter by showing up.
Use your gifts and your influence and your breath and your hands—and fix something that is badly broken before it breaks beyond repair.

This is not some fictional zombie apocalypse series you can binge watch, turn off, and walk away from into the radiant light of day. This is flesh and blood men and women living among you, with dangerous agendas that they will not abandon unless opposed.

I’m not trying to scare you. What is happening right now to this nation should scare you enough. I’m trying to wake you up and ask you to see if your heart is still beating, and then to do something worthy of that gift.

Whatever hill is worth dying on for you in this life, take it now.

Affirm life, speak truth, defend the vulnerable, call out injustices—and gladly brave the criticisms and the wounds you sustain in doing it, knowing that they are a small price to pay for the nation that could be if you speak—or will be if you do not.

Chances are you won’t actually be called to die for these cause and these people, but when you do leave this planet you will have lived for them. That in itself will be a beautiful legacy.

If you aren’t finding your voice right now, don’t bother worrying about it later.

You won’t have one much longer.

Ascend the hill.

 

Get John’s book ‘HOPE AND OTHER SUPERPOWERS” here!

 

85 thoughts on “Pick a Hill Worth Dying On, America

  1. There are three things to do right now. 1. Join the ACLU for the cost of a couple of coffee drinks and lend your voice to the cause of liberty. 2. Protect our watchdog press, standing between the people and tyranny. See FB page “People’s Bill Of Rights For White House Transparency”. 3. Get the book by Yale holocaust historian Timothy Snyder “On Tyranny: Twenty Lessons From The Twentieth Century” — it tells us how to live in this troubled moment.

  2. Remember this those of you headed for the hills, if things do not change soon, there will be some of us headed for the camps, as we are members of targeted communities that the administration would love to get rid of. Lgbtq will be the first in the gates wearing an analog of the little pink triangles our forebearers wore as they entered the camps, well before other hated groups did.
    If it comes to this, I will die fighting, but I will die just the same.

    They came for the person down the street and I did nothing. They came for my neighbor, and I did nothing. They are coming for me, will anyone do anything?

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  4. All the Trump-worshippers are out in force, yawping about abortion and immigrants and poor people and whatever else that they’ve been taught to hate and fear since Reagan was inaugurated.

    They wrap themselves in the flag and pages from the Bible, then spew all the bullshit they were taught about how only white, heterosexual, Christians are worth a damn, and only rich, white, heterosexual, Christian, males should run things — and that government can be run like a business.

    In their world, the Gilded Age was the epitome of American civilization and the biggest mistake was including women and minorities as anything approaching equals.

    And they can’t understand why people are looking at them sideways.

    Meanwhile, the rest of us are doing what we can. Some are organizing. Some are running for office. Some are protesting or circulating petitions. Journalists are doing their jobs. Some will vote in every election. Some are donating to organizations such as Human Rights Campaign, and the ACLU.

    Why? Because we think the American experiment is worth saving. Unlike those on the Right waiting for the End Times and the glorious destruction of evil (basically, everybody except them) and the Second Coming of Jesus. They don’t think the nation is worth saving.

  5. Oh yes, oh yes. I needed you to say what I have been grasping at. Thank you. I am an encore career lawyer. I’ve been a lawyer less than 2 years. I’ve been a human for a long time. I volunteered in El Paso, Texas last week, helping bring a tiny light to the detained parents, separated from their children at the border. I am shattered. Nothing will ever be the same. My declaration of what I heard is now forever part of the ACLU case filed last week about how parents are being asked to make life altering decisions for themselves and their children with no legal advice, no time or opportunity to discuss it with the other people affected, and often only a few minutes to sign a document that wasn’t always even in their language. I have found my hill, and I left everything on it. If you want the truth of “my” people, the ACLU case is public record, as is my part in it (Susanne Gilliam, Massachusetts, Exhibit 52). My daily posts on Facebook are also public. As you so clearly point out, it was the cries of the children that got me up & moving. But there are so many other issues screaming in the night.

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  7. A wonderful call to arms. Thank you! Btw…I met you in Tulsa on Sat night at the church. I had to sit in the overflow room during your talk, but had you sign my book later at the reception. I am a life-long Christian, a civil rights lawyer, an activist in the area of International Human Rights, a mother of 3, grandmother of 3, exchange student Host Mom to 19, raised in the Church of Christ in Springfield, MO (home of the Assembly of God), and now a good ole
    Methodist — where we are taught about God’s grace (something my former very stringent training never mentioned). God has worked in my life in so very many “open and obvious” ways over the years, it is hard to remember them all. But I have nonetheless become discouraged at watching people who I have always believed to be good people, bolster and embolden Donald Trump. Listening to your story and over-relating it to mine, I was in tears when you were describing our current state of affairs. But by the end of your talk, you had given me and my ex-husband who I dragged there, some hope. Thanks! MamaKayB-R

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