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Please, Enough With the Partisan Chain E-mail

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For five years, Joyce and John Good silently tolerated angry partisan e-mails forwarded by family and friends.

They even ignored the steady vitriol flowing from the husband and wife they'd known for 40 years.

"We'd raised our children together," Joyce said of the couple. "We never talked politics. We'd just say, 'We're bipartisan.' But they started sending us these awful e-mails, and it was clear they assumed we agreed with them."

The Goods, who live in a small town east of Cleveland, cherished the friendship, so they just hit delete. Over and over.

Then Barack Obama ran for president.

"This past election brought out such an anger," Joyce said. "It's as if our country hit a boiling point."

The subject line of their friends' e-mail read, "VP of Procter & Gamble Speaks Out."

I know this e-mail practically by heart. As a columnist, I'm on the receiving end of a lot of partisan junk mail, and this one has been a running hit with many conservatives ever since Obama's election.

"An Open Letter to President Obama" is attributed to Lou Pritchett, who retired from P&G more than 20 years ago. Pritchett confirmed via e-mail that he was the author, proudly adding, "Although I never heard from (The New York Times) or Obama the letter has had over 6 million hits on the internet."

The letter begins:

Dear President Obama:

You are the thirteenth President under whom I have lived and unlike any of the others, you truly scare me.

You scare me because after months of exposure, I know nothing about you.

You scare me because I do not know how you paid for your expensive Ivy League education and your upscale lifestyle and housing with no visible signs of support.

You scare me because you did not spend the formative years of youth growing up in America and culturally you are not an American.

On and on it goes. For the Goods, it went too far. They stewed for five days and then sent a simple request: "Please do not send us any more political emails.

Joyce and John."

Their friends cut off communication for months. Finally, the Goods called them to hash it out.

"The wife said she was very hurt," Joyce said. "I said to her, 'How do you think it made me feel?'"

Joyce reached out to me with a question: "How do we stop friends and family members from sending these e-mails? They're so divisive for the country, and they hurt a lot of people."

The Goods are not alone in their distaste for partisan e-mail that traffics in rants and rage. In the nearly eight years that I've been a columnist, I've received countless messages from readers despairing over relationships that have splintered and exploded because someone thought it'd be funny to hit "send." And I've received enough snarky e-mails about George W. Bush — most questioning his mental acuity — to know that uncivil discourse is a bipartisan hobby.

So many of us wrestle with unsolicited hate mail. It likely will amuse some of my conservative critics to know I get far-right missives from relatives who are apoplectic over the immutable reality of our shared gene pool. One even unfriended me on Facebook. That hurt.

Some are hard-wired to rebut these e-mails, responding with links to fact-checking sites — such as Snopes.com and PolitiFact — and engaging in tit for tat until their fingers catch fire.

Some, such as the Goods, send earnest pleas for it to end. A lot, I suspect, do the grr-and-grind: They click on the delete button but still churn long after the e-mail has evaporated.

Most of us would like to lose the e-mails but keep the people who send them. So here's a thought. Next time someone you like sends an e-mail you hate, just send this column to them.

I'll take it from here:

Hey.

That awful e-mail you sent?

Please don't do that again.

Hopefully yours,

A fellow American.

Connie Schultz is a Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist for The Plain Dealer in Cleveland and the author of two books from Random House, "Life Happens" and "... and His Lovely Wife." She is a featured contributor in a recently released book by Bloomsbury, "The Speech: Race and Barack Obama's 'A More Perfect Union.'" To find out more about Connie Schultz (cschultz@plaind.com) and read her past columns, please visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2010 CREATORS.COM


Comments

7 Comments | Post Comment
So you hate the hate filled e-mails? Why is it then that it'l okay to malign Sarah Palin? You seem to enjoy that quite a bit. Do you even know anything about her? Any of the interviews conducted before the election failed to bring out any of the reasons she had been chosen. I had to read her book to find out any details of her life. I just assumed that she read the important items. I didn't need Katie Couric to badger her about that. But, that's just one example. I admire her and I think less of you for not supporting a woman who has done everything that women's lib wanted us to do even though it's quite tough to do everything.
I would like to know more about B.Obama. It is strange that no info is available. Just imagine if any of the other important people in our government refused to let us know about their past. I will never understand why the Obama lover's want someone with absolutely no experience in running anything.
P.S. I think that people believe that Obama has no thoughts of his own and only with notes or teleprompter can deliver a speech.That's why the criticism. I think Sarah Palin probably talks more from her heart and knowledge than Mr Obama does.
Probably, this will never get read, but I feel better for finally getting it off my chest.
Comment: #1
Posted by: linda Marley
Sun Mar 14, 2010 12:49 PM
Like the Good's I too have received hurtful emails from one relative in particular who lives in NW Ohio (I live in New York), I had to ask him to stop, as did his brother, and thankfully he did without a fight. Unfortunately, I don't think there will be an end to these mails soon! Thanks for the column!
Comment: #2
Posted by: Glorya Johnson
Sun Mar 14, 2010 8:44 PM
Thanks for reminding us of this great example of "Hate Mail" - I understand most liberals "Hate" getting emails written by a very successful businessman containing this kind of intellectual honesty. I dug out this "Hateful" email and passed it on again - so maybe it can get 100 million hits this time around. You need to ask yourself why has this country has "hit a boiling point" and try to write an honest column on that topic. Thank you again for reprinting the "hate mail" now maybe it can get some more circulation from the media.
Comment: #3
Posted by: sally Cahill
Tue Mar 16, 2010 8:11 AM
The dilemma we face in this country can be summed up in this sentence. "Don't confuse me with the facts my mind is made up." The vitriol running rampant on the internet makes it almost impossible for any one to get the "facts". Mike Royko once called the internet "An electronic asylum for babbling loonies"; and so it has become.
Comment: #4
Posted by: Ronald Evers
Tue Mar 16, 2010 9:32 AM
The dilemma we face in this country can be summed up in this sentence. "Don't confuse me with the facts my mind is made up." The vitriol running rampant on the internet makes it almost impossible for any one to get the "facts". Mike Royko once called the internet "An electronic asylum for babbling loonies"; and so it has become.
Comment: #5
Posted by: Ronald Evers
Tue Mar 16, 2010 9:32 AM
Those of us who are right leaning don't send "hate mail." We send mail to try to wake-up America from the grip of a complete socialist takeover of our country. We send out mail because we are frighten about what is happening to our country. But some of us, like me, now know that it is hopelless to try to convince those who elected a man they know nothing about. A man who refuses to release any of his personal information about himsellf. A man who completely disregards what "most" Americans want, and sticks to his socialist agenda. I say I am right leaning because I am still, though incredibly, an Independent. I voted for Clinton twice and I voted for Bush twice. In each of those elections I truly tried to vote for the man I believed was the right choice for our country. Obama is not right for our country at any level. It frustrates those of us who love this country to see it being ruined by increased taxes and spending that are completelly out of control. That our tax dollars support illegal aliens who shouldn't be here, and that liberals now want to grant amnesty. And now, this week, Obama, Pelosi and Reid want to shove a government controlled healthcare bill down Americans' throats, even though a large majority of Americans know that it will not help, but will only further bankrupt our country. Those of us who are enlightened with cognitive thought know that the healthcare bill isn't about healthcare at all. It's about big government gaining more and more control over all of our lives. Obama pledged transparency, but chose secrecy. With every slap in the face Obama gives Americans, I come closer and closer to joining the Republican party. How can you, Ms. Shultz, as an American, accept this radicalism? How can you support an adminstration that wants to take away our liberties, our freedom ... our country? Perhaps you, too, are on the radical left and want to see our country go down. If that is the case, should I hate you and, therefore, this letter could be regarded as "hate mail?"
Comment: #6
Posted by: Robert Waldrum
Tue Mar 16, 2010 9:52 AM
I'm like the alternative people in the column. I respond with facts and logic to every hate-filled e-mail I get. Afterward, the senders leave me alone. I still am on friendly terms with the people, but my in-box is less cluttered. I still believe sunshine is the best antibiotic.
Comment: #7
Posted by: Tom Blanton
Tue Mar 16, 2010 1:23 PM
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