Turn Down the Temperature--Before It’s Too Late
This past weekend in Doylestown, protestors gathered for a “No Kings” rally, holding signs that compared federal immigration officers to Nazis – one reading, “Nazis used trains. ICE uses planes.” These kinds of messages aren’t just offensive – they’re dangerous. And they’re becoming far too common in politics.
This same weekend, across the country, Minnesota state Rep. Melissa Hortman was shot and killed in a politically motivated attack. While the investigation is ongoing, the timing is chilling – and it reminds us that words and rhetoric can have consequences far beyond the floor of a legislative chamber.
When public servants are threatened, harassed, or even harmed for doing their jobs, something has gone deeply wrong in our democracy.
It’s time to turn down the temperature – not just in our political speeches, but on our main streets, in school board meetings, and even our protest signs.
Public service is about problem-solving, not posturing. I’ve always believed in working with my neighbors – even when we disagree – to make our community safer and stronger. But that’s becoming harder when disagreement is met with dehumanization, and history is twisted into political theater.
We’ve seen it right here in my community. At a recent public hearing on how to protect children from online predators, a woman disrupted the meeting to shout that our Jewish Sheriff, Fred Harran, was a “Nazi.” A week later, during a Bucks County Commissioners meeting about a law enforcement partnership with ICE, Commissioner Bob Harvie warned of “parallels” between modern politics and pre-war Nazi Germany.
I’ve worked hard in the state House to expand Holocaust education in Pennsylvania schools, because I believe history must be remembered – not weaponized. As the daughter of educators, I was raised to know that using Nazi references as political attacks not only dishonors the memory of those who suffered, it poisons the possibility of honest, civil debate.
None of this is to say we shouldn’t debate serious issues – immigration, public safety, fiscal priorities, and the future of our communities. Or that we shouldn’t take part in peaceful protest rooted in our First Amendment rights. We must. But we must also remember that democracy isn’t about shouting each other down – it’s about listening, questioning, and finding common ground.
The truth is, most people don’t want politics to be a blood sport. They want real solutions. They want their kids to be safe, their neighborhoods to be strong, and their elected officials to focus on solving problems – not scoring points.
Let’s be better than the signs. Let’s be better than the soundbites. Let’s choose to be neighbors first, and partisans second.
Because if we don’t change the tone now, we risk losing more than just elections – we risk losing one another.