
How does a country move from argument to action?
The shooting at the White House Correspondents’ Dinner is not an isolated event. It is part of a pattern, a deepening reflex in this country to divide the world into friend and enemy.
We have been moving, steadily and dangerously, toward seeing one another not as fellow citizens, but as sides in a contest that must be won. Not debated, won. That shift matters.
When disagreement becomes identity—grievance, hate—it stops being contained by words.
“Everyone is entitled to his own opinion, but not to his own facts,” scholar, statesman Daniel Patrick Moynihan said.
The tragedy is not only that violence occurs. It’s that, in some corners, it begins to feel inevitable.
But it’s not inevitable. What has been built can be unbuilt.
The question is how.
Unity is not a declaration. It’s a discipline.
It begins with something quieter and more difficult: a willingness to see the other side not as an enemy to be defeated, but as a reality to be engaged. The framers understood this. They did not design a system to eliminate division. They designed one to manage it.
We have lost sight of that.
If there is a way back, it will come from those who choose, deliberately, to step out of the reflex of tribalism.
But leadership still matters.
The presidency is an office of voice as much as power. At moments like this, the country looks for clarity, for steadiness, from someone willing to say, plainly, that we are not enemies to one another. First and last, we Americans. Regardless of party. Regardless of belief.
A president cannot erase division. But he can refuse to deepen it. He can call the country back to a shared understanding that disagreement is part of democracy, not a justification for tearing it apart.
That responsibility should not be optional. It comes with the office. And it matters now.
Abraham Lincoln’s admonition echoes more loudly than ever:
“If destruction be our lot, we must ourselves be its author and finisher… It cannot come from abroad.”












