Tuesday, November 13, 2018

Civility

I forgot to mention the TNR's I did yesterday.  Both sweet cats.  Both males, and both had to be returned to the streets last night.  And yes, I felt terrible returning them.  And no, I did not see either this morning.  I HATE TNR, but its because of irresponsible people that did not have it done prior to them letting these cats out of their homes that are responsible for this plight!






OMG, I found this gem from EIGHT years ago!  Of course, a lot of my thinking has changed since then. I don't know how this all came about. I think it was the first time I was written up in the paper, and it wasn't under the arrest column!  :)  NOT that I was ever bad or anything!  :) 

(Mark Hare retired in 2012 after 28 years as a columnist, reporter, and editorial writer for the Democrat and Chronicle and Times-Union.)

Civility is Essential to Building Community
Mark Hare • November 4, 2010 

The other day, city crews filled the Broad Street 
planters with mums — deep purple, orange and 
yellow. I am sure there are critics of such "frivolous 
spending," especially so close to the onset of cold 
weather. But I welcome the color and the civilizing 
effects of flowers on our streets.

I welcome any activity that makes our community a 
little more human — including kindness to animals.

Janine Wagner of Irondequoit spends $100 a week 
on cat food — food she leaves for stray and feral 
cats at several locations in northeast Rochester. She 
knows that a lot of people think she's crazy. She 
sometimes uses have-a-heart traps to capture the 
cats. She tells me she has found homes for 15 or 20 
strays (domesticated but abandoned) and she has 
turned over feral cats to animal control. "I've come 
to realize that euthanasia may be better than the 
suffering they endure," she says.

Civility starts with simple acts of respect. People 
scoff today at folks who worry about stray animals 
when so many people are hurting.

But kindness is kindness. In my experience, people 
who care for animals care for people, too.

Speaking and acting in ways — even small ways — 
that improve the quality of our collective experience 
has a civilizing impact on each of us. I don't know 
that egotism and selfishness have reached all-time 
highs, but I do know that too many people live 
completely unfiltered lives — saying and doing 
anything that comes to mind, no matter how hurtful.

Civility requires a concern for how our words and 
actions affect others. I asked P.M. Forni, who co-
founded the Johns Hopkins University Civility 
Project in 1997, why civility has declined and what 
we can do about it.

Forni, a professor of romance languages and 
literature, recently did presentations at both Monroe 
Community College and Rochester Institute of 
Technology. He has written widely on civility and 
has authored two books on the subject, most 
recently The Civility Solution: What to do when 
people are rude.

The decline in civility, he told me, does not owe to 
any single cause, but the informality of the Internet 
has exacerbated the problem. "Sometimes 
informality is the Trojan horse that smuggles 
incivility within the walls of society," he says. Giving 
people online anonymity shields them from all 
repercussions from vile, uninformed and hurtful 
comments and "does not exactly call out our better 
angels," Forni says.

As a society, Forni says, we've instilled self-esteem 
in young people, but not a sense of self-restraint. 
And civility is not just a matter of saying the right 
thing. "What we have to reform is how we interact, 
how compassionate we are, how willing we are to 
meet the needs and desires of others."

Most people are never called on to jump in a river to 
rescue someone, but civility, manners and 
politeness are not trivial "because they are the 
everyday acts of goodness," Forni says. The kind 
word, the pat on the back, the choice to let a driver 
change lanes ahead of us — these are the acts that 
help us be more aware of our humanity. So, too, the 
planting of flowers and the feeding of animals.

These are not the best of times, but I hope we never reach a point where we cannot afford to do even simple things that "call out our better angels."

2 comments:

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  2. Thanks for being kind to all the kitties over the years J !

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