It is my observation that the middle is disappearing in the US.
- Economically, people are moving closer towards poverty or wealth, but not stability.
- Socially/morally, people are moving closer into liberality or conservatism; taboos are either rejected or embraced, but not affirmed.
- Religiously/spiritually, people are moving further into relativism or fundamentalism; what used to be defined by denomination is no longer valid, as once conservative faith groups have moved en masse leftward with the most conservative of their group winding up sitting on the middle. People are leaving denominations in droves to form new groups that are becoming more distinct in their position.
- Politically, the party system no longer defines ends of a spectrum, with hawkers from the extreme trying to convince the voting middle. Individuals are moving further left or right regardless of party lines. Apart from the Tea Party influence, the Republican Party looks more and more like conservative Democrats of old - certainly not the GOP I grew up with. And I understand folks on the left are saying the same thing about the DP.
The state established religion of tolerance has not produced a strong healthy centrist population, but instead has made us very very sensitive of "difference" - albeit with stated intent to make us careful not to offend. The result is we spend a lot of time exploring difference, talking about difference, and its clear that its affected the way people think and the national dialogue.
Where is the middle? Is it important? What role does it serve? And what does the future hold without it?