There are two sides to every question
There are two sides to every question
Outlines:
1.
Introduction.
2.
Truth is many-sided.
3.
Two sides to political questions.
4.
Conclusion
There is a story told in verse
about that curious kind of lizard called the chameleon. Two friends talking
about it almost quarreled about its color one saying it was blue and the other
swearing it was green. While they were arguing, a third man joined them and he
said they were both wrong. He had caught a chameleon the night before, and it
was black, All three went to see it, but when its captor took it out of the box
where he had put it, lo and behold was not blue, or green, or black, but white.
The explanation of course, was
that a chameleon has the stranger power of changing its color to suit its
surroundings. So at one time it may appear blue, at another green, at another
black, and at another white. So all were right, and at the same time wrong.
In the same way truth is many-side
and different people see different sides. So every question has at least two
sides. Narrow minded people can see only one side, and it take a broad-minded
man to see both.
Consider the different ways in
which different people will look at a social problem, say poverty. Some will
say that poverty is entirely due to laziness, thriftlessness or strong drink.
Let the poor work and save and keep sober, and there will be no more poverty.
Other people will point out that idleness, thriftlessness and drunkenness are
themselves the result of poverty the wretched circumstances in which the poor
are brought up. So one party says, change the man and he will change his
surroundings and the otlher says, change the surrounding and you will change
the man. And then they quarrel and fight. Yet both are right, each sees one
side of the question, but only one. A wise and broad-minded reformer will see
both, and work both for the individual and for social reform.
Or, take plolitics, In most
democratic countries there are two great parties which correspond to the
Conservatives and Liberals or progressives in England.
The conservative wants to keep (“conserve”) things as they are, fearing that
any change will do more harm than good; the Liberal stands for reform, change
and progress. Now both are in a way right. Because no social organization is
perfect, we must reform abused, adopt better methods, and progress to better
things, But it has often happened (as in the French Revolution) that, if people
are in too great a hurry to make progress, they destroy many good institutions
with the bad, and even wreck the whole constitution. But narrow-minded
politicians of different view do not see this; and so, each seeing only his
side of they question, the fight. A real statesman sees both.
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