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There are 2 comments on Healing the Divides

  1. Thanks for these soothing words Sando. I was in DC this past week for the American College of Rheumatology annual conference. Fabulous meeting, but the atmosphere in DC was charged and tense.

    We heard a compelling study from San Francisco showing that a major determinant of damage accrual in lupus is poverty. Importantly, the study showed that the patient group that was able to move above the poverty line achieved damage rates that were comparable to those of individuals who had never been poor. I found this a powerful message. Reminded me of some of the data you presented on your 40th anniversary tour regarding public health measures that can achieve major health changes.

    Thanks again
    Hani El-Gabalawy MD
    Professor of Medicine and Immunology
    University of Manitoba, Canada

  2. I too appreciate this week’s Dean’s comment and its attempt to wrestle with the contradictory dynamics of the Trump victory, which was made possible by the shift in white working class voters in the states that have been hit hard by the macro-economic changes away from manufacturing and toward finance and technology. On the one hand, these voters have lost jobs and hope; on the other hand, their response was to blame even more vulnerable populations. I have no idea whether Bernie Sanders would have beaten Trump (and I was agnostic throughout the primary process regarding who was the stronger candidate), but it is instructive that many of these voters were attracted to both candidates, because both paid attention to their problems. Of utmost importance, the diagnoses of the causes of their condition and the solutions offered were radically different. It is also a reminder that groups of people under stress are susceptible to demagoguery and to the promise of easy solutions. The U.S. is hardly the first country to experience this phenomenon.

    While I’m not sure that I agree with the idea suggested in the last paragraph of the Note that the need for civility, respect and, above all, empathy is the fundamental lesson of this election, I certainly agree that it’s of great import for both sides as we move forward. As for what is the fundamental lesson? I think that will take us some time to work out.

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