Election Day 2024: Why both sides feel this is a tipping point for America

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Lauren Markow lived through the Cold War with a bomb shelter at her St. Louis home. Yet to her, it feels like America is at a dangerous new tipping point with former President Donald Trump on the verge of reelection. 

Meanwhile, Hillsdale College sophomore Cole Sutherland has been feeling a sense of “doom” about the possibility of Vice President Kamala Harris winning this presidential election, the first in which he is old enough to vote. 

Why We Wrote This

Amid unusually high concern about this election, many voters don’t recognize that people on the other side are also deeply worried. And that may be part of the problem.

Ms. Markow and Mr. Sutherland represent opposite poles in Middle America. But both say it’s important to seek common ground – including a shared love of country. 

So we invited the two to speak over Zoom. 

On Sunday afternoon, they talked through their fears for the country’s future. Before they logged off, Ms. Markow shared a parting quote. 

“Given how scholarly you are about these things, I think you might appreciate this,” she told Mr. Sutherland.

Near the end of the Civil War, Abraham Lincoln was asked if he had ever doubted that the Union would prevail. He responded in the words of his secretary of state, William Seward: “‘There was always just enough virtue in this republic to save it; sometimes none to spare.’”

Lauren Markow lived through the Cold War and the turbulent 1960s, yet to her it feels like America is at a dangerous new tipping point.

She teared up thinking about it the other day as she sped past brilliant fall foliage headed west from St. Louis, away from the suburb where she grew up with a bomb shelter at home – and toward an election that looms ever larger in her thought. Not only because of what it means for her as a Democrat desperate to restore civility and worried that former President Donald Trump could be more unrestrained in a second term, but also because of the children in her life.

“If Trump gets elected and he does the things he says he wants to do, my 10-year-old friends will never know what this country really can be on better days,” she says. “This country was an exquisite and stunning idea.”

Why We Wrote This

Amid unusually high concern about this election, many voters don’t recognize that people on the other side are also deeply worried. And that may be part of the problem.

Meanwhile, seven hours to the northeast in Michigan, college sophomore Cole Sutherland has been feeling a sense of “doom” about the possibility of Vice President Kamala Harris winning this presidential election, the first in which he is old enough to vote. Among other concerns, he sees her and her allies as disregarding guardrails that the Founding Fathers carefully put in place.

“They wanted a place for the people, but they didn’t want direct democracy because that ends up being mob rule, in which one party gets crushed,” says Mr. Sutherland, adding that the founders instead envisioned a representative republic.

“I think that’s in one of the Federalist papers,” he adds. “Hang on, I have it. … It’s in Federalist 10.” Within seconds he pulls up James Madison’s treatise on how to strike a balance between majority rule and minority rights, which he recently wrote a paper on for one of his classes at Hillsdale College, ranked third by The Princeton Review for “most conservative students.”

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