Tolerance
'Tolerance implies no lack of commitment to one's own
beliefs. Rather it condemns the oppression or persecution of
others.'
John F Kennedy
Tolerance in every definition (both the capacity to recognise and
respect the beliefs of others and the capacity to endure hardship
or pain) is at the very heart and soul of modern manners.
George Eliot wrote that, "The responsibility of tolerance lies with
those who have the wider vision," and there is clearly still a need
for that wider vision or education to be the seed-bed of tolerance:
you can't expect a toddler to be tolerant of someone taking his
toys because he hasn't thought through the implications of sharing
being a two-way street.
If faced with a lack of tolerance in someone else, the way of
getting through that encounter with the least effect on one's blood
pressure is to wonder if they are being so intolerant in this
context because they are like that toddler - they haven't thought
it through.
That's not to say that one should tolerate intolerance silently
(though in some circumstances it might be better to swallow what
you were going to say and simply move on), but if you can persuade
yourself that perhaps the intolerant one does not know what they
are saying, it could make the conversation more peaceful and
polite.
Tolerance does not imply weakness, so if tolerance means turning
the other cheek or letting something slide over you like water off
a duck's back, then do so knowing that it is done from a position
of strength.
The British are rightly proud of their religious and political
tolerance, but traditionally that tolerance did not extend to
antisocial behaviour. Disapproval of transgressions - from dropping
litter, to noisy parties, inconsiderate parking and boisterous
behaviour in public - was an integral part of British life. Some
would argue that the British are gradually becoming more tolerant
of antisocial behaviour, and that the UK is becoming as a
consequence a less safe, clean and tidy place. Sometimes - in the
face of unacceptable rudeness - intolerance is the only
option.
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