On Wednesday evening, a tall, thin man wearing a baseball-style cap stood up from his seat at the Paramount Theatre in St. Cloud to pose a question. He is still on my mind this July 4th weekend, when we celebrate an America that's trying to be great again but is apparently wildly conflicted on what that really means.
The occasion was a forum on journalism and how we cover the news during a time of unsettling rancor, calculated fearmongering and just plain goofiness. The event was in honor of this newspaper's 150th anniversary, and our panel included members of the St. Cloud Times.
The man rose, paused and admitted he didn't quite know how to say what he was about to say.
Uh-oh, I thought, here it comes. Engaging the public is always risky business, particularly in a region that elected Michele Bachmann. Would this man be the troll in the bleachers?
The man, who later said he was 96 years old, eloquently spoke of living through tough times in this country for nearly a century. He mentioned President Nixon and Watergate and other American political carnage, but he concluded he'd never seen anything like what we are seeing right now, in 2017. He said he feared for his country and even for democracy, and he was deeply troubled by Russia's attempts to interfere with our elections and the apparent lack of concern by some officials.
The man encouraged the press to be tough and fair and to hold the government accountable. A woman sitting near him rose to echo his comments, and she begged members of the media to continue to fight lies and fake news and to counter them with "reality." Others asked for more investigative and enterprise journalism. Their questions and suggestions drew hearty applause.
The evening was a wonderful exercise in the kind of democracy we need, with thoughtful questions and civil criticisms. It was a reminder that journalists probably need to get out more. I left the theater inspired and for the first time in a long time, hopeful.
We all needed it. The previous day the Trump administration had ramped up its war on what he calls "the enemy of the people." His sock puppet press secretary derided journalists for continuing to ask about Russian hacks into our election system, something nearly everyone agrees happened — except our president. Even the secretary of state that he appointed believes it.