There was a time—not that long ago—when we argued about how to fix things.
Taxes. Schools. Crime. The border. You could sit across from someone, disagree completely on the solution, and still start from the same basic understanding of the problem. The facts might be uncomfortable, but they were shared.
That’s no longer where we are.
We’ve reached a moment where disagreement isn’t just about solutions. It’s about whether we’re even describing the same problem.
One side says crime is under control. Another says it’s being underreported or redefined.
One side says the border is secure. Another says it’s anything but.
One side says concerns are overblown. Another says they’re being deliberately minimized.
These aren’t policy disagreements.
These are reality disagreements.
And that’s where things begin to break down.
Because a functioning society depends on a shared baseline of truth. Not perfect agreement—but at least a common set of facts we can argue from. When that disappears, something more dangerous takes its place: competing versions of reality, each reinforced by its own media, its own leaders, its own echo chambers.
At that point, debate becomes impossible.
You can’t solve a problem if half the country doesn’t believe it exists—and you can’t calm fears if the other half believes those fears are being dismissed or hidden.
Here in the Hudson Valley, you can feel that tension creeping in. It shows up in community meetings, in conversations at the diner, in the quiet frustration of people who feel like what they’re seeing doesn’t match what they’re being told.
And once that gap opens, trust doesn’t just weaken—it fractures.
That’s the real danger.
Because when people stop believing the information they’re given, they start looking elsewhere. They rely on instinct, on anecdote, on whatever source feels closest to their lived experience. Institutions lose credibility. Leadership loses authority. And decision-making—at every level—becomes harder, slower, more reactive.
That’s not just division.
That’s risk.
Risk that problems go unaddressed because they’re politically inconvenient.
Risk that warnings are ignored because they don’t fit the narrative.
Risk that by the time everyone finally agrees something is wrong… it’s already too late.
A country can survive disagreement. In many ways, it depends on it.
But it cannot function—let alone stay safe—if it no longer agrees on what is real.
Because reality doesn’t wait for consensus.
And when we stop recognizing it together, we don’t just drift apart.
We leave ourselves exposed