Pres Obama talks with novelist Marilynne Robinson (NY Review of Books)
http://www2.nybooks.com/articles/s3/2015/nov/05/president-obama-marilynne-robinson-conversation.html
This conversation takes place in Iowa.
an excerpt (much more at the link):
. . . .people are treating each other the way you would want our democracy to cultivate. But theres this huge gap between how folks go about their daily lives and how we talk about our common life and our political life. And people describe it as the distance between Washington and Main Street. But its not just Washington; its the way we talk about our politics, our foreign policy, our common endeavors. Theres this gap.
And the thing Ive been struggling with throughout my political career is how do you close the gap. Theres all this goodness and decency and common sense on the ground, and somehow it gets translated into rigid, dogmatic, often mean-spirited politics. And some of it has to do with all the filters that stand between ordinary people who are busy and running around trying to look after their kids and do a good job and do all the things that maintain a community, so they dont have the chance to follow the details of complicated policy debates.
They know they want to take care of somebody whos sick, and they have a generous impulse. How that gets translated into the latest Medicare budgets [isnt] always clear. They know they want us to use our power wisely in the world, and that violence often begets violence. But they also know the world is dangerous and its very hard to sort out, as you talk about in your essay, fear when violence must be met, and when there are other tools at our disposal to try to create a more peaceful world.
So that, I think, is the challenge. Im very encouraged when I meet people in their environments. Somehow it gets distilled at the national political level in ways that arent always as encouraging.