Podcast Season 4, Episode 1 Transcript
Babette: 0:06
Welcome to Season 4, episode 1 of Many Voices, One Call SUNY Schenectady's very own
diversity, equity, inclusion and social justice podcast. I'm your host, Babette Fehmel,
history professor and podcast host. Today we are without a student co-host because
Alexandre, who was with us for the entire season three, has transferred to SUNY Albany.
Well, this is our October episode. It's the spooky season. It's also the month before
a major election, and so that's also the reason why today we have decided to get together
to talk about politics and we have guests in the studio. Joining us from University
of Albany is Sean Millington. Sean, you seem to wear a lot of hats at SUNY Albany.
Can you introduce yourself and say a bit more about what you do there?
Sean: 0:57
Yeah, of course. So my name is Sean Millington. I'm a junior at UAlbany and I study
political science and history. I'm part of the SUNY Student Assembly, where I'm the
special advisor for special projects, which essentially is civic engagement. We want
to get students all across the SUNY system registered to vote and then at UAlbany
I'm also the president of the College Democrats there and I'm also a Student Association
senator.
Babette: 1:24
Also in the studio are some of our SUNY Schenectady's finest. Do you want to just
go around the room and everybody introduces themselves? Sa, do you want to start?
Sayeed: 1:34
Sure, yeah, absolutely. Thank you, Dr Babette. My name is Sayeed Chambers. I am a
first-year, first-semester SUNY Schenectady student. I am also a part of the Student
Government Association here in SUNY with plans on becoming part of the whole entire
SUNY A. Right, we're looking forward to the conference coming up, and you and I also
met on one of the webinars that just recently passed. Yeah, and I'm just involved
in a whole bunch of committees here, like the Student Activities Board, the International
Committee, a few other things Budget and Finance. I do a lot of stuff as well besides
make everybody laugh and smile. So I'm happy to be here and I'm going to pass it to
my best man right here.
Dan: 2:25
Hello everybody. My name is Daniel. I am the treasurer of the Student Government Association
at SUNY Schenectady. I am a teacher education major with a concentration in history
and as Sai is also involved, I also go to a lot of those student government committees
and things of that nature, a lot of meetings I get around.
Cesarina: 2:45
Hi, my name is Cesarina. I'm a student here at SUNY S and I am in Babette's class,
DEI, and I'm a big mental health advocate.
Rae: 3:01
And I am Professor Rae Doyle.
Rae: 3:03
I teach the communication courses including mass media and public speaking, along
with a social media course.
Nadine: 3:21
I'm Nadine. I major in business administration, I'm a human resources specialist,
full-time career, and I also am a small business owner that specializes in event planning,
and I'm also in the DEI class.
Babette: 3:32
And I did not force them to come. So you actually all volunteer to be on a podcast
episode about politics, and I think that makes you kind of unusual, because it's not
the most popular topic to talk about. So, for starters, I was just wondering if we
could all talk a little bit about what do we even associate with the label, with the
word, with the term politics? What do we even mean by that? Does anybody want to take
that one?
Sean: 4:02
Chaos.
Babette: 4:05
Very much, seems like that sometimes.
Sean: 4:08
But I mean, if we want to define it, I think politics is how decisions are made in
government and also how we interact with that so they can make those decisions for
us.
Babette: 4:29
What do you associate with politics?
Cesarina: 4:32
I think I kind of agree with that, but I'd like to add on to it just by saying that
I think politics is kind of the system that we use to solve societal issues.
Babette: 4:43
Okay, yeah, absolutely.
Dan: 4:49
Polarization. That is, I think, something we'll be talking about later in this podcast.
Babette: 4:52
I mean yeah, absolutely, we absolutely have to. I mean, I was just before this podcast.
I was just looking up some studies from Pew Research Institute and I mean, like the
negativity that is associated with politics is really mind boggling. So I found a
study that said 65 percent of Americans, and like last year, said they always, or
often, feel exhausted when they think about politics. Fifty five percent feel angry,
only 10 percent feel that they are hopeful and more than 86 percent agree with the
statement that Republicans and Democrats are more focused on fighting each other than
on solving problems. So we seem to definitely have like a problem here at hand. So
another thing that I that I find really interesting to get us started is like how
can you, can you remember how you got interested in politics as a subject?
Sean: 5:48
Yeah, so I got interested. I don't think this is normal, I got interested really young.
I was always really interested in history. And that kind of got me interested in politics
in 2016. During that election, when Hillary ran, I was 12, but I was a big supporter
of hers. I really enjoyed that moment. And then, obviously, when she lost. I was a
little sad, but I was always interested from there on and I knew it's what I wanted
to do when I got to college.
Babette: 6:27
So was the experience of disappointment that you wanted to work for change or have
a voice?
Sean: 6:32
Yes, yes, yeah, I would definitely say so. I want to be involved in the process because,
we all can be.
Babette: 6:41
Yeah, we definitely talk about that, like how we can be and what we mean by that.
Yeah, okay, anybody else?
Sayeed: 6:49
Yeah, so I also got into politics really young. It's funny because I can remember
when I was really really young and I had a babysitter. I can't remember exactly the
reason, but I remember that she used to like help me write letters to the current
president at the time, I think it was Bill Clinton and I just had fun doing that.
But growing up I kind of enjoyed watching the chaos you spoke of earlier, all the
scandals and all the shenanigans that goes on with these politicians inside politics.
I see politics can be a lot of language, a lot of rhetoric. Politicians and inside
politics, um, I see politics can be a lot of language, a lot of rhetoric can be. You
know some some, some, some discourse. You know either negative, positive, um propaganda,
whatever.
Sayeed: 7:32
So it just always fascinates me how politics actually operates on the underbelly you
know and from whatever country you know, from the us to Russia, to North Korea, so
yeah, that's my take on it.
Babette: 7:46
Yeah, an, do you remember how you got involved?
Dan: 7:49
Well, I would say I probably got into it from peers. I had a lot of friends in middle
school and high school who were, you know, into activism and things of that nature,
a lot of gay friends who would go to, like you know, pride parades, pride protests,
things of that general nature.
Babette: 8:12
My memories of how I got interested in politics. I was really, really young. And I
just noticed that in my family, which is like a quite conservative family, politics
was the thing that the guys talked about after dinner, like when we had like bigger
family events and all the ladies went to the kitchen and did like took care of the
housework and the guys stayed behind and talked politics. And I was just this like
well problematic teenager and I stayed with the guys because I wanted to. I thought
like there's something going on here, like why don't they have to do the housework?
So I'm going to stay here and I'm just going to like voice my opinion, not knowing
much, but I wanted to have a voice, Cez, do you remember?
Cesarina: 8:57
Yeah, so I recently started getting into politics. My whole life I was kind of sheltered
from it, I feel like I wasn't really educated on it and because of that I felt that
my voice kind of didn't matter because I didn't want to state an opinion and not know
the facts behind it, and so I kind of just stayed that way for a while, and I feel
like the first time I really got like had an opinion that I thought mattered was I
was in a relationship with someone who's not from this country so he's from a different
country and seeing how the immigration system was, kind of like not okay in my opinion,
like it was kind of like it was really hard to become an American citizen legally.
Babette: 9:41
Yeah.
Cesarina: 9:41
And to see going through that kind of made me like really start to get involved in
politics. And then, especially like really recently, I seen a few Jubilee episodes
about a bunch of "woke teens talking against Charlie Kirk and that really inspired
me to learn more on these topics and hearing the facts about that.
Babette: 10:09
Okay, and how about you, Ry?
Rae: 10:11
I grew up in a very political family and one of the earliest memories from my parents
was if you don't vote, you can't complain. And so it became instilled in me very early
on that it was important to be knowledgeable, to recognize our role in being able
to make change, and that we needed to be active that way, and so it really was, from
a time I was a very little girl.
Babette: 10:40
Yeah, and you, Nadine.
Nadine: 10:43
For me it probably would be, I would say, the first time I was able to vote and the
person that I voted for won the election, where I kind of felt like, okay, my voice
does matter, my vote counted for something, counted for something. And then, honestly,
because politicians and the whole idea of politics gives me a little bit of anxiety.
It kind of makes me feel like we're focusing on more negative things than world peace.
So I don't quite enjoy it, probably as much as others, but I think I'm learning to
accept it and to actually get a little bit more involved, especially like I think
this election coming, I'm so torn and I feel like I don't know which way to go.
Nadine: 11:40
So I definitely feel like it's time to get involved, it's time to learn and make a
difference.
Babette: 11:46
Do you think that your attitudes towards politics are fairly representative of your
generation or of your cohort of students? Or do you think like, what do you perceive
amongst your peers? Because from, I mean, from my perspective as a professor here,
I never hear students talk about politics in the public spaces, like where I was an
undergrad in Germany, like there was constant talk about politics. And I'm wondering,
like does it happen? And I'm just not aware of it, because it happens more in, like
private spaces in college. I mean, you probably have the better insights there. What
would you say? I mean, sga is not. It might also not be that representative, but maybe
it is. Like within SGA do you guys talk a lot about politics, civic engagement and
these things.
Dan: 12:38
I wouldn't say that we do in SGA, but in terms of the student body in general, I would
say we do talk politics, but I think it's generally relegated to private spaces, like
you were saying, because of that perception that it's something that causes conflict
and distress, at least in my experience. Anecdotally, whenever I talk politics with
people, it's only usually a couple other students, you know. Yeah, not big groups,
couple of people that I know well. Uh, people that I know generally agree with me.
Um, people don't usually speak politics in open spaces,
Babette: 13:14
I wouldn't say nd you say it's because they fear that it will just cause too much
stress for themselves or create um like hostility, or Yeah, that's what I would say.
Dan:13:24
People tend to avoid it because of that perception of politics as a stressful and,
you know, a problem.
Babette: 13:33
Yeah, yeah, it's the polarization that you mentioned earlier. Like you are either
like if you're not on my side, if you don't see things like I see them, you are on
that other side and we don't get along. Is that what's happening?
Dan: 13:46
Yes, and I think that is an attitude in politics that has significantly increased
since the 1980s. I would say that was when politics started to change a lot in the
minds and hearts of the citizens.
Babette: 14:01
Because I mean, in a way it's funny when Sean said politics is and also chess is a
process, right, like a process of decision making and of distribution. That kind of
sounds fairly mild and, like, benevolent. I mean like if you are, if you've ever lived
with more than two people, or like one other person, even if you're just living with
a other person, you have to make. There needs to be a process how you decide how things
are being done. And you say it became incredibly controversial and acrimonious in
the 1980s. Is that how you perceive it too? Has this just been with us for quite some,
some time, or was there more of that recently, maybe when social media came into the
mix or whatnot?
Sayeed: 14:53
I definitely agree with that statement because if you look at how America is structured
right, if you look at the backbone of capitalism and free market and free enterprise,
the whole goal is big business right.
Sayeed: 15:10
It's big business. So, therefore, we have to have a governing system that's going
to accommodate, you know, the people, right? And by the people I mean the industries,
not the real people, not people like us, but, like you know, the markets. And I'm
saying um, so like, laws change when there needs to be, when there's a change in the
markets, a new demand, a new supply, you know. So, uh, what? The internet bubble,
right? What was that? 99, something, 98, right. New things started coming to play
20, 30 years ago. We had no social media policies or cryptocurrency restraints and
restrictions, but laws had to have changed in order to keep up with the times. And
politics has to change as well. It's, you know, it's the evolution of politics. First,
you know, the Romans were whatever public right, and then we come along with the democratic
republic. First, you know, the Romans were whatever public right, and then we come
along with the Democratic Republic, and, you know, whatever, whatever.
Babette: 16:11
And a little bit of empire...
Sayeed: 16:12
Yeah, a little bit of empire a little bit of you know swindling and you know all that
stuff.
Dan: 16:17
I think what you were saying about how laws change when the money, about how laws
change when the money is there and it needs to change, I think that contributes to
the perception of politics as something that people view as a negative. Because a
lot of the time, like we talk about lobbying, right? Like, let's say, we got a big
oil company or something you know and the government is trying to pass a law saying,
you know passing a regulation on oil companies and you know drilling in endangered
species, environments or something right, if that company doesn't want that law to
go through, they can spend money to lobby those senators, those representatives and
try to make sure it doesn't go through. So I think what you were saying about you
know capitalism and how the money really affects politics I think that contributes
to the perception of politics as a negative, corrupt force.
Babette: 17:08
And I like that you emphasize perception, right? Because, I mean, I think, like, on
the surface there is a lot of, well, corruption, scandals, and also the pervasive
sense that whatever they are doing up there" and out there in some state house or
in Congress is not really serving us like the common people or the people. But I'm
wondering, is that supported by evidence, by facts, or how much of it is perception
by facts or how much of it is perception? Because I also think I mean, yeah, sure,
there is corruption in politics, but there's also a lot of real effort, especially
on the local level or among members of Congress who are not constantly on social media,
who actually are there to put their head down and do the humble work of being there
for the public, doing public work? We don't see that, right? Maybe if we watch C-SPAN,
but that's not necessarily in everybody's media diet. So I just wonder is the corruption
the real story or is there another story to tell and do we hear about it?
Sean: 18:26
I think the United States has a little bit of an institutionalism problem. So, I think
the structure of the US government isn't 100% fair and accurate and built in a way
that most effectively represents the people.
Sean: 18:49
So, for example, we have the US Senate, where the state of Wyoming has the same power
as the state of California, even though California is I don't even know the number,
but it's a lot bigger. And that's also true in the electoral college as well. Right,
we have a system where someone can win the election without winning the most votes
in the country. So I think a lot of it comes down to the institutional problems we
have with a document that was written over 200 years ago and it can't really adapt.
Sean: 19:31
The founders never foresaw what America looks like now.
Babette: 19:35
No, probably not. So yeah, yeah, once again, that's really, I think, important to
keep in mind. There is an institutional basis and there are issues about the process
and about the fairness of the process that one would need to be aware of in order
to really assess politics and the state of our politics, because if you leave that
out, then it's the corruption, corrupt politicians, liars who just want our votes
and then they do whatever they want to do. So this kind of understanding of the process
and the institutions is really important. Do you feel that we are properly equipped
with that information and that knowledge?
Sayeed: 20:22
I feel this though over time, um, as a society, we've gotten better, you know, with
obtaining the information and making use of it. Um, if we can perpetuate our culture
to be more proactive and engaged more in these politics, I I think it will, it can
get better that's all we need we just need more engagement from all different communities
from both sides.
Babette: 20:47
Yeah, yeah.
Dan: 20:48
At the same time,
Babette: 20:49
Hold on, Nadine
Nadine: 20:51
No, I was just agreeing.
Nadine: 20:53
I think that's spot on accurate.
Babette: 20:56
Yeah, I mean you need to have like a lot of people around the table when they are
talking about what's best for the community. Right, absolutely! Dan?
Dan: 21:05
I think on the same time as what you're saying, we have the Internet, right, we have
what we call the information age and now we are quickly progressing into the misinformation
age. And that amount of access to information that we are now equipped with is actually
harming us, because people can just very easily spread misinformation, make false
claims. I mean, you see, even at the vice presidential debate last, what was that
last night, Tuesday?
Babette: 21:34
Two nights ago.
Dan: 21:35
Two nights ago. Yeah, there were plenty of times where the moderator stepped in and
said listen, that's just false. You know, on both candidates. Yeah, and I think that's
very scary that nowadays it's so widespread this misinformation.
Sayeed: 21:51
Somebody just mentioned information literacy. Who? Was that that was you guys, and
that's why that's important.
Babette: 21:56
Yeah, right.
Sayeed: 21:59
To sift through. You know all that nonsense.
Babette: 22:00
Right.
Sayeed: 22:01
Like, like, like financial literacy to know how to do your taxes, know how to do student
loans, stuff like that, know how to use a credit card, information literacy is just
an important and, as time changes, we need, you know, society to be more privy on
that. Just like, um, you know, uh, what? Nowadays they don't even teach kids how to
write in cursive. Why is that? Because there is no no need it for . Quote air quotes
if you can't see me um, there's no need it 'cause everybody's everybody's just texting.
But yeah, that's just that.
Babette: 22:32
think actually that's a really kind of I ... Argh. I want to be alarmist, but I think
that's a dangerous moment in human history. I mean, we have so much information that
we are being flooded with and we have to decide almost in real time what is trustworthy,
what's reliable, when are we being manipulated and when is something like completely
made up right? And I just sometimes really worry that we and at the same time there's
so little time because there are still, like all the other things that you have to
take care of and feeling it's probably natural that one feels overwhelmed and helpless
or clueless, and that then comes with a danger that you just check out, because you
just decide like, okay, whatever, who knows what's true, Can we do anything about
that? Or do you feel like that, that you are almost I don't know like overburdened
with the challenge of figuring out what's fact and what's not, with the challenge
of figuring out what's fact and what's not.
Dan: 23:35
Well, I would say to our listeners, listen to this podcast, if you're feeling clueless.
Babette: 23:40
Thanks
Dan: 23:41
If you are feeling clueless, and you want to know what's going on politically. Listen
to things like this and we'll provide resources to help you Get out there, look around.
Dan: 23:54
Make sure you know where your news is coming from. That's important. Make sureans
how it leans and just keep an eye on things. I think this could also really needs
to be pushed more in the education system as well. What do you mean? Well, you know
in high school maybe a little more focused on it and you know we have people.
Dan: 24:08
You have to take a US Gov class and you have to take a civics class, things like that.
Maybe focus on it a little more. Make sure people are educated on this kind of thing.
Babette: 24:17
Rae, you teach communication and you do teach digital media and new media and social
media and all these things. I imagine students come to your classes because they are
really interested in presenting information and how we interact with information.
What do you hear from your students?
Rae: 24:35
They have a lot of different reasons for coming in. A lot of them struggle with understanding.
So I was thinking about something that you had said about left-leaning and right-leaning
news. Right, but what I'm trying to get my students to understand, even at the most
basic level, is that there's a difference between pundits and news. And so they get
really confused and think that when they're watching some talk show that's politically
related, that that talk show is actually journalism and it's not they are just opinion
givers, and so we often are starting at the very basic level, because they want to
understand how to figure out is this an opinion?
Rae: 25:19
Or is this an actual fact? Is this journalism or is this just somebody talking about
a topic? And so... I always start right at that very basic level, trying to get them
to understand that there's a big difference there that you can. For example, in my
public speaking class we're coming on persuasion right now and I actually have them
look at multiple news articles Fox, CNN, Reuters, and then they're all about the same
topic and they're shocked to find out that they're all delivering the same information
topic and they're shocked to find out that they're all delivering the same information
Fox News, CNN News, and we have these ideas that they're biased.
Rae: 25:57
But they're not if they're not opinion pieces, and so they're always like wait, what
that Fox News is, like that's not biased?
Rae: 26:04
And I'm like, no, it's not, it's literally giving you the news yeah, because there's
like the punditry part of Fox and of CNN or of MSNBC, and then there's the news part.
Right and so they have a yearning, I think, to understand how to figure it out right.
Rae: 26:21
How to figure out what's actual news and what's not news.
Babette: 26:25
Yeah. Do you feel the same, Ces and Nadine? T hat there's a yearning among students
to figure out how to distinguish bias from well, an argument that might be based on
some misinformation or some falsehoods, but it's a sincere and honestly made argument,
as opposed to something that is basically presented to you without particular concern
about, like different sides or perspectives, or the facts? Do you feel that there
is a real need to, like, figure that out?
Nadine: 27:05
Yeah, I think my experience in particular, I think a lot of conversations that I have,
whether they go good or bad, I'm often feeling like I don't know what's opinion and
where they got their information or just things that you see on social media. You
don't know if it's edited, chopped and screwed to you know spin a story or whatnot.
So I would definitely say yeah, especially for myself.
Babette: 27:37
Yeah, and you Ces?
Cesarina: 27:39
I definitely think it's important. I also, though, would say that a lot of people
don't really realize that, like. I think, a lot of people just see something and it
fits what they already thought, so they'll like repost it on like TikTok or something,
and they just agree with it, whether they know if it's true or not.
Babette: 27:58
Yeah, I sometimes feel really like that we totally dropped the ball on this whole
issue as educators, as institutions, because social media has been around for a while
now and we didn't pay like people like me that we didn't pay much attention and in
the course of not paying attention, we missed out on the fact that an entire generation,
or two generations by now, I don't know, have, like, become, or have become immersed
in a completely different information environment. And so now we're playing catch
up, right? I mean, I never I watch, I don't know. I probably can count the numbers
of TikTok videos that I've seen in my life with two hands, like two fingers, thank
God, more than that, but I might be like 10, 15. But that's. I think that's dangerous
because, like, you just lose,... you lose people, you lose out on realizing, or you
just don't realize, that they operate in a different system, in a different environment.
How do you see that? Yeah, Say, you've been quiet for a while.
Sayeed: 29:09
Honestly, I live by simple rules. See, I'm a huge social media person. Like, I don't
post a lot, but I scroll a lot. Like you can find me 2 to 4 am on Instagram for no
reason, Right, just laughing. Right, looking at stuff or taking in information and
news on these different sites and stuff. But I have one rule, right, on these different
sites and stuff. But I have one rule. Right, it's not really a rule, but this is just
the process of taking in information and seeing what is going to fit in my ideas.
Right, first, receive the information, be open-minded to it right.
Sayeed: 29:45
Secondly, don't believe it whatsoever. Third do some research. Fourth confirm or deny.
If that last one, if I cannot do neither, then step three is the biggest one. Just
don't believe it. If I can't confirm nor deny, then it's a no.
Sayeed: 30:04
It's a no for me, dawg.
Babette: 30:06
So you want, like, healthy skepticism?
Sayeed: 30:07
Healthy skepticism through and through! Because I like to laugh at this stuff more
than ... Because this is when I realized, um, some years ago, over covid, this is
a great piece right here. Over Covid, I didn't realize that countries have different
internets, right? I didn't even know, that until I started shopping in like Nigeria.
One time, I was calling the mall, buying, buying like stuff, like you know, using
my stimulus money, to do stuff or whatever you know.
Sayeed: 30:36
So it just shocked me and then I started looking into it. Like information is spread
differently everywhere. Right? Our information here is going to be different from
the information that they're spreading over in Taiwan or especially opposition countries
like North Korea. Right? Especially third world countries like Sierra Leone. You know
definitely different. I mean, some might be a little similar, like you know Canada
and you know all our you know ally forces.
Babette: 31:10
Coming back to this idea of like how do we interact with information? Like what, what?
What do we? What kind of options do we have? Like, how can we make sure that more
people are not getting more, that people are not getting more cynical and that more
people find like a process, just like Say has, like when, like how to interact with
information, or like historians have right, because I mean, Dan, you have a history
background, Sean, you have a history background like, how do we make sure that people
are not checking out and not getting more cynical?
Babette: 31:43
What can we as peers, like peers, like students amongst themselves and as educators
too.
Dan: 31:48
I think one of the things I wanted to touch on in regards to that is something Professor
Doyle just mentioned: Confirmation bias, which is a very large issue with social media,
no wadays. You get into these sorts of echo chambers where, like, let's say, you're
on Twitter or something, right, you know, you get all these people, they all agree
and it feeds you. So this is on any social media platform. It will feed you opinions
that you agree with. Maybe not so much recently, but you know, uh, and I think that's
a real problem that we need to work to combat.
Sean: 32:21
Yeah, no, I, I totally agree.
Sean: 32:22
And I mean I I've caught myself a few times where I like see something and I roll
my eyes and I'm like, oh, I can't just like disregard this piece of information Right.
So it definitely is an issue, and I think the first step is being aware of it. Right?
If, if you're aware of it, you can take action to get better at it. But but overall,
I think we need to. We really need to focus on our education systems. You were talking
about this.
Sean: 33:00
We need to do this more in school because, when I was young, we were never taught
information literacy or anything like that, or even how to interact with social media,
and that's something we might need now, I mean, as we're going into the age of misinformation,
right? Well, one of the best ways to tackle that is by educating people, and we need
to do that in institutions, in academic institutions.
Babette: 33:23
Yeah, and I mean it's not that we have to reinvent the wheel, right, as historians
you know like okay, so misinformation, dan, you're saying, well, we are entering the
age of misinformation.
Babette:33:34
There have been ages of misinformation before, right, but it's like with social media
or with the internet, everything gets amplified and it's harder and harder to find
your way through that.
Babette: 33:47
It's just like everything is so big and there are so many pieces involved and so much
information. Everything is so big and there are so many pieces involved and so much
information, and at one point we thought the Internet would democratize information
and liberate us all. I think that didn't quite happen and thankfully, I mean, thankfully,
like, civics is now a greater emphasis! Like, civic engagement, civic education, civic
engagement skills, those kinds of things are going to be part of like the SUNY Gen
Eds now, and also a bigger emphasis on information literacy. It's just, unfortunately,
higher education moves very slow in adjusting and before we can reap the benefits
of that, I think one of the best things that we probably can do is peer education,
right, and peer mentoring and having like creating communities on campuses where you
have like a captive audience, where we talk about this stuff. So do think, Do think,
think our students are, like, interested and ready to do that a little more?
Dan:34:49
would say so. I know because I'm the president of one of our clubs on campus.
Babette: 34:53
Which club is that, again?
Dan: 34:57
I have a captive audience, that, you know they've got to listen to me. So I'm thinking
about next Wednesday. Now that I have this opportunity, I'll bring in some voter registration
forms, get everybody registered to vote. But I think, like what you said, I think
that's very important that you know, while the education system moves very slowly
towards getting these things working, we amongst ourselves, as students, need to work
to educate our peers.
Babette: 35:27
Yeah, yeah, absolutely. How about you? So, Dan has a captive audience in the gamer
... E-game club?
Dan: 35:34
Yeah!
Babette: 35:38
What are some other ways in which we could do this? Like I mean, because, OK, not
everybody is going to be comfortable with handing out voter registration forms, right?
Especially, I mean, what do you think students even think about voting? Is that a
thing that is already controversial? Well, not controversial, but just basically dismissed
as a pointless exercise?
Sayeed: 36:04
I'm glad you asked that, because when I was younger, especially like most all through
high school, I didn't care about voting.
Sayeed: 36:11
I really didn't. I was, like, whatever. Um, but I think to get more engagement with
our students, I think we should fight fire with fire. We should use the media, right,
to, you know, tell our story um to to explain, 'Hey, pay attention to this. Keep this
in the back. You know your real. Keep this saved, bookmark it, right? Come back, take
some notes, learn from this. Come back, take some notes, learn from this because this
is going to help you, you know, become more involved an d have a more impactful, you
know um, feel, feel like you have a more impactful decision amongst whatever decisions
of voting and stuff like that.
Sayeed: 36:51
I definitely am big into voting now. Actually, my mom, she's a huge advocate for political
engagement, civic engagement and stuff and we talk about this kind of stuff all the
time. But now that I have grown aware like you were saying earlier, just becoming
aware. Now that I'm aware of certain things and I see all these doors now and I can
see clearly, it definitely has a relevant part of my life. Because you know we're
voting for people who are going to be making decisions, whether they're the decisions
we want them to make or not. So it's important to get people in the right seats, right,
and people don't understand that. I think, uh, uh, Ms. Rae, right? You were saying,
if you, if you don't vote, you can't complain, right? So if if we're not voting to
put the right kinds of people in the right places so that we know where we're backed
and we have, you know, a voice and representation, then we honestly have nothing to
complain about because we did it to ourselves.
Sean: 37:53
I think one of the most beautiful parts about living in a democracy as well is that
when we think politicians are doing a bad job, we can vote to kick them out of their
job, right, right. So we need to be utilizing that system, because we do have that
power.
Sean: 38:10
That power is in our hands.
Babette: 38:16
It's probably, to think about politics like that, is a really healthy exercise, right?
A healthy exercise of vote, of your vote your voice, of like your power. I mean, it
sounds cliche, but it is our power, right? But I think for a lot of people, before
they are at their point where they see it as a healthy exercise, it just seems like
challenging, frightening and not really welcoming, right. So I mean, Ces, you said
earlier that you are a big advocate of mental health. Do you think that there are
parts of politics, like how we do politics, that are actually, like, harmful to mental
health? And that's part of the reasons why some people probably want to protect themselves?
Cesarina: 39:03
Yeah, definitely. I think a lot of people are really afraid because you see the the
main two parties and they're kind of, like, just arguing with each other, going back
and forth, and they can't find a compromise. And so I think people are afraid to talk
to even their friends about politics because maybe if they don't agree with you, they
have a different point of view.
Cesarina: 39:20
A lot of people are seeing that there's no compromise from the parties and I feel
like they're afraid that maybe they'll lose their friends if they don't agree and
stuff like that like. I think a lot of it's scary. It's causing anxiety, which is
a big reason people develop mental illness is anxiety and depression.
Babette: 39:41
Nadine, do you have the same impression that it's dangerous for your own health and
sanity and well-being?
Nadine: 39:51
Yeah, especially my family dynamics. It's like we're not even going to go there because
we're having a good time right now.
Nadine: 39:57
We want to enjoy each other. So I would definitely like to see more healthy conversation
behind politics. A nd, to kind of piggyback on what you said. Definitely think it
needs to be touched based a little bit more in schools at an earlier level and maybe
we don't get into the detail and we don't go into, we don't put that type of stress
on children and we protect them from from the nonsense, but just the basics. I would
like to see like more stretched, go into depth, a little bit more on what it took
us to get to this level, to have the right to vote, what it means, who you're voting
for and what it means for the people below them.
Babette: 40:39
I mean, I think one of the things that are really difficult to deal with is that discussions
about politics usually involve something that is really very dear to somebody, that
goes to somebody's core, and I think it's part of part of it is, like, it goes to
the core of your identity or of like the core of what you believe is right, and that,
therefore, disagreement creates like these like oh, yeah, yeah, I mean it feeds into
these emotions that are really intense, right, like it's fear, it's anger, it's like
feeling rejected. Is there any way to get around that? How do we deal with that? Is
that something where you would say it's a skill that we need to cultivate, that we
listen to one another again, that we kind of wait before we judge and that we don't
take everything that seriously? Is that something that we need to relearn? Okay, Rae
is nodding.
Rae: 41:35
Yeah, no, I feel like that only works if all people involved are willing to do that
right.
Babette: 41:41
Yeah.
Rae: 41:42
My family is very to very extreme levels as far as political beliefs, and it's difficult
to have rational conversations sometimes so it's like I have made a lot of headway
with my father, but with one of my brothers like it's like a no-go and so and it's
because he's not willing to listen to both sides, right and so I think it becomes
really difficult.
Babette: 42:09
Yeah, I must, I must say, mean, I consider myself surrounded by people who are, well,
smart people, educated people, rational people, but still, there are these places
where they will not go, they will not open themselves up to the possibility that there's
something about that position of that other person on that other side that comes from
a good place.
Babette: 42:32
Right, there's a lot of demonization going on on both sides and I think that is super
dangerous. I mean, okay, so, as I said, I don't want to be alarmist, but if you demonize
another position or a person who has different opinions, that is dangerous and that's
definitely something that we should practice talking across differences and divides,
right. So for a newbie, a newbie to politics, or somebody who has so far stayed non-engaged
for various reasons, what would you say would be an easy kind of like way in? Like,
how do we ease more people into these conversations?
Sayeed: 43:13
So I was thinking well, one to make it easy for a newbie just join community stuff
in local municipalities, like what I did first coming to school here. I just started
joining stuff. You know, to get the vibe, get the feeling, just start joining stuff
and listen. You know it could be small. You know, to get the vibe, get the feeling,
just start joining stuff and listen, you know it could be small. You know neighborhood
watch meetings, or, you know, whatever! You know, and then, you know, get more comfortable.
Sayeed: 43:39
And, as a lot of us here pointed out, I know a lot of people don't like being comfortable
speaking about politics around family, or public places. But I do feel like it would
be a good idea to have like a safe place for people who need more understanding about
politics, who may have a lot of anxiety and depression about it. To come to, like,
um, in Canada and certain States in America they have these, uh, harm reduction centers
right, which is very controversial. You could go and do you know illicit drugs and
there would be nurses there to help you live right.
Sayeed: 44:14
There should be a place where we can have tough talks right In a safe environment
like that. And but even if we don't get that, just just start, do just one by one.
Just, you know, I don't know start answering the questionnaires you get at the mall
or something, I don't know. But there's always a way, there's always a route you know
to take, and you just got to be inquisitive and adventurous and be a little bit brave.
I know it's scary, but be brave.
Babette: 44:40
Well, I mean you also said earlier like let's fight fire with fire, right? So if the
media, like, the way in which the media has developed oftentimes works against all
of this, like, understanding, of course, differences and maybe also use the media,
use like what we have, um, the tools we have, to bring people together, right? I mean,
like you can have a, like, you can have a virtual meeting, where you don't have to
like sit, like, right, right opposite that person. You can still start um, like, listening,
learning about their position, without having to actually touch them, see them, be
in the same room with them. So maybe also seek out more opportunities like that, because
there are plentiful, there are a lot of organizations that offer that right. Ces,
how do you feel about that?
Cesarina: 45:25
Yeah, I think people need to figure out what they believe what their values are what
they want, because I think a lot of people just don't even really know themselves,
or what they want in a potential candidate for something. So I feel, like, yeah, watching,
like, using the social media to kind of educate yourself, but, like, you obviously
have to be cautious and stuff. But if you aren't ready to have actual talks in person
or anything, like that, definitely, just learning about what you believe in is the
step. And then, I think, the second step would honestly be voting. Because, if you
aren't ready to speak about it, y ou can still have your voice heard. But other people
aren't really aware of about it. Like, you know what I'm saying? Like you can vote
with and it's confidential, you know?
Babette: 46:20
Totally! I like, I love that that you say um, you need to figure out, like, what you
yourself believe and what like. What is your, what is your identity? How is it it
connected to your, like, idea about civics and politics? Right, that's really, that's
really.... And plus, if you do that, then you probably also realize that what you
value is pretty, pretty universal. Like you, we all want like a life of dignity and
like some beauty in our lives and like, like, we want to be healthy and we want our
loved ones to be healthy and other people want that, too. We just disagree on how
to get there and how to get more of that, and maybe some people don't necessarily
want to, like, share as many resources as we want to share with others, and I mean.
Bu t once it comes back to those basics, we realize we all want somewhat the same.
Rae: 47:10
Yeah, I always start conversations when we're doing persuasion again with the idea
that with every controversial topic there is common ground. People just don't know
where to find it. Like when you think about two sides of abortion, or two sides when
it comes to guns. Like everybody has the same concern, they just are concerned about
it in different ways.
Rae: 47:29
And so trying to have those conversations is really important in order to get to that
same page or same understanding, at least. Even if you can't completely agree, at
least you understand where you're coming from. I also think it's important what you
said about your own values, because so many people grow up with their parents' values,
right, or whoever raised them, their values, but you come to a point where your values
might shift, right? And so having those hard conversations within your family so that
you can actually have good conversation again is really important. Like I, my parents
didn't go to college, high school education, and I will never forget the day I came
home from my first semester of college and I suddenly was like I don't agree with
anything you ever said to me my whole life.
Rae: 48:15
And clearly that wasn't true.
Rae: 48:17
But that's what I felt, because I had suddenly started learning right and expanding
my knowledge base, and so learning who you are as a person, I think, is a really important
part of this.
Babette: 48:27
Yeah, I mean, I hear you, I had that too where you have that moment like I have no
idea even who you are anymore.
Rae: 48:35
And you take it upon yourself to educate them, which was a bad idea!
Babette: 48:41
Most definitely, and it's probably true for a lot of our students, because a lot of
our students are first generation of students and their families, right? So, okay,
that's awesome. So I mean, in terms of speaking to students and speaking to other
professors and just like to people in general, like why politics, why engagement,
why engagement with these matters matters, what would be like good new topics or the
next topics that we as as a collective, as a community, as a group, talk about, where
we're really like to bring home why it's important for all of us to sit around the
table and have our voices heard?
Dan: 49:23
I think this ties into what Cesarina said about finding your own identity. Um, I think
the way to get people engaged in politics is to help them find their identity, find
out what their values are and really get home to them on. These policies affect you
directly. Like if you're a woman and you want to talk about abortion, that affects
you directly. People of color, any kind of marginalized group. I think a good way
to get people involved is to just tell them these policies that all these older, white,
men are voting on affect you and this is why you should get involved.
Nadine: 50:04
That was definitely it for me. Once someone spun it and said you're giving this person
the power to choose how your life is ran changed it for me. I'm like you know. They
don't know. You know they're rich and wealthy and they just live a totally different
lifestyle and they may not even have experienced the way of life that we have, so
it's important for you to go out there, pick someone that's gonna make decisions not
just for the top of the food chain, but also for the bottom.
Sayeed: 50:46
I agree with all of that and so, adjunct to that, it's important to be involved in
politics, right? Like, and it's important to have these conversations in places where
you know we should be having these places, like in the household, right, it starts
here, it starts in this community, the household community, and then, you know, if
you and your family can have this conversation, you can take it to a different family
across the street.
Sayeed: 51:12
You know it's about being all on the same page and all on board of what this community
needs. Right? Because a community in the middle of New York City, Manhattan right,
has different needs than the community out in Wyoming.
Nadine: 51:23
Right.
Sayeed: 51:24
So it's about being in the like, like if each family, you know, if each neighborhood
has a church, right, and you, you know, each family in that church had this conversation.
It came together in that church not to get religious or anything, but they could be
like OK, this is how we feel politically and then we could talk to other people in
other communities. If you can do that in every church in each neighborhood, you can
actually change something in your local. You know power system, you know? And that's
just an example. It doesn't have to be a church, it could be a barbershop yeah, you
know it could be a school, you know community college.
Sayeed: 51:55
You can change something, so it starts here. That's why it's important, because if
you don't, you you will be lost in the sauce
Babette: 52:06
ike, if you it's, it's very easy to feel just intimidated and confused and cynical
when you are by yourself, when you're interacting with information by yourself. But
the least cynical people that I know are the ones that are actually laboring with
others, like communally, for some public good, who are engaged in their community,
and it can be be really small, but as soon as you are engaging with other people,
um, actual people, um touching grass, um you are, you're realizing that, first of
all, it's not. It's not. It doesn't have to be intimidating and it doesn't have to
like. They are real people and they might have different opinions about how the economy
should be organized and regulated or if at all, but they are people and they're people
just like you. And so for also, just like for mental health reasons, I think it's
really important to create space for community and for conversations about like us
as a collective, as a society. Sean, I think you wanted to say something.
Sean: 53:09
Yeah, so I think you emphasize something really, really important. Um, when I got
to uab, I'm from the area right, and I met, I had friend, new friends from from new
york city, right, they live totally different lives than I did and I also met people
from from upstate upstate new York, the Adirondacks right, completely different life
than I have lived, and they also have different political beliefs, and that is because
different things matter to them, and that's okay.
Sean: 53:45
We shouldn't be demonizing people, because there are situations where something might
be better for one person than it is for another, because they live in totally different
worlds, and I think we need to be present and we need to recognize that. Because,
when we don't, that's when we demonize people and that's when people tune out of politics.
Babette: 54:03
Yeah, absolutely, Absolutely. Nadine. You're nodding.
Nadine: 54:07
Yeah, because I just feel like, when you look at it that way, change the narrative
and that's how you have the more healthier conversations and that's how you have more
people that are willing to be engaged. And there's just nothing that grinds my gears
more than someone that has an opinion on something they never experienced or lived.
So we definitely got to go out there, do our own research, be unbiased and research
both parties Right, because I remember one time it was my first year to vote, I was
18, and I was like OK, how do I do this? What do I do? I don't even know where to
start. I haven't listened to any of the Debates and I remember someone was saying
Like we're a blue state, you absolutely vote blue, and I just knew In the pit of my
stomach that that's not right. Like no, I really should have an idea and not go based
off Of someone else's opinion or state for that matter. Right?
Babette: 55:10
Yeah, absolutely. Rae? About that?
Rae: 55:17
About that? Oh yeah, absolutely.
Rae: 55:20
I keep coming back to this thought that I've had throughout. This is that I feel like
sometimes, because we live in New York, people feel really disenfranchised, right
because of the blue state thing, and so they think, oh, it doesn't matter if I vote,
because it's going to end up being what it ends up being, like Harrisville and New
York, because we're a blue state, and so they think it doesn't matter to go vote.
Rae: 55:39
And so I think that if they see examples of local elections and state elections where
it's not like that, right, where it's not the electoral college that's making choices,
that that could actually impact whether or not they're willing to go vote, right because
you can see so many examples on smaller levels where change happens, like school boards,
right? And so there was a huge movement a couple of years ago where more people turned
out for school board elections in New York than a real, than in years, because they
were concerned about censorship with books in schools and things like that, and so
they combated a real issue, right? And so I think, if people see that there are examples
where your vote really does matter, that hopefully that will get people more engaged
again, because, face it, we're not going to get rid of the Electoral College.
Rae: 56:25
It doesn't mean you shouldn't go vote just because New York might turn out a particular
way, right? If you disagree with how New York typically votes.
Rae: 56:41
And so it's just really important that people understand that on the state level,
local level, your vote is huge.
Babette: 56:43
Yeah, I'm really glad that you said that, because I mean we need to remember that
politics is also like local, our local community it's not just what happens in Congress,
right. And also like most of us, like we, us as people, are way better than some of
these um, like people who are just speaking for um clicks and likes and whatnot, or
even whether that be on social media or national media, because I mean, I like, like
it's just never as ugly as that stuff that happens out there in those spaces, what
I have seen.
Sean: 57:12
Yeah, I think it's also important to emphasize that even on a federal level I mean
New York State specifically had I don't know off the top of my head but five or six
congressional seats that were decided by less than a percentage point.
Sean: 57:28
Like hundreds of votes and thousands of votes, like close elections that decided which
way, decided who was the Speaker of the House, and that's true again in this election.
Whoever wins, New York State is probably going to control the House of Representatives
and Congress, so even on the federal level that's true.
Rae: 57:54
They blame the president for everything but it's not the president that people should
be concerned about sometimes.
Babette: 57:59
Yeah, I know, definitely. I can testify to that as somebody who teaches American history
online, so I see a lot what people write. Like, yeah, definitely, we are not a monarch.
Babette: 58:09
So, so we are coming up on our usual, like hour our. Um, that means we need to wrap
up, but, um, so, as a, as a last thing, um, do you have any kind of advice or suggestions
for where, where people could go for reliable, unbiased, non-partisan information
about politics or about, like some like,news- websites? Um, that, like you, would
prefer that more people should be aware of?
Dan: 58:38
There's this site that I I uh heard about recently, called Ground News, that, uh,
a lot of people like to use because it specifically breaks down, um, how certain sources
lean. Uh, you can get articles and it'll break it down, it'll tell you where they
get their information from. That's a source that I personally like to use.
Babette: 58:56
For media bias.
Dan: 58:57
For media bias.
Babette: 58:57
Like media bias checkers. Rae, you probably also have like a lot of them.
Rae: 59:01
Yeah, Politico is often very good about showing bias and helping you to figure out
what's true, what's not. I also tend to look more at sources like BBC and things like
that because they tend to be less biased.
Rae: 59:16
They just report on what is happening here in this country, and so you can find good
information there.
Babette: 59:20
It's also really great to have information about American politics from a non-American
news source, because they're like what's going on there? We need to explain this.
Say, do you have, like, suggestions?
Sayeed: 59:35
It's fun that you asked. I'm a more, you know, adventurous person. Finding unbiased
information? No. I feel like most information is going to come biased at some shape
or form, but I would just just, you know, go out and see these places, see these people,
meet people, talk to them, experience things. You know. Knock on doors. You know.
Go join a book club. You know. Go watch I don't know.
Sayeed: 1:00:00
Watch a movie, watch a documentary and come up with your own thinking.
Dan: 1:00:06
As Dr. Babette said, uh, "touch grass."
Sayeed: 1:00:08
Touch grass, go canvas, go grassroots, go do, go, go experience for yourself, because
then you'll r, experience for yourself, because then me, f or yourself better. time,
I know for me. For a long time my grandfather was Republican. I had a lot of conservative
ways of thinking growing up, but once I got older to know who I was, I became in the
Green Party, which really means nothing, but it really doesn't matter because I can
vote for whoever I want. So go find yourself, go out there, explore, be adventurous,
be curious, be skeptical.
Babette: 1:00:39
diet. Don't just listen and watch what makes you feel good about yourself or just
people who you agree with, but also seek out other positions and other like ideology,
other people on other I other, don't like, wanna say ends, but other parts of the
ideological spectrum, because that's how we grow right and that's how we need to grow,
gain?, And like new perspectives, to grow our knowledge. Sean, do you have a suggestion?
Sean: 1:01:06
That was gonna be my answer kind of is look at both sides right. Right. Look at both
sides, See where they're coming from right. Talk to people. That's also a big thing.
Also something else I really want to encourage if your campus has it, if you're a
student, join a political organization. There's not just political organizations.
There's apolitical organizations. I know UAlbany has a club called Democracy Matters.
Sean: 1:01:37
They focus on key big issues, but they don't endorse any candidates. There's also
Generation Vote at UAlbany. They just work on getting people registered to vote. There's
a lot of political orgs out there.
Babette: 1:01:51
And that's good to know, because a lot of our students will transfer to SUNY Albany
and then they have they know where, where to go right. Um, Dan you probably, Dan,
and Say, because you are in student government, you probably know a lot more than
me about like student clubs that exist. Do we have? Do we have civic engagement- like...[groups]
Sayeed: 1:02:10
You know, the only thing I can say right now is that me and a few other members, um,
of SGA, our SGA here at SUNY S chenectady, we are working on a streamline to have
more um engagement from our student body. Right um, as as far as politically, I don't
think there is anything besides SGA, right?
Dan: 1:02:36
The closest thing we have at SUNY Schenectady is the Sustainability Committee which is part of the Student Government Association. However, if you are a SUNY Schenectady student, this is your chance to start one of these political organizations.
Sayeed: 1:02:49
Yes, yes, yes, yes,
Dan: 1:02:50
Please go to the student activities director's office and inquire about how to create
a club.
Sayeed: 1:02:57
You know it starts here. All right, uh, loyal Royals, let's go!
Babette: 1:03:04
Alright. That's a good last word there. Um, so okay, awesome. That was a great conversation.
So thank you once again everybody!
Babette: 1:03:12
Sean, Sayeed, Nadine, Cesarina, Dan, and Rae.
Babette: 1:03:17
Many Voices One Call is made possible thanks to the contributions of the SUNY Schenectady
Foundation. We are especially grateful to the School of Music and in particular, Sten
Isaacson, for their continuing generous support with the technical details. The recording
and editing of the podcast was possible thanks to music students Benjamin Grable Gravle
and Connor Shearer. Josh Johnson is doing the transcripts. Heather Meany, Karen Tansky
and Jessica McHugh-Green deserve credit for promoting the podcast. Thanks also go
to Vice President of Academic Affairs, Mark Meacham, College President, Steady Moono,
the Student Government Association, and the Student Activities Advisor. You can find
more episodes of Many Voices One Call on Spotify.