I had never realised how vast the qualities used to define your identity could be until we talked about positionality in class. How certain experiences, family legacies, and interests are stacked upon one another and used to position ourselves in the world. Now though, when I reflect on that class, our differences and outlooks weren’t intensely criticised or scrutinised by one another. Nobody seemed to fear being confronted or dramatically shunned because of opposing views.

 

The next day, I talked to my brother about American politics, and it was a whole other story.

 

When we all introduced ourselves and our views in class, it was inevitable politics stumbled its way into the mix, but more so as a passing titbit than an identifying feature. Of course, politics is important in New Zealand, but at least in my experience, supporting a specific party has never been an absolute friendship breaker and homewrecker. Here, not everybody sees politics as polarizing and world ending.

 

Yet, when we look at America, politics is exactly that – polarizing. My brother has been living in the U.S. since 2015 and witnessed the gradual escalation of political party tensions. He watched roommates end friendships when they discovered their politics didn’t perfectly align, or noticed that in many Tinder bios, ‘Republican’ and ‘Democrat’ were frequently featured.

Not My Pressident

When I visited him, I got merely a small taste of it all. I had his friends come up to me and eagerly state that they were part of the ‘good’ Americans. I witnessed first-hand a sense of comradery between people voting the same, as if they were battling through trenches together. It was rather bizarre.

 

You don’t have to visit America to know political stances mean a whole lot more over there than here. The news and tweets are more than enough to get the idea. In America, political affiliations are ride or die, and a large part of that is because this election does feel like the end to a crescendo.

 

Trump Supporters

However, the polarisation of politics doesn’t just rely on which party you support, but the candidate as well. I’ll never forget how shocked my brother was to find many of his friends no longer wanted to vote because Bernie Sanders was out of the race. To them, it felt like they’d lost all ready, and it took them awhile to see the bigger picture again.

 

The positionality of people determines their alliance with political parties. However, the direness of a two-party system with polar opposite policies gives little leeway to those who fit somewhere in between. As we discovered during class, our positionalities are made up of so many different experiences and lessons, so it feels rather impossible to categorize people into two parties.

 

This polarisation in American politics doesn’t just pit a nation against each other, it forces people to position themselves in ways they otherwise wouldn’t. As the tensions grow, a person’s positionality feels less personal and more strategic. I wonder if that will ever change.