Quite possible. I am very world weary. However, other people being unable to comprehend me without extensive hand holding does not help either. Since the mention of the parable is confusing, I will hold hands once again.
Like the parable, the people in this discussion are making arguments and theses centered on their own limited experiences, and so find themselves in complete disagreement about the nature if what they are observing.
The people on the far end of the political spectrum that have seized the reins of power, likewise.
Each describes what they see, and how it affects them, but dismiss the reports of the other, favoring more familiar reporting.
I learned a trick to hold two seemingly simultaneously contradicting truths, and see both equally. I find it makes me have to reevaluate my naturally limited perspective, because I can then glimpse the whole elephant, figuratively.
To ever see the whole elephant, you have to see how all claims can be true.
You cannot do that by being dismissive.
The "counter swing" is because of the lack of care or consideration for the other groups impacted by the heavy push toward progressivism in the past century, due to this POV bias. Try to see the whole elephant, even though it is nihilistic and depressing.
Are you implying that progressivism and anti-progressivism are equal to each other?
Because if you do, then I have to say that they're not. For one, progressive thought is backed by scientific studies, while the anti-progressive thought is backed by, literally, "feelings", as Newt Gingrich has put it.
Also, progressive thought was the main reason for the existence of many nice things, such as, you know, rights, and democracy. Anti-progressive thought was, in comparison, mainly responsible for producing enormous body counts in all wars, famines, institutionalized oppression...
Though it's not surprising that you don't see any difference between those two, if your vision of the world can be summed up with "grey". Real world has colors, real world has texture, real world has many, many things other than a single 1-line white-black gradation. It's impossible to really understand the world without seeing that things can be not-white, not-black, but yet still vastly different from each other, some better, like yellow sunlight, which can still burn your skin if you have too much of it, but in moderate amounts, it's pretty good, and some much, much worse, like gamma rays, which, sure, could maybe be used for something useful, like killing cancer cells, but are far more likely to come in a form of a deadly indiscriminate burst, irradiating your body and causing you to die really, really painfully.
Excuse me for not wanting to accept moral equivalence between those two.