Below the Surface.Underlying beliefs that most of us share
12-05-2019 “Work as if you lived in the early days of a better nation.”
— Alasdair Gray
Take the lesson of the Greatest Generation. Our Roosevelt-era parents and grandparents overcame a mélange of would-be plutocrats, populist tyrants and communist commissars to craft a social contract that unleashed a confident, burgeoning middle class, spectacular universities and science, vast infrastructure and entrepreneurship — plus a too-slow but ponderously-growing momentum toward justice.
That social contract was so successful that we forget how rare and special it all was! Our parents were so successful at crafting a middle class society that we members of the Boomer Generation largely assumed (and still assume) that age-old cheater plagues like oligarchy and feudalism — dominant across nearly all of the last 6000 years — were banished for good. They weren’t. Today’s worldwide attempted oligarchic putsch — propelling America back into Civil War — is both lethally dangerous and boringly predictable.
As Hannah Arendt taught, evil can be oafish and banal, while also feral-canny. But one thing villains are instinctively good at is setting decent people against each other. So let’s dig down to undercurrents that most of us share. Our enlightenment experiment is founded on some notions and practices that were never extensively practiced till recently — common threads that are masked by our dismal obsession to couch everything in left-right terms.
For example, if pressed, most Americans would avow:
– that liberty is desirable;
– that men and women of goodwill should negotiate in good faith — either directly or through representatives — each giving a bit in order to achieve positive-sum outcomes;
– that leaders are not the same thing as the state; they can and should be frequently replaced;
– that the rule of law must be applied evenly, fairly and transparently… though we can also change faulty laws — fairly and transparently;
– that money and power often corrupt, and it can happen from any direction;
– that a mature/sincere person should at least consider the foremost — even sacred — tenet of science: I might be wrong;
– that prejudices believed by our parents — and those clutched by us today — might be disproved by facts, at which point it’s time to let them go;
– that expertise and intelligence don’t guarantee wisdom, but knowledge and skill merit respect;
Moreover, if you couch it right, you can also get folks across a wide-spectrum to admit:
– that competition and cooperation are not opposites. Humans are inherently competitive beings and competition engenders creativity… but competition is nearly always wrecked by cheating, unless we cooperatively come up with rules and referees to keep it fair;
– that whatever is not explicitly forbidden — via duly deliberated laws that can always be questioned — is automatically allowed;
– that most ‘liberal’ endeavors — at least those aimed at uplifting children — need little more justification than “stop wasting talent”;
It’s a safe guess that you’d credit yourself with holding all those views… while denying that your opposition-neighbors do! But try asking: Aren’t they just as likely to claim that you don’t?
In fact, all of the nostrums listed above are fundamental to our new kind of society, though you’ve likely not seen them expressed that way. Which is the point here. The first step in bridging our chasm is to escape loaded terminology.
EVEN MORE BASIC THAN THAT
Now let me surprise you by saying other themes run deeper than those above, distinguishing America and its allies from the rest of human history. For starters, can you name any other society that raised its own children to relentlessly criticize their own tribal elders?The way that you — yes, you — have a powerful reflex to criticize?
A relentless stream of propaganda has poured from the indoctrination system known as Hollywood, pushing themes you agree with! Doubt that? Quick then, can you name a popular film you’ve enjoyed, across decades, which did not promote the following?
Suspicion of Authority… or SoA…
Tolerance
Diversity
Personal autonomy and individuality
Eccentricity
Above all, suspicion of and resistance to unfair authority figures. These are traits of a successful Hollywood film. They are also the very traits that enable and empower criticism, of the sort that you — as a politically active person — apply to your nation and its mistakes. It’s all part of a critical self-improvement campaign that enabled us to thread (sometimes just barely) a minefield of potential disasters across the last century, achieving many kinds of progress. It is also the trait that — despite every effort of the oligarchs — may yet win us the stars.
Right now you may be simmering, offended by the notion that you imbibed such values from movies, novels and songs, instead of inventing them yourself. Even worse, the effrontery to suggest that your opponent-neighbors might share those same deep reflexes.
Get over it! We don’t have time for self-indulgence. Nor is this the place to explore philosophical implications of such a strange propaganda campaign, so unlike the mythologies of any prior culture. Though elsewhere I’ve called it The Dogma of Otherness. What matters now is the calamity that’s befallen us! Because these memes, which underlie much of our success and our strength, are now being used against us. Suspicion of Authority (SoA) is reflexive in both liberals and conservatives. Both denounce Orwellian plots against freedom and light. But they part company over which groups aim to be Big Brother.
– Conservatives fret about power grabs by snooty academics and communists and faceless government bureaucrats.
– Liberals see cabals of secret-conniving billionaires and racists and faceless corporations.
But when you put it that way, isn’t the answer Duh? All power centers are inherently dangerous! At various times, cheaters and would-be tyrants used corporate, or bureaucratic-socialist, or owner-elite centers of power… and if you’ve spent time at any university, you saw mini-despotisms in many departments. Exploiters and cheaters will fester and plot wherever they feel they can. It’s why we finally invented habits and tools of accountability.
Ideally, we’d warily guard each other’s backs, with liberals grudgingly admitting “all right, I am more worried about plutocrats, while you fear bureaucratic excess. Tell you what. I’ll listen to you a bit if you’ll listen to me.”
Ideally. I’ve seen it happen! Though not in 21st Century America. Alas, that synergy shatters amid re-ignited civil war, when each side tells its partisans that freedom can be harmed only from one direction. This political fused-spine disease leaves us unable to turn our heads. A form of tunnel vision, it’s one reason we get trapped into grunting sumo-shoving, instead of thinking two or three dimensionally… helping our neighbors do the same.
And no, I am not asserting that the “sides” in this current phase of the American Civil War are similar, morally or by fault. Yes, one wing of our political-social life has clearly gone stark, jibbering insane and must be constrained by electoral defeat until the fever breaks. Later chapters of Polemical Judo offer many ways to thwart them.
But our key starting point here is simple. The putsch-masters need us at each other’s throats, so they exploit the most inherently American meme — Suspicion of Authority — getting us denouncing each other as authoritarian elites!
The best and most honorable approach? Get our cousins and fellow citizens to admit:
Yes, we share the same instincts and underlying fears.
We differ over particulars.
Might there be some way we both are right?
And perhaps both wrong?
David Brin is a former Hannah Arendt Center Visiting Scholar, an astrophysicist and best-selling author whose novels include The Postman, Earth, and Existence. He serves on NASA advisory boards and speaks or consults on a wide range of topics including privacy and national security. This passage is a brief excerpt from his recent book on political tactics — Polemical Judo. (http://davidbrin.com/polemicaljudo.html)