There's something I want to delve into over a series of posts, and I thought I'd touch on the tip of that iceberg tonight. Namely: authoritarians, and the toxic impact they are having on democratic values and politics in America.
This is a subject area that is, as it were, part of the skeleton of what makes conservatism tick in contemporary politics. The conservative movement, as embodied by the current GOP and its largely Christian-religious base, is a relatively recent development on the national stage. It has gained momentum since Falwell et al's jump into the spotlight with the perversely named "Moral Majority" in the late 1970s, and its successor organization the Christian Coalition.
The damage that has been done by this school of thought is insidious and widespread, and has managed to hijack older strains of conservatism and pervert them to a narrow, righteous, and dogmatic worldview that takes no prisoners and works to create a fundamentalist autocracy in place of actual democracy.
Democracy, you see, requires comprise, and truly listening to what others have to say so that compromise can be achieved. Because of the authoritarian orientation that closes doors to open discourse and marches roughshod in condemnatory righteousness over "enemies" (Let's take our country back! We're the Real America!) - we are losing or have already lost our channels of true bipartisanship. It is increasingly difficult to find common ground in national issues. The disconnect between liberals and conservatives has become a gaping chasm, and authoritarianism is the underlying dynamic, I think, behind why the country has become so polarized, so Red State/Blue, "Us or Them", most markedly over the last decade.
In the posts I'll write regarding this theme, I hope to share with you not only my rationale, but the social psychological research that underpins it. I believe my perspective is well-founded from a rational basis. I live in the eternally springing hope that rationality and not only emotional appeal can inform people's political opinions. Yes, I know our knees all jerk more quickly to the emotional hotbutton, but at the end of the day if we are talking about long term strategic governance of a great nation (and I am), then rationality, I believe, should take premier place at the table. (That's one reason I favor braniacs in the Presidency: it's good to have Spock in office. At least then rational arguments will be considered, and it is likely that polemic will take second place.)
I find it ironic that I of all people am commenting on this sort of thing. According to the self-survey at Political Compass, I rate out as a libertarian-liberal somewhere on the spectrum near Gandhi. (hahahaha) Yet by some other measures I also have streaks of conservatism, and potential affiliation with certain closely defined conservative interests, ranging from aspects of Goldwater conservatism to a distinct Technocratic leaning. (Again: hahahaha. I am amused by the weirdness of life.).
Yet I rather toss all these cards in the air, because labels are too constricting or not descriptive enough, and in my case at least, change situationally. And I know from experience that my socially "open-minded" leanings are stark enough to tie even most progressives into knots. They are also off-put by my avid gun-ownership.
At the end of the day I aim to pitch most of my arguments to moderates and independents, not only because "you're the swing votes, baybee!" but because I find them the least ideologue-driven of all interest groups, and actually inclined to listen to rational argument and come to their own conclusions. (But of course people with open minds willing to engage with new info and new perspectives can be found anywhere, and if you come from this orientation I welcome your thoughts no matter where you think you may fall on a political spectrum.)
So. I will be spending a little energy here delving into some threads of power and control that play largely upon fears and have, I believe, hijacked what our country is about in quite overt ways. I can't separate these discussions entirely from my own potpourri of political leanings, but I can step back as a social scientist and make some observations and arguments founded in actual research, not merely reflexive opinion. Or, for that matter, ideology, to which I am rather allergic. My own eclectic interests are one reason I remain non-affiliated with any party, and prefer to ask pointed questions from something of an outsider stance. Nevertheless, those points will be pointed rather directly at the present configuration of conservatism or better said, Republicanism, as it appears today, because that is where I find the most egregious offenses and greatest threat to the practical work of democracy, for reasons I will be getting into in coming posts. There. Pump primed, posts to follow.
"Every facet, every department of your mind, is to be programmed by you; and unless you assume your rightful responsibility, and begin to program your own mind, the world will program it for you."
- Evil Nine, Cakehole
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1. Political Compass offers a surprisingly accurate self-test, with some interesting social science to back it up. If you're interested in how such things tick, read their various explanatory notes and links at the site. If you don't care, just take the test for fun.
Next in series: Authoritarians, pt 2: The Problem Broadly Outlined



Salon.com
Comments
Guess that answers it, I'm a "Leftist Libertarian". Not sure how that jibes with my life membership to the NRA, but it'll have to do!
Bobbot - I'm not sure I understand what you're getting at with Communism being the start of something. I would trace authoritarianism back to pre-history, we've always had a somewhat "imperial" nature to our societies, and it was only in the last few hundred years that humanity has begun to experiment with large-scale implementations of a more distributed form of government.
I guess if you're looking at religion's political influence, I'd suggest that what you're noticing is a religious backlash into government affairs (using, as you mentioned, Soviet and Chinese Communism as the boogey man to fight against) after several decades of being slowly edged out after the repeal of Prohibition.
I think we have a long way to go to get rid of the Rick Warrens meddling in governmental affairs...and the best way to get the most traction is to keep them scrutinized in the public eye. None of those crooks is clean, and the best way to break them is to show their sheep exactly what the money goes to. These "humble servants" need to be demonstrated as being anything but.
Good points across the board, T. Let's hope it's not too late to about-face the authoritarians and exit them from the stage.
T