Cynicism and the Struggle to Save Democracy

First, the definition of cynicism from my Oxford American Dictionary:

Cynic: A person who believes that people are motivated purely by self-interest rather than acting for honorable or unselfish reasons. A person who questions whether something will happen or whether it is worthwhile.

Right-Wing cynicism

Cynicism is a characteristic of fascism.

The best way to understand this is to talk about fairness v. hierarchy people.

Fairness people believe fairness is possible. When fairness leaders go to work, they try to figure out how to make life better for people, like getting rid of the lead in the drinking water pipes, or making the Internet available to people in rural areas, or finding ways to make health care available to everyone.

Hierarchical people believe that nature forms a hierarchy with some people naturally at the top. They don’t believe that equality is possible because they don’t think people are equal.

Hierarchical people see democratic government as giving handouts to those who don’t deserve it and taking away from the people at the top, who have “earned” their right to be at the top.

When hierarchical leaders go to work, they think about how to maintain the hierarchy—with themselves at the top.

When people lower on the hierarchy say, “We want equal rights,” “or we want equal opportunity,” the right-wing cynic thinks, “They want to replace me at the top of the hierarchy.”

This is why these kinds of cynics embrace replacement theory. (This is the theory often expressed by people like Tucker Carlson that says nonwhites and immigrants want to “replace” white Christians.)

Cynics believe everyone cheats (or acts from self-interest), so the winner is the person who cheats the best. This leads some people to say Democrats need to fight like Republicans. (If you missed it, see my blog post on Why Democrats Should not Fight like Republicans.)

“Everyone cheats therefore it is justified” is dangerous.

Left-Wing cynicism

I believe one source of cynicism on the left is this: If your brand is predicting doom (“I warned everyone that it would be this bad!”) then the moment you acknowledge that the Democrats have a victory, you tarnish your brand. So you can’t. The Democrats must always be failing. Outrage needs a target.

Some people are just paranoid. They can’t see anything good in what anyone does, so they see only failure. They see cheating literally everywhere. If someone doesn’t do exactly what they think that person should do (exactly when they think that person should do it) they assume the person is corrupt. In their eyes, there can be no other reason. When they look they see evidence of corruption, even where it doesn’t exist.

One way to see our history is that liberals (fairness people) have been trying to push for more fairness by doing things like ending slavery, ending racial segregation, offering safety nets, and making sure that pipes in lower-income areas don’t contain lead.

Meanwhile, “conservatives” (who like things the “old-fashioned way”) try to maintain the hierarchy.

19th century America was a strict hierarchy with White men at the top and Black women at the bottom. One way to see our history is: “We’ve come a long way and we still have further to go.”

Another way is, “We still don’t have fairness. So it’s all hopeless.”

He sees failure, rather than the good that the bill will do — which includes providing Internet to rural areas and getting lead out of the water pipes.

Remember in my last few videos, I talked about how some people were having meltdowns, believing that because some witnesses were refusing to cooperate with the select committee, the entire committee would fail. I pointed out on Twitter this week that a person inside the Trump White House (Alyssa Farah) was cooperating with the select committee. She was disgusted with the insurrection. My point was (1) you have to expect people with criminal liability to try to avoid testifying and (2) as long as a few people cooperate and spill everything, the committee can get what it needs.

Then people came along and said, “She’s just trying to rehabilitate her image after supporting Trump’s authoritarianism. Nobody should believe a word she says.”

One value in a witness like Alyssa Farrah is that she can turn over documents: Contemporaneous notes, emails, etc. In addition, the only eyewitnesses who can provide evidence about Trump’s state of mind will be people in his inner circle. How smart is it to try to discredit the only eyewitnesses we can get? You can be sure Trump will try to discredit her. Wanna help Trump out?

I agree with this from Michiko Kakutani: “Outrage leads to fatigue, which leads to cynicism, which causes people to give up on democratic processes.”

Many on the right-wing make statements intended to trigger outrage on the left. This creates a loop: The left gets outraged, and then the sight of the outraged left thrills the right-wing. Throw in left-wing outrage merchants, and you have a constant, exhausting storm that will wear everyone out.

If the people who want democracy are worn out, who is going to do the work to save democracy

Here’s the thing about fairness: There can never be complete fairness– at least not on earth, where people are imperfect. All we can do is to keep trying to push the needle closer.

The people who push the needle toward fairness don’t run around spreading doom and cynicism.

Did MLK, Jr. have a NIGHTMARE? Well, maybe he had a few, but he told us he had a DREAM.

If you are thinking, “Yeah but what about . . . [fill in the blank with what has made you feel cynicism] I refer you back to my two previous blog posts, which may answer youre questions: Why Democrats Should Not Fight Like Republicans and Criminal Punishment and the Threat of Right-Wing Extremism.

This is from CCJ, and I think I’ll conclude on this note:

 

 

 

 

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