Interesting point. Yes, everyone feels the situation is dire, and yes, you can make a case that things have never been better.Ares Land wrote: ↑Tue Apr 27, 2021 3:35 am My main objection is that both left and right are in full survive mode right now.
How many people now don't feel like civilization is hanging by a thread? It's also pretty hard to explain why that is, given that we're decidedly in the most prosperous and secure period of human history so far. (I have ideas about that.)
The main divide is that each side find the other sides' concerns ridiculous or offensive.
The left feels we're about one bad day away from a fascist/capitalist dystopia, assuming we're not currently living in one, and assuming an environmental apocalypse doesn't get us first.
The right feels we're about one bad day away from a communist/lesbian dystopia, assuming we're not currently living in one, and assuming the global Jihad doesn't get us first.
But, both things can be true at once! That's kind of the hallmark of the modern era. Things could change for any of us in a flash: a nuclear war, a fascist takeover, a mass shooting, a major depression. Or there could be a slow descent into horror: climate change, jobs evaporating into permanent precarity. At the same time, things are better in so many ways than any time in the last 6000 years.
Nah, the left has always been that way.That said... Maybe that explains why the left has a tendancy to fragment, and why left-wing groups hate each others' guts. (Splitters!)
The point here isn't about conservatives fear of The Other; it's about whether they have tribal loyalties. And they do, to other people like themselves. They're always celebrating it, in fact: they love to put out their tribal emblems. Nerst is quite wrong to think that they only care about family and friends. Heck, just look at Nort's last post, which is full of solidarity with "flyover country", a place where he doesn't live.I'm not sure I agree. If you scratch a conservative long enough, you eventually get to the core of selfishness that is at the heart of the matter. There's a deep, deep fear that people of color and Muslims will end up costing you money and sex.
Fair enough, though I'm not sure the rate of change is that high for anywhere before 1800. But then, in a monarchy or aristocracy, politics looks very different anyway.A theory I worked out over coffee, inspired by the American politics thread: the political compass is just a natural reaction to rapid societal change. They are, at heart, a SWOT diagram. Given any change, you'll find people who love it and others who hate it.