rolling explaining conservatism

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to convert them or make them powerless

― scattered, smothered, covered, diced and chunked (WilliamC)

and what if you can't convert them, and can make them powerless only by subjugating them?

increasingly bonkers (rushomancy), Tuesday, 7 March 2017 17:30 (seven years ago) link

well if you insist on believing that you'll never understand conservatism.

i don't need to jettison my own values to understand conservatism just like i don't need to start eating human flesh to understand cannibalism

Mordy, Tuesday, 7 March 2017 17:32 (seven years ago) link

then oh well it was worth a shot, and continue to coexist uneasily xp

scattered, smothered, covered, diced and chunked (WilliamC), Tuesday, 7 March 2017 17:32 (seven years ago) link

xxp there are probably good reasons to protect private property that even contemporary liberals can get on board w/

Mordy, Tuesday, 7 March 2017 17:33 (seven years ago) link

xxp there are probably good reasons to protect private property that even contemporary liberals can get on board w/

Perhaps, but let's not pretend that it's a question of government vs freedom.

My Body's Made of Crushed Little Evening Stars (Sund4r), Tuesday, 7 March 2017 17:37 (seven years ago) link

Here's an interesting article that touches on how liberals and conservatives often talk past each other on political issues.

https://www.currentaffairs.org/2016/11/why-is-the-decimation-of-public-schools-a-bad-thing

People therefore interpret political language through ideological lenses. What sounds obviously appalling to one person may seem totally unobjectionable or even desirable to another. People on the left, however, often fail to comprehend this fact. They condemn “marginalization” and “inequality” as if everyone already agrees that those are bad things. (A lot of people don’t.) The same is true of “privilege” and “neoliberalism,” which are treated as self-evidently undesirable even though many people do not know what those things are, let alone share a hatred of them.

neva missa lost, wednesday nights on abc (voodoo chili), Tuesday, 7 March 2017 17:37 (seven years ago) link

don't mean to spam the thread, and i know he's a controversial figure, but i just read this passage from Sloterdijk and i thought it provided a pretty interesting distinction that could be mapped into the difference between liberal and conservative tendencies.

In the era of increasingly nervous encounters between peoples in the second and first millennia BC, there were various attempts to come to terms with the irreducible pluralisms of ethnicities and their religion control systems. At a general level, one can divide these attempts into two opposing blocks of neighborhood policies. On the one side are syncretistic tendencies whose goal is the liberating amalgamation of foreign worlds of peoples and gods. Unifying tendencies of this kind are typical of political theologies such as those attempted in the integration of several ethnicities into an empire and a corresponding higher-level sacred imperial order. In the process, priests of a local cult are retrained as diplomats who can recognize their own gods under the foreign names they bear in other popular cults. The great innovation of this school of thought lies in the discovery that, with intercultural sustainable gods, the inner and the outer converge: what one had taken for a foreign god is revealed, upon closer inspection, as a different guise of one’s own deity. Peoples and cults approach one another as soon as they understand that they have devoted themselves to the same numinous entity under different names. The ecumenically compatible thought model of the one in the many spread among the educated, and the number one became the keyword in educated synthesis…A completely different interpretation of the polyethnic and multicultic situation can be observed in the second block. Here the leading actors respond to the perception of polyethnic existence with a resolute hardening and aggrandizement of their own cult traditions. This tendency to withdraw to what is their own culminates in the refusal to let oneself be compared and to participate in translations. Hence the alternative way out of the inevitable ethnic and cultic comparison invites an escape to singularity. Anyone recommending this strategy for self-preservation amid intercultic competition to a people must also offer the prospect of a great contest: because our god is like no other, our people too will be like no other. Whoever commits to the untranslatable god, the most exclusive of divinities, will be rewarded with endless procreative successes and offspring with long memories. Whoever does not join the confessional community may go under amid the multiplicity, leaving neither traces nor memories behind—biblically put, their name will be struck from the Book of Life.

ryan, Tuesday, 7 March 2017 17:38 (seven years ago) link

xxp it sorta is tho, no? who were ppl generally protecting their property against? the gov were the ppl confiscating it basically at will.

Mordy, Tuesday, 7 March 2017 17:38 (seven years ago) link

if you're pointing out that there's a paradox to have the government guarantee yr right to property against themselves, then you're right. but in historical terms it's not crazy that after dealing w/ monarchies and the church there was a sense that the greatest threat to private property was the overwhelming might of the sovereign.

Mordy, Tuesday, 7 March 2017 17:39 (seven years ago) link

i mean it seems to me that implicit in this quest for "understanding" is really "how do we make them understand". and maybe you can't. at which point you're dealing with people whose interests are intrinsically hostile to yours and who would probably kill you if they could get away with it. which, honestly, is how a lot of conservatives think of us.

maybe you can "understand" someone as an intellectual exercise, without thinking like them, without trying to envision what they feel on a daily basis, but that's not my approach.

how do we get out of this without mass slaughter? can we?

increasingly bonkers (rushomancy), Tuesday, 7 March 2017 17:41 (seven years ago) link

^_-

Mordy, Tuesday, 7 March 2017 17:41 (seven years ago) link

I acknowledge the power of the metaquestion, but. Seemstame that a thread question of the form "let us try to understand (thing)" sort of presupposes at least some interest in discussing (thing).

E.g., there has been an "explain the appeal of Dream Theater" thread, primarily concerned with the question implied by the title. One potential response could be exactly one post saying "WHY?" with the next post being "yep, you're right, lock thread." But we would have missed out on fun times.

may all your memes be dank (Ye Mad Puffin), Tuesday, 7 March 2017 17:42 (seven years ago) link

maybe you can "understand" someone as an intellectual exercise, without thinking like them, without trying to envision what they feel on a daily basis, but that's not my approach.

consider that it is only by understanding someone that you truly understand why you believe what you do - and that those who do not understand conservatism are likely doomed to fall into it themselves as they never understand what they thought they were opposing and end up backing into it as they avoid the fantasy of what they thought it was. i don't think this inoculation effect is the best reason to understand something (which continues to be: for the sake of understanding itself) but if you really feel you need pragmatic reasons to answer this question this might do it for u?

Mordy, Tuesday, 7 March 2017 17:46 (seven years ago) link

maybe you can't. at which point you're dealing with people whose interests are intrinsically hostile to yours and who would probably kill you if they could get away with it. which, honestly, is how a lot of conservatives think of us.

Isn't that feeling at least somewhat mutual?

Maybe not the killing. But that's prolly just because we're betas and pussies, not skilled with firearms.

may all your memes be dank (Ye Mad Puffin), Tuesday, 7 March 2017 17:49 (seven years ago) link

if you're pointing out that there's a paradox to have the government guarantee yr right to property against themselves, then you're right. but in historical terms it's not crazy that after dealing w/ monarchies and the church there was a sense that the greatest threat to private property was the overwhelming might of the sovereign.

Yes, the government enforces your right to property against itself but also against other citizens, i.e. your right to own a parcel of land means the government has to restrict someone else's 'liberty' to walk onto your land, eat your bread, etc. Historically, the bourgeoisie were surely fighting both for property rights against the power of the state but also for their ability to use state power to protect the power of property/capital over the propertyless classes? As Puffin notes, in the context of the American Revolution, this also extended to the right to own other human beings.

My Body's Made of Crushed Little Evening Stars (Sund4r), Tuesday, 7 March 2017 17:55 (seven years ago) link

controversial conservative opinion: private property is good

flopson, Tuesday, 7 March 2017 17:57 (seven years ago) link

bringing in slavery muddies the waters i think. there are reasons to think protecting private property is good without simultaneously believing that humans can/should be owned.

Mordy, Tuesday, 7 March 2017 18:00 (seven years ago) link

I find trying to use Logic and thought-experiments (my personal favourite is Grab World) to headsplode libertarians by forcing them to confront the Awesome Paradox at the heart of their ideology but it's a waste of time imo

flopson, Tuesday, 7 March 2017 18:01 (seven years ago) link

CORRECTION:

controversial conservative opinion: private property is good. also, slavery is bad

flopson, Tuesday, 7 March 2017 18:02 (seven years ago) link

That link basically says what I was saying. I wasn't arguing that private property is a bad thing in all cases, just that it is just another means of using state power to restrict some people's liberty in order to promote one conception of justice. So, framing left vs right economic positions as an issue of "government vs liberty" is problematic. This is probably undergrad-level poli sci stuff but, eh, it's Spring Break and I'm on the Internet.

My Body's Made of Crushed Little Evening Stars (Sund4r), Tuesday, 7 March 2017 18:09 (seven years ago) link

right it's definitely not government vs. liberty. that's only if you're a libertarian. if you're a conservative you believe in a government (and in fact the conservative Weltanschauung requires gov in order to prevent the worst crimes of natural man) just a limited government because a broad powerful government can also abrogate freedom. the right size government is one that protects ppl from invaders, and prevents people from killing each other / stealing from each other. i don't think you need to view preventing theft as "restricting some people's liberty in order to promote one conception of justice." it's a pretty foundational crime and only in a particular political context (communism?) does it make sense to even start from a position of "private ownership is unnatural."

Mordy, Tuesday, 7 March 2017 18:13 (seven years ago) link

Well, what is 'natural' about private property ownership as practised in modern capitalism, beyond basic personal property?

My Body's Made of Crushed Little Evening Stars (Sund4r), Tuesday, 7 March 2017 18:19 (seven years ago) link

The extent to which it predates modern capitalism and has been guaranteed in legal codes since antiquity. Once you're distinguished between good historical ownership and bad capitalism ownership tho I think the onus is on you to explain where the line lies.

Mordy, Tuesday, 7 March 2017 18:25 (seven years ago) link

Good points/questions and ones I should definitely try to answer after I get some work done!

My Body's Made of Crushed Little Evening Stars (Sund4r), Tuesday, 7 March 2017 18:29 (seven years ago) link

soref & flopson otm.

to the extent that modern american conservatism has a coherent underlying ideology, its half religious/cultural, half fiscal/philosophical. the former just want to hand authority over to the bigotries of yesteryear, but the latter often have coherent, (semi-)defensible views. among them that the world is fundamentally unfair, and it's not really the government's place to "fix" that. as others have said, that the "best & brightest" tend to rise to the top in any system, and we all benefit best by restricting them least. that equality of opportunity is a noble goal, but any attempt to legislate our way to an actual equality of outcomes will necessarily verge on tyranny. that government bureaucracies are inherently inefficient and self-serving, once entrenched are all but impossible to dislodge no matter how dysfunctional. that society is profoundly degraded when any reward is attached to non-work, so much so that the inevitable consequences of refusal ("no healthcare for you, no food for your children") are preferable to the cultivation of a persistent underclass dependent on system of entitlements. fundamentally, that "the way things are" in some supposedly "natural state" makes a kind of super-sense that transcends ideology, while the naive, liberal/progressive attempt to pull society away from this towards some pipe-dream engineered utopia is doomed to ruinous failure.

plus racism, yeah. lots and lots of racism.

“Remember,” he says, “Noddy Holder is a gangster.” (contenderizer), Tuesday, 7 March 2017 18:39 (seven years ago) link

its its its its it's

“Remember,” he says, “Noddy Holder is a gangster.” (contenderizer), Tuesday, 7 March 2017 18:39 (seven years ago) link

XP to mordy re traditional capitalism intersection with conservative ideology - i think a lot about this and especially in the context of how the ideologies will react to increasing cyclical unemployment created by technological advancement over the coming decades. anyway good thoughts above (i especially appreciate when things get back to state of nature)

art, Tuesday, 7 March 2017 18:43 (seven years ago) link

good list, contenderizer

may all your memes be dank (Ye Mad Puffin), Tuesday, 7 March 2017 18:46 (seven years ago) link

The abortion thing seems a major difference between US and UK conservatives. No-one gives a flying fuck about abortion over here, save for some headbangers in Northern Ireland (Ulster-Scots, go figure).

Return of the Flustered Bootle Native (Tom D.), Tuesday, 7 March 2017 18:49 (seven years ago) link

Not banning but plenty of Tory MPs have been angling for limits - either to time scales or to who can provide advice.

Wag1 Shree Rajneesh (ShariVari), Tuesday, 7 March 2017 18:56 (seven years ago) link

In the US, I think it has its roots as one of the main ways that the GOP pulled Catholics and Protestants together into the fold, so to speak

El Tomboto, Tuesday, 7 March 2017 18:57 (seven years ago) link

Small beer compared to the lunacy that prevails in the US. (xp)

Return of the Flustered Bootle Native (Tom D.), Tuesday, 7 March 2017 18:58 (seven years ago) link

(xp) Conservatism in the UK is Anglican as opposed to Baptist or whatever in the US or, God forbid, Catholic.

Return of the Flustered Bootle Native (Tom D.), Tuesday, 7 March 2017 19:00 (seven years ago) link

No-one gives a flying fuck about abortion over here, save for some headbangers in Northern Ireland

...who prefer to wait till the unwanted wee ones get born, then whack them with a bible and then dump them in the ditch out behind the home for wayward girls.

“Remember,” he says, “Noddy Holder is a gangster.” (contenderizer), Tuesday, 7 March 2017 19:00 (seven years ago) link

re: abortion as fundamental conservative issue in the US now

Kiarostami bag (milo z), Tuesday, 7 March 2017 19:08 (seven years ago) link

Uh huh, sounds about right.

Return of the Flustered Bootle Native (Tom D.), Tuesday, 7 March 2017 19:12 (seven years ago) link

interesting read, esp the first couple pages. thanks, milo.

“Remember,” he says, “Noddy Holder is a gangster.” (contenderizer), Tuesday, 7 March 2017 19:16 (seven years ago) link

Isn't that feeling at least somewhat mutual?

Maybe not the killing. But that's prolly just because we're betas and pussies, not skilled with firearms.

― may all your memes be dank (Ye Mad Puffin)

i mean, there is a lot of mutuality here. this whole "understanding" thing has been really fucking me up, particularly over the past six months or so, because man the more i feel like i "understand" conservatives the more i hate and fear them. there's this mutually reinforcing/escalating cycle and that cycle does lead, pretty inevitably, to mass political violence. and i don't see any way of breaking the cycle. either don't oppose them and let them commit genocide, or do oppose them and have brutal civil war. what other options are there?

increasingly bonkers (rushomancy), Tuesday, 7 March 2017 19:24 (seven years ago) link

gridlock

“Remember,” he says, “Noddy Holder is a gangster.” (contenderizer), Tuesday, 7 March 2017 19:28 (seven years ago) link

Winning - unquestionably - in elections. Bit by bit, at every level, regaining real power so that we don't have to make so many appeals to decency that go in-heard.

Either that, or the sitcom hugging/learning plan.

may all your memes be dank (Ye Mad Puffin), Tuesday, 7 March 2017 19:32 (seven years ago) link

un-heard

may all your memes be dank (Ye Mad Puffin), Tuesday, 7 March 2017 19:32 (seven years ago) link

Conservatism is such an amorphous concept in American politics right now that every "explanation of conservatism" that one could give would not apply to some group whose members would vehemently insist they are the 'true' conservatives.

However, if I were to venture an explanation that might apply to a majority of self-described US conservatives, it would be a simple matter of tribal identity, often arrived at by the expedient of being born among self-identified conservatives and taught 'the facts of life' as viewed through that lens, while seldom or never hearing contrary views except as fodder to be caricatured and scorned. This is basically analogous to adopting one's parents' religious identification and religious prejudices.

As explanations go, this is hardly new, sophisticated or surprising, but it is also probably more true than not for most Americans, whether conservative or liberal.

a little too mature to be cute (Aimless), Wednesday, 8 March 2017 02:21 (seven years ago) link

people are inherently selfish, and only fools believe otherwise. the four gospels are allegories about how to get rich. anyone telling you otherwise is just trying to take advantage of you. your self-interest is the only real motivation you can trust, and the only people you owe a living to are your fetuses

reggie (qualmsley), Wednesday, 8 March 2017 15:13 (seven years ago) link

Your fetuses are your fetuses, nobody can take them away from you.

El Tomboto, Wednesday, 8 March 2017 15:14 (seven years ago) link

always loved that Gershwin tune

waht, I am true black metal worrior (Neanderthal), Wednesday, 8 March 2017 15:17 (seven years ago) link

people are inherently selfish, and only fools believe otherwise.

I kind of do believe this, but I think it's an individual person's approach to this assertion that determines conservativism. Like, I think that people are inherently selfish but also that participation in a society requires us to transcend our inherent selfishness.

The twin snake of violence and sex is more like a sick wolf. (Old Lunch), Wednesday, 8 March 2017 15:23 (seven years ago) link

To me, throwing up your hands in the face of that assertion is as morally indefensible as saying, 'people are hardwired to have sex, so you can't expect me to exercise self-control in the employment of my genitals'.

The twin snake of violence and sex is more like a sick wolf. (Old Lunch), Wednesday, 8 March 2017 15:25 (seven years ago) link


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