The Psychology of Progressive Hostility - Quillette
The Psychology of Progressive Hostility - Quillette
Matthew Blackwell writes: "Both Sowell and Pinker contend that conservatives see an unfortunate world of moral trade-offs in which every moral judgment comes with costs that must be properly balanced. Progressives, on the other hand, seem to be blind to, or in denial about, these trade-offs, whether economic and social; theirs is a utopian or unconstrained vision, in which every moral grievance must be immediately extinguished until we have perfected society. This is why conservatives don't tend to express the same emotional hostility as the Left; a deeper grasp of the world's complexity has the effect of encouraging intellectual humility. The conservative hears the progressive's latest demands and says, 'I can see how you might come to that conclusion, but I think you've overlooked the following...' In contrast, the progressive hears the conservative and thinks, 'I have no idea why you would believe that. You're probably a racist.'
"No doubt, other factors creep into the mix of the triggered progressive mind. Fashionable theories, such as those advanced by Jacques Derrida, teach students that all text and language is structured by power, so any argument from someone in a position of 'gendered' or 'racial' power can be disregarded, whatever its logical validity. By reinforcing this premise with a heavily left-biased education, university educators have created a Frankenstein generation of fanatical students, and are now finding that they are unable to force the genie they've conjured back into its bottle."
0 TrackBacks
Listed below are links to blogs that reference this entry: The Psychology of Progressive Hostility - Quillette.
TrackBack URL for this entry: https://www.batesline.com/cgi-bin/mt/mt-tb.cgi/8196