Positions of Authority, Status Hierarchy, and Social Dominance Orientation

This piece is about how social dominance orientation (SDO) operates on the lower levels of society and in everyday experience.

We typically think about dominance behavior and hierarchies in relation to politicians, police, military, plutocrats, tech tycoons, CEOs, managers, televangelists, social influencers, etc; or in terms of corporate monopolies and consolidated media, shadow networks and inverted totalitarianism, and on and on. But in a society of high inequality and power disparity, SDO has a way of seeping into everything, even into the psyches and behavior of the best of us. Under extreme stress and duress, none of us are immune and invulnerable.

To demonstrate this, I’ll use a real world example that I personally experienced recently. I find that issues become much more clear by exploring specific cases, so as to flesh out identifiable patterns. It’s on the experiential and interpersonal level that issues, otherwise feeling abstract, become subjectively and concretely real. And in my own life, I’m always looking for things that clarify the various topics I’m studying and contemplating.

SDO is a concept, a social construct. Few people know of the theory and research behind it. But once it’s described and explained, almost anyone would be familiar with what it represents. Still, we’re not used to thinking in these terms, much less looking for the signs of it in others and in ourselves. In a society like this, dominance hierarchies and behavior is everywhere. But it’s a case of the air we breathe, the water the fish swims in.

* * * * *

I broke a personal rule today. I’ve been almost entirely avoiding social media, including Reddit. But I saw an interesting post on r/AskAnthropology. And so I decided to take a chance by responding.

Following the subreddit commandments, I formulated a high quality comment that was put into an explanatory context where all my claims were backed by reputable sources, all of them from professional academics in respectable institutions, most of them university professors with published works in scientific journals. I also made sure I phrased everything carefully with qualifications, so as to pre-empt any possible criticisms and ensure my argument was solid.

The original post has a long title: So, why ARE women so oppressed in almost all non-industrial societies? (It’s a FAQ topic but the FAQ thread seems to be empty.) As for cultures that buck the trend (matriarchal, gender-egalitarian) – is there any pattern to them, like specific conditions where they have an advantage? Here is my comment as a direct response to the original poster:

Patriarchy tends to coincide with the conditions that predispose a society toward a loose constellation of traits, if varying in combination and degree for any given society — so not all of the following would apply to each and every case: traditionalism or conventionalism, tight culture (rule-making), formulaic art and architecture, vertical ideology, social hierarchy, power disparity, economic inequality, social dominance orientation (SDO), dark triad (Machiavellianism, narcissism, & psychopathy; + sadism), right-wing authoritarianism (RWA), conservatism, supernatural and superstitious beliefs, religiosity, fundamentalism, demarcated social roles and identities, ingroup bias, xenophobia, norm enforcement, punitiveness, intolerance of uncertainty (ambiguity, cognitive dissonance, cognitive complexity, etc), need for closure, cognitive rigidity, low ‘openness to experience’, low ‘honesty-humility’ (H-H), and such. Basically, they’re illiberal and inegalitarian.

It’s a complex topic to detail all the factors that are involved, but the basic pattern is easy to understand. That said, some of the above traits can exist separately from the others, depending on the overall context. For example, RWA (low openness) and SDO (low H-H) are related to different causal factors (threat vs competition) and so measure independently. Yet under high inequality, they tend to form together as part of a broader authoritarianism, as SDOs are drawn into power that is used to manipulate and organize RWAs; with Double Highs (SDO+RWA) on the far right. See: Bob Altemeyer, The Authoritarians; Michelle Gelfand, Rule Makers, Rule Breakers; Christopher D. Johnston, ‎Howard G. Lavine, & ‎Christopher M. Federico, Open Versus Closed; Agner Fog, Warlike and Peaceful Societies; Luke Kemp, Goliath’s Curse; etc (I can give other book recommendations, if requested).

You ask, “With specialisation, you increasingly get roles which aren’t biologically locked to either gender and don’t particularly require physical strength – why couldn’t women be priests or scribes just as easily as men?” In many patriarchal cultures, women do have unique religious roles, sometimes with significant authority. The Greco-Roman oracles tended to be women. In various patriarchal societies, ancient and modern, it wasn’t uncommon for there to be priestesses. And interestingly, in hierarchical societies, shamans tend to be women, as opposed to egalitarian tribes where shamans tend to be men–I think that was referenced in Manvir Singh’s Shamanism: The Timeless Religion. Also, even among the male-born shamans, they’re sometimes perceived as female, effeminate, or non-gender. We should keep in mind that non-WEIRD societies often have had other notions of gender (e.g., two-spirit).

I thought I was safe, considering the subreddit I was dealing with (note 1).

In my experience, only a few kinds of subreddits are not overflowing with antisociality and other problematic behaviors (e.g., r/AskALiberal, one of the best moderated subreddits). The more academic-oriented ones are often of a higher caliber, as they’re part of literary culture that attracts people with a literary mentality. That is far different from the antagonism, combativeness, identity politics, shitposting, trollishness, etc that’s more common with secondary orality (electronic media) and tertiary orality (digital media) that dominates most of the online world, including most of Reddit (note 2).

I was looking forward to positive response in return. And right away, I did get some likes. So, obviously, others approved of my comment.

* * * * *

Yet I got the following response from a moderator:

“Sorry, but your response has been removed per our rules on sources. We expect answers to be based in anthropological research, which offers a decidedly different perspective than the Big Idea books you’ve referenced here.”

Directed to the moderator, I sent this private message:

How are the following not qualified experts? They are academics working in respected institutions:

    • Manvir Singh is an assistant professor of anthropology at the University of California, Davis.
    • Agner Fog is an evolutionary anthropologist and computer scientist at the Technical University of Denmark.
    • Luke Kemp is a research associate at the Centre for the Study of Existential Risk at the University of Cambridge.
    • Bob Altemeyer was a professor of psychology at the University of Manitoba.
    • Michelle Gelfand is a psychologist who is a professor at Stanford University.
    • Christopher Johnston is a professor of political science and sociology at Duke University.
    • Howard Lavine is a professor of political psychology and the social sciences at the University of Minnesota. ‎
    • Christopher M. Federico is a professor of political science and psychology at the University of Minnesota.

I was then given this answer:

“We run this subreddit under the (fairly basic) assumption that users come here to get responses from the field of anthropology. While those authors certainly have credentials, their general approach to social issues is often at odds with the findings of anthropologists, who have been highly critical of both the “grand unifying theory” and the “here’s the two types of cultures” genres. Furthermore, some of the books you’ve cited, such as Rule Makers and Goliath’s Curse, are transparently non-academic books for a popular audience and would be unacceptable sources regardless of the author.”

In defense of my references, I clarified about these experts and their scholarship:

Goliath’s Curse is a tome of academic scholarship and heavily cited. No one who has read it could think it was written as popular writing for a general audience. Other than Gelfand’s book that doesn’t go as deep, all of the works I referenced are serious scholarship. You may disagree with them, but they can’t be dismissed as failing to present high level academic analyses, syntheses, and theories.

BTW Luke Kemp’s book isn’t exactly a single big idea in the standard sense. He covers a vast amount of examples and factors. His view is more wide-ranging than almost all other scholarly books I’ve ever read [and I’ve read hundreds in my lifetime]. He is not falling into reductionism as he looks at the issues from numerous angles.

So, in r/AskAnthropology, only comments are allowed if they express conventional, mainstream thought. A comment like the other one in that thread [and some others later on] offers no references at all, no evidence at all, but it’s fine because they state a view the moderators agree with. Hence, we must treat every anthropological issue as if there is a singular consensus as settled science and no new challenging views and theories are allowed. That doesn’t seem in accord with the scientific method to my mind.

[I received no further responses from the moderator. Apparently, they considered the issue as ‘settled’ as their view of the science. No new ‘big ideas’ are needed nor defenders of them. They are not welcome or tolerated. I was literally told to go elsewhere: “You’re welcome to discuss their perspectives in a more general sub like r/AskSocialScience.” Translation: Fuck off! We don’t want your kind here.]

That last paragraph is significant. What I was forced to conclude is that my comment would’ve been acceptable if, like the other commenters, I made no references in support of my argument. They’re encouraging people to make unsubstantiated claims, just as long as it’s part of acceptable opinion within the dominant paradigm. Or else as long as it fits whatever are the idiosyncratic biases of the moderator.

In a comment that’s no longer available, the moderator asked, “How well received have these books been in anthropology?” I questioned the question itself:

I’m not quite sure how that is relevant. These are established professional academics employed in reputable institutions. Even if their views were unconventional, they’d remain part of scientific debate within anthropology and the social sciences. But as far as I know, none of them are maligned in academia, if no doubt there are differing views on their scholarship. Most of them are mainstream researchers, some of them leading thinkers in their areas of expertise.

Bob Altemeyer, for example, is one of the biggest names in authoritarian research. He came up with the construct of RWA, as well as coining Double High. Though I can’t say how many anthropologists are familiar with that area of study. As another example, take Manvir Singh [an anthropologist]. UC Davis ran a piece on his book. Also, it was was praised by the anthropologist Michael F. Brown in the Asian Ethnology journal: It “stands as an admirable contribution to anthropology and religious studies.”

* * * * *

The thing is I doubt that this particular moderator has ever come close to writing scholarship that is even a fraction as impressive as most of the experts I cited, especially not Luke Kemp with his magnum opus. I’m forced to assume, in this case, it’s some combination of various intellectual sins: jealousy, arrogance, dishonesty, incuriosity, closed-mindedness, groupthink, ingroup bias, prejudice, etc. Of those, jealousy seems a likely candidate.

The moderator in question goes by the username CommodoreCoCo, but his real name is Corey Bowen. He is an archaeologist and museum researcher.

What stood out to me, though, is that Bowen has never written a book himself. Nor has he done any research that has gained significant attention or had significant influence, much less proposed any new insightful theory that has advanced his field of study. His main role seems to be as a small-time public intellectual and popularizer. From what I can tell, he is low on the totem pole, without the greater academic reputation as seen with some of those he is censoring.

Basically, he can’t run with the big dogs like Manvir Singh, Luke Kemp, Bob Altemeyer, and others. Nor is any major publisher interested in his pedantic scholarship. So, if he can’t beat his superior academic competitors, then he’ll silence them.

Yet even as Bowen is largely a nobody in the academic world, he controls two major academia-related subreddits where many people look for scholarly information, views, and discussion. As a gatekeeper, he can determine who gets heard or silenced, who is seen or made invisible. Based on his own idiosyncratic biases and prejudices, he can make disappear anyone he doesn’t like and so disallow their evidence and theories from being a part of scientific debate, at least in his little Reddit fiefdoms, r/AskAnthropology and r/AskHistorians.

He can be a big fish in the small pond of his own subreddits.

If only conventional, mainstream views can be heard, or otherwise only views that Bowen allows for mysterious reasons of what he personally agrees with, who he likes, etc, then no new challenging, critical views will be heard in that space. It’s the problem that Thomas Kuhn famously described in The Structure of Scientific Revolutions (note 3), the kind of book that a Bowen-type petty tyrant would’ve banned from whatever was an equivalent platform back when it was published in 1962.

Kuhn was arguing about why paradigms only change as quickly as the old guard retires and dies. As Bowen appears to be in his 30s, that’s not a good sign.

At least, all he unfairly and oppressively rules over is a couple of subreddits, not a scientific journal or a university department or, worse, the department of education. Still, those two subreddits probably have far greater reach than the vast majority of scholarly books ever written. The Ask Anthropology subreddit has upwards of 500,000 subscribers with 122,000 weekly visitors or about 6,344,000 annually. And the Ask Historians subreddit, far larger, approaches three million subscribers that amounts to roughly 3-4 million monthly pageviews or 36-48 million annually.

Now consider Bowen has been a moderator since 2019. The people he could’ve directly and indirectly influenced has been in the hundreds of millions. Small-time as he may be in academia, his position as an authority figure is outsized online, potentially shaping minds far more dramatically than many of the greatest academic scholars and public intellectuals of this era.

In contrast, non-fiction books like Luke Kemp’s Goliath’s Curse typically sell a mere 5-15,000 copies over their entire published lifespan. Even if they get boosted with mainstream media or are adopted for university teaching, they still only achieve maybe 20-50,000 copies sold.

* * * * *

We need to take seriously those who control what we are allowed and disallowed to see online, especially as these people are largely unknown and act behind the scenes.

Concerns about online moderation have gained traction in recent years because of systematic censorship, shadowbanning, demonetizing, deplatforming, etc–with even major tv stars getting fired (e.g., Stephen Colbert), at the behest of the authoritarian regime. But it isn’t only about the largest and most well known corporate-owned platforms, such as Facebook and Twitter/X. Something like Reddit has vast reach in terms of users and web search results.

If some moderators are neutral, fair-minded actors, many others are not. But the main issue isn’t conscious intention, as biases tend to be unconscious. Some of the biases that creep in are political and we mustn’t forget that academia is extremely political. With that in mind, consider this research:

“The research team investigates a massive dataset of over 600 million comments from roughly 1.2 million users on Reddit. Using a novel methodology that combines archival data and quirks of the Reddit application programming interface, they can recover users’ comments that were removed by subreddit moderators. Within this dataset, they identify the political leanings of both commenters and moderators and find that if commenters had different political opinions than moderators, then they were more likely to have comments removed.

“While the data can show us that a statistical bias against opposing political views exists, it cannot say anything directly about the intentions behind moderators’ actions. Research in other settings has shown that biases are often unconscious, and that could well be the case here. Subreddit moderation is a ripe environment for unconscious bias, as subreddit moderators face the Sisyphean task of enforcing the community’s often vague and ambiguous rules. In these cases, it’s very easy for biases around in-groups (my party) and out-groups (their party) to creep into and subtly influence human decision-making.”

~J.T. Godfrey, New Study on Reddit Explores How Political Bias in Content Moderation Feeds Echo Chambers

It’s not mainly about moral character.

Bowen might be a perfectly fine mundane academic plugging away at his tiny niche of expertise, his silo of a sub-specialty, always staying in his lane (Andean archaeology & ethics of museum curation). He may be a great person who is kind and caring, loves his family, volunteers in his community, practices educational outreach, works studiously, and is driven by goodwill for all of humanity. But if he is consciously stating that he is biased against ‘big ideas’, which is itself irrational and unintelligent (certainly, it’s not a scientific assessment and critique), imagine what his unconscious biases might be.

Besides, across the centuries, nearly all revolutionary and paradigm-transforming scientific research and theory, as well as other scholarship, has been inspired by big ideas: heliocentric model, Darwinian evolution, quantum physics, cultural relativism, etc. We may not think of these as big ideas now because they’ve become normalized and mainstreamed, having been assimilated into the present dominant paradigm.

But if Bowen got his way by stopping all serious scientific debate (and public debate) about big ideas, all scientific advancement would grind to a halt. Then ‘big ideas’ like that of WEIRD bias (Joseph Henrich), at the heart of the replication crisis, would never be heard about.

Ultimately, there is no such thing as a big or small idea (note 4). There are just ideas. Calling it ‘big’ simply is an admission of feeling threatened. Maybe in his entire life Bowen has never had a ‘big idea’ or rather an original insight, a radical view, a divergent thought, a challenging conception, a complex synthesis, a perspective-shifting hypothesis, etc. If so, that’s his problem and no one else’s.

The question is: Why should all of scientific debate be constrained to the stunted or deficient cognitive abilities of some academics who want to defend the status quo?

* * * * *

Here is a more serious point.

I’d like to believe that Bowen isn’t so stupid, clueless, and obtuse as to not realize his own actions are intellectually dishonest, that his own rationalizations are intellectually disingenuous. But obviously, he doesn’t care or doesn’t realize there is anything to be concerned about. Or it’s one of those cases where a person simultaneously knows and doesn’t know something (The Stories We Know). It’s possible that his identity has gotten so entangled with his position of authority and control that he can no longer step back to gain perspective. Or maybe he really does plain lack self-awareness and psychological insight, which would be ironic–if likely not uncommon–for someone working in the social sciences.

What’s interesting is the topic that started this all, that of patriarchy. It’s a particular variety of social dominance. But Bowen is demonstrating another variety of social dominance.

In how competitive academia can be, many academics are constantly jockeying for position, privilege, and power. If one has an inferiority complex for a lack of ‘big ideas’ to impress others with, then the best way to posture as superior is by dismissing those who have done advanced scholarship that has gained widespread professional and public attention. Though I can’t prove that’s his motivation, that possible explanation perfectly matches his observable behavior.

Still, one has to wonder. Does he really not see how he is exhibiting social dominance behavior?

He works in the social sciences. And social dominance theory is a well known area of study in the social sciences. Yet academia, including the social sciences, is a dominance hierarchy by design. It’s interesting that some academics can study such things (or simply be around others who do so) and not see how it applies to themselves. But in Bowen’s case, he really might have little familiarity with psychology, as his area of expertise is more focused on the physical aspects of artifacts and such.

That is one of the inevitable results of hyper-specialization. That is particularly problematic for someone who is acting as a gatekeeper for the vast fields of anthropology and history that are surely far beyond his limited personal knowledge. One becomes concerned about the smart idiot effect, of which notoriously affects the well-educated most of all.

Then again, that could be why Bowen has chosen such an obscure academic field that has little consequence to the real world, not requiring social- and self-understanding (as sociology or psychology would). Maybe he’d rather not think about his own motivations and behavior, about what he is promoting, about the effect he has on others, about the kind of world he is helping to create. And if so, that would also be why he feels the need to attack and dismiss those academics who are doing serious scholarship that is relevant to the problems of our society, including explanations about social dominance (e.g., Luke Kemp).

More important, as a scientist, why would Bowen think that shutting down scientific debate is acceptable?

The whole point of scientific debate is about a supposed democratic process (note 5) where everyone with relevant expertise can be heard and where the truth is collectively determined. The problem is that academia, as I’ve already said, is organized as a dominance hierarchy with power disparities of who controls that scientific debate. And anywhere there is inequality, be it government or policing or academia, it will draw into power those who measure the highest in social dominance orientation and dark triad (Machiavellianism, narcissism, & psychopathy).

Research has confirmed this, such as the rate of psychopaths among politicians and CEOs being similar to that of the prison population. If to a less extreme degree, there is a good chance that the same would be true for platform moderators, especially those who are higher status such as on a high profile subreddit with millions of subscribers and visitors.

* * * * *

That is something we need to figure out as a society. It’s not only about developing democratic, egalitarian processes, however essential that is. We already have all of that in theory–we know how to implement democracy, if we ever got the crazy idea to actually attempt it one of these days. Based on constitutional originalism, we have the idea and ideal of democracy in politics. The same democratic aspiration or posturing is also found in academia.

But it’s subverted by the social reality of vast inequality. Democracy and inequality can’t co-exist, a realization that’s been long known, from Aristotle to Adam Smith. It’s not merely a problem of bad actors, since these unnatural conditions elicit antisocial behavior from even good people (Brian Klaas, Corruptible).

So, though the focus here has been partly on a single individual, the actual issue at hand is the system itself. It’s about who that system incentivizes to gain power and what it does to people who find themselves in high status positions, even if only minor status of a subreddit moderator as public intellectual. [Looked upon as an expert, Bowen has minor celebrity status in his own subreddits, and occasionally gets invited as a guest to talk on a podcast.]

About the effect of systems, this is demonstrated by the worsening quality on most subreddits over time, partly having to do with changes made on Reddit.

In recent years, some major subreddits were co-opted by bad actors, which wouldn’t have been possible prior to platform changes. In the past, the same moderators could retain their position in a subreddit for as long as they wanted, which reinforced stability–if it kept bad subreddits bad, it at least kept good subreddits good. But that is no longer the case. Now, if an old moderator is temporarily less active (sickness, personal crisis, extra workload, newborn child, etc), someone who just recently became a moderator could seize control of the Reddit and oust the old moderator from power.

This change was intended as an improvement so as to ensure active moderation. But the end result was that it gave a tactic for dark personalities to manipulate the system. For example, it’s how a bunch of left-wing subreddits got taken over by MAGA and alt-righters.

That isn’t the case with Bowen’s subreddits, as he has been a moderator for quite a while. The point, however, is that entrenched systems of unelected and unaccountable power don’t bring out the best in people, much less inspire the best of people to struggle for power against the worst of people. It’s what we’re seeing right now writ large, in how authoritarians and social dominators have taken over the political system, as well as the economic and media systems (e.g., the Epstein class). It’s how we’ve ended up in a banana republic (The American Dream of Democracy).

The same applies at the small-scale, and in some ways democratic process is even more important at that level. Most of us spend more time with online platforms than we spend doing anything involving politics. That is how online social influencers have become major political actors, and prominent moderators who act as public intellectuals can take on that role of social influencer.

The internet has magnified influence like never before. Those who would’ve been small-time actors in the past sometimes suddenly find that they have far greater reach. As an academic and a scientist, Bowen is largely unknown and insignificant, likely not even getting any respect at a scientific conference. But as a minor public figure in the online world, he is treated as an important expert who shapes opinion. One could imagine that it could go to one’s head.

The problem is, for someone in that position, soul-searching isn’t likely to happen and less likely to alter their malbehavior. Certainly, my own pleas fell on deaf ears.

Status tends to disconnect people from those they perceive as below them, but also disconnects them from themselves, specifically in terms of cognitive empathy. And in the case of a moderator, those deemed inferiors includes almost everyone they interact with in that role. And the pressure of being a moderator would just isolate them even further, might even numb them to complaints, especially complaints about them.

Besides, since they have all the power in that scenario, there is no incentive to treat others as equals. It would take a rare individuated individual of immense moral character, self-awareness, and psychological insight to act that humbly. But in most cases, it’s the conditions they’re in that determines their behavior and way of relating. And those conditions, with online platforms, are sub-optimal to an extreme.

We shouldn’t be surprised by the sad results. That said, knowledge is power, if it sounds trite. We know what has created the bad outcomes, and so we know how to create good outcomes. We need to improve conditions, if we want to improve behavior.

* * * * *

Note 1:

It reminds me of another incident on Reddit. That time, it was on the Carnivore subreddit. As I’m on a carnivore diet, I figured defending the carnivore diet on such a dedicated discussion forum wouldn’t be problematic.

In knowing the data from having researched it previously, I made various statements about land availability for food production, the animal biomass of the planet, and so on. Specifically, I pointed out that, including farm animals, there are no more animals, by number and weight, than there were in the past; and even more specifically, no more cows, pigs, chickens, etc than there once were buffalo, bison, passenger pigeons, etc in North America prior to European settlements.

I wasn’t looking for, much less expecting, disagreement. But to my surprise, the moderator, presumably also on a carnivore diet, removed (i.e., censored) my comment.

Their reason given was because they claimed to not believe me. Not that they had counter-evidence. They simply, as an act of blind faith, assumed the plant-based arguments against an animal-based diet was correct without any hint of skepticism or curiosity. So, even a carnivore advocate denied evidence supporting the carnivore diet in defense of the bias and assumptions of conventional, mainstream thought. To say that I was shocked would be an understatement. But I was easily able to get my comment reinstated by showing the proof of my claims.

What is disappointing is that the ruling paradigm doesn’t have to prove itself valid and correct, even when its demonstrably wrong. It’s just assumed to be right by default of being repeated as if it were true.

By the logic of Bowen, the carnivore diet or any other animal-based diet (e.g., Paleo) would be a ‘big idea’ and so automatically assumed to be wrong, such that it shouldn’t even be allowed to be debated or even mentioned in respectable society. Likewise, it’s irrelevant if anything I claim is provable, according to legitimate experts, since there would be no way to debate the evidence since the debate is shut down before it starts.

And in the case of r/AskAnthropology, even a private message made no difference. No meaningful explanation or justification was given. It was a naked assertion of authority, a complete shut down of open dialogue and free speech. Rather than a platform where various scientific positions are presented and considered, analyzed and discussed, only a narrow spectrum of scientific research and theory is allowed to see the light of day.

Note 2:

Over the past two centuries, we’ve been gradually shifting from a literary culture and mentality to visual media (photography, pictures in newspapers), electronic media (secondary orality), and now digital media ( tertiary orality). See: Marshall McLuhan, Eric McLuhan, Walter J. Ong, Neil Postman, Barry Sanders, Jeff Jarvis, etc.

This shift, however, has happened unevenly. There are still pockets of strong literacy, even online. I see it on a few platforms where the last of the remaining higher level readers and writers congregate: Medium, Substack, and WordPress. In those places, moderation tends to still be done well, that is to say reasonably and fairly, rather than oppressively controlling and censorious.

That is how the literary mentality operates. It tends toward the emotionally neutral, objective, rational, analytical, critical, and individualistic. Whereas post-literate semi-orality induces agonism, emotionality, trollishness, defensiveness, confrontational aggressiveness, reactionary terseness, tribalism, identity politics, ingroup conformity, and honor culture.

So, even for literary types who spend too much time on non-literary platforms, they start to take on the traits of post-literacy, typically without self-awareness. I see that on the academic subreddits that, though their field of study is part of the literary culture, the media environment trumps all else. It can become our totalizing mediated reality tunnel.

As Marshall McLuhan put it, the medium is the message. That can’t be escaped.

By ‘medium’, he didn’t only mean it in the narrowest sense, rather everything that is involved in media, every aspect of society, economy, politics, infrastructure, technology, etc. For example, in the 19th century, the railroad was part of the media system because it made media content travel faster than ever before.

That’s even more obvious now with how pervasive and immersive is media. There is almost nothing the media system doesn’t touch Aware or not, we are constantly being influenced and shaped, manipulated and controlled. Those who set up how the media system operates determines our mediated reality, identity, and behavior.

In relation to Corey Bowen, my suspicion is it’s partly that he has spent too much time among post-literates on Reddit. He is acting according to the norms of the new post-literate culture that is dominant there. So, even those educated and trained in literacy are forgetting the norms of literary culture.

When he seeks to exclude certain scholars, he is asserting that they’re not part of his tribe. So, in authoritarian fashion, they have no rights within the defended territory of his tribe.

Yet it doesn’t require Bowen to be a bad person with bad intentions. It’s most likely he doesn’t recognize the significance of his own behavior. Individualistic self-awareness is also a product of literary mentality. Hence, it’s not just the loss of the literary mentality but additionally the loss of the ability to recognize and comprehend that loss.

Note 3:

By the way, Kuhn’s book was definitely in the realm of so-called ‘big ideas’. Interestingly, his very book was proposing a scientific revolution about understanding scientific revolutions.

Scientific change and revolution have always gone hand in hand (Steven Johnson, The Invention of Air: A Story of Science, Faith, Revolution, and the Birth of America). And, as some would radically argue, that’s because all scientific methodologies are authoritarian (Paul Feyerabend, Against Method). So, whatever may be the case of paradigms, methodologies without a doubt get overturned and replaced, on a regular basis across scientific history.

But I think it’s impossible to argue against paradigms themselves being altered, whether or not Kuhn’s exact explanation is satisfactory. If not dismissing it, some deem his theory to be inadequate, in overlooking other factors. Fair enough. That would be part of genuine scientific debate.

At the time, Kuhn received tremendous pushback, critique, and accusations from his fellow scientists and academics. The elite and leaders, the watchdogs and gatekeepers all circled their wagons to defend against Kuhn’s challenge to their orthodoxy of scientific Whiggish history. He overturned the self-serving belief that the system of scientific methodology is self-reforming, rather than requiring revolution to be forced upon it.

Nonetheless, more than a half century later, his theory is still considered by many to be a worthy, reasonable, and probable explanation of how science changes over time. Or at least, it remains a hotly debated topic in scientific circles, if of course the scholarship has advanced since the 1960s.

Maybe someone like Luke Kemp is resisted for similar reasons.

By formulating and articulating a theory about societal collapse, he is challenging the institutions, such as academia, that like to imagine themselves as having lasting power of Whiggish progressivism, as part of an established sociopolitical order of power, privilege, and prestige going back centuries (Moroccan Fatima al-Fihri founded in 859 CE, Italian University of Bologna in 1088 CE, English University of Oxford in 1096 CE, etc).

Kemp’s argument might be taken as knocking sacred cows off their pedestals. He is a threat and, as research shows, threat can induce authoritarianism. So, what is he threatening exactly?

It isn’t only that Goliaths, as seen with Western powers, don’t last forever but that most people are often better off without them in many ways, including improved health, increased innovation, and such. His anarchist argument, unsurprisingly, doesn’t have appeal to many attached to our present authoritarian social order (Anarchists Not In Universities).

This questions that undemocratic and inegalitarian dominance hierarchies, such as authoritarian-structured universities ruled by academic elite, are necessary and beneficial. In terms of higher education, scholarship, and scientific research, we could instead develop democratic, egalitarian systems and institutions where there was transparency, accountability, and responsiveness; as part of direct self-governance and as equivalent to worker control of the means of production.

Do we need elites like Corey Bowen to tell us which scholars and intellectuals should be promoted and who should be made pariah? Shouldn’t scholarship, rather, stand on its own without having to be filtered through authoritative political correctness? Shouldn’t the public be part of scientific debate, instead of fed pre-processed and pre-packaged scientific dogma?

Note 4:

It’s similar to the problem of the common assertion that, “Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence.” As there are no ‘big ideas’ in reality, neither are there ‘extraordinary claims’ in reality.

Words like ‘big’ and ‘extraordinary’ are purely subjective perceptions and opinions, having nothing to do with scientific analysis and appraisal. This is how people, unconsciously or deceptively, slip in personal and cultural biases without detection.

Anything new and challenging is treated as suspect, being held to a higher standard. It’s no different than holding blacks to a higher standard than whites, immigrants to a higher standard than native-borns. That’s to say it’s unjustified prejudice.

That’s how dominance hierarchies function.

Note 5:

Why Are Forum Moderators Like “That”?
by zora

“We’ve made moderation a largely volunteer effort, with inconsistent tools, little mental health support, and no institutional recognition. Platforms rely on moderators to maintain civility but refuse to share accountability.

“If we want healthier online spaces, we need to reimagine the role of moderation entirely. That means better training, clearer guidelines, improved AI transparency, and fair compensation for hired moderators.

“Some platforms have begun experimenting with cooperative moderation models, where power is distributed more evenly across teams, or with transparent appeals systems that make decisions clearer to users. But these are still rare.”

With New Media, We’re Losing Both Literacy and Orality

In talking to an old friend about learning styles, a range of related thoughts occurred to me about experience and media, with specific thoughts on mediated reality and the world it creates. Both my friend and I are neurodivergent. That might affect the context a bit. But most of what I have to say should apply more broadly to neurotypicals as well, specifically in relation to orality and literacy. And as often is the case, my thoughts here will meander a bit, as I’m trying to make sense of new info.

To begin, my friend is a visuospatial thinker. That is a fast and efficient way of processing a lot of info, and quite impressive at times. It requires greater capacity for cognitive load and cognitive complexity, at least of a particular kind. She models the world and orients herself within those models. They’re three-dimensional with moving parts. She can think about how all the pieces interact and so imaginatively manipulate them to predict the results, then to use those predictions to change the results in the real world.

But there are some weaknesses as well. She is extraverted and externally focused. Also, my sense is that she is far more extrinsically motivated than I am. She admits to not having a strong inner voice (nor well-developed cognitive empathy, the ability to understand someone else’s inner self, including their inner voice). As she explained it, she has to take her mental experience and then translate it into language. It’s an interpretive process. But that can be a stumbling block in trying to communicate her inner experience.

That visuospatiality might be closer to an oral style. Some have observed that many oral people express amazing ability to visualize and imagine spatial relations, such as an intuitive sense for mechanical devices and how to fix them. Another thing is that oral cultures are actually often far less verbally-obsessed, instead allowing more space for silence, as well as more space for other senses, sometimes synesthetically. Orality is about a fuller embodied and enworlded experience.

My own thinking, if possibly overlapping with that of my friend’s, is different. I may have high verbal intelligence now, but that wasn’t the case when I was younger. Because of a learning disability related to word recall, my learning to read was delayed. And even then, I didn’t begin to engage with harder texts until high school. In line with that early verbal deficiency, the one area where my childhood self excelled was in fluid intelligence, especially puzzle-solving.

There is definitely a visuospatial component to it. It’s possible that, prior to becoming fully literate, I had a more visuospatial mentality that was dominant or at least developed significantly. But I’m not sure, as it’s hard to access one’s pre-literate self. Even now, I can spatially visualize to a fair degree. And I do have a natural talent for aesthetic appreciation (e.g., I notice when pictures are crooked on a wall), along with related abilities like pattern recognition.

A couple of things come to mind, though. My visual capacity may have diminished as my literacy advanced, as if the two mentalities are in conflict. Whereas I was drawn to creating visual art when younger, that creative impulse has largely dried up. My interest in music has also declined, and I find I can’t as easily read while music is playing — they compete for my attention. Even when I want to listen to a voice, I’m more inclined toward spoken word than sung word.

While having aged, I’ve become increasingly entrenched in a literary mentality, to the point of near graphomania. I’m constantly engaging with text. I’m always in the middle of reading numerous physical books, along with my online reading and writing. Then at night, I fall asleep to some audiobook, which plays as I’m sleeping — as the words drift into my consciousness, I hear parts of it as I wake up in the middle of the night, sometimes with it still playing as I wake up.

I live in written language! And my mind rarely shuts down and not easily. Nor does my inner voice go quiet without my intentionally shifting it through mindfulness or distracting it by way of external input, such as a tv show or movie. Intensive, focused physical activity, such as hacky-sacking, also works. Otherwise, as a default mode, my mind goes prattling on all day long. It’s my superpower, as constantly working over info is how I build deeper insights and extensive thought structures.

Yet my way of thinking isn’t entirely verbal or maybe not even primarily verbal. If I don’t have the visuospatial virtuosity like my friend, I have another means to a similar end. I’m a very feeling-oriented person, not just in the emotional sense. I lead with feeling, such that I often feel my way into ideas and the connections between them. I sense what resonates, which corresponds to what interrelates, what is synonymous, etc. It’s a feeling tone that I’ll also use when having trouble with word or info retrieval. It’s a slow method, if thorough in how it can bring so much together, potentially far beyond the visuospatial.

* * *

It’s hard for me to figure all of this out, as I suspect my mind really has changed greatly over the decades. My psyche — and my life — feels fractured these days. There is often a gap, sometimes a gulf, between mind and body, self and others, individuality and world, knower and known, actor and acted upon, etc. Also, a separation of the sensorium, such as of the visual and verbal. It exacerbates alienation, not that non-literary new media is better in this regard.

In reading Barry Sanders’ A is for Ox, I’m reminded of how that splitting is an artifact and defining feature of the literate mind. Maybe my friend has better maintained her own powerful levels of visuospatial skills because she reads and writes so little these days, albeit she did so more in the past. She spends far more time doing physical and social activities, including visual art. She is always doing something tangible in the world. (As a side note, she also wastes less time on the internet than most.)

Though such literacy-based splitting and splintering as I exhibit may seem like a horrible fate, it has its advantages. Modern civilization wouldn’t be possible without it. It’s what allows high levels of abstraction. Everything is broken down into its components and categories. That in turn allows them to be restructured in various ways, including toward radically imagining new prospects or else using juxtaposition to force divergent thought.

Orality tends to be stuck in conventional patterns, as the concrete sensibility is overriding. Whereas literacy, in particular alphabetic language with formal usage of punctuation, allows for complex arrangement of words and what they represent. Hence, recursive language (i.e., embedded phrases) makes possible recursive thought (i.e., layered & interwoven). There is a dynamic quality to this. (My friend says that she has lost much verbal complexity over time, partly because of a brain concussion. But she can compensate with her visuospatial complexity.)

Consider some of my convoluted long-form essays. It’s not only that the arguments I make and the views I present wouldn’t be possible to convey in mere orality. More importantly, with orality alone, it wouldn’t be possible to think those thoughts in the first place. I can only attain such intricate complexity of original thought by building upon the structure of writing, as there is no way to hold all of it in the mind at once. Text is an extension and affordance — it holds info for you while your mind is preoccupied with something else.

Of course, there is a price to be paid for that gift. For example, a divide also forms in temporal experience, forming into a linear sense of past and future, thus making it difficult to be in the present moment. A literary mind can record what happened, dismantle the parts, and conceive of a different future or, as a thought experiment, even a different past — one can become dislocated in time, forever several steps in one direction or another. Opposite of that, the oral mind is present-oriented. Even in cyclical time, each revolution is a return to the same place.

Also opposite of literacy, in being present-oriented, orality is immersive, embodied, situated, and holistic; what’s known as 4E cognition (or 5E with ecological or enworlded; various other Es have been suggested) — a common feature being the de-emphasis or elimination of the individualistic framework. The literary individual, in contrast, stands separate from or above, sometimes experienced as outside and at other times inside. This creates the modern dilemma of the individual at odds with community and collectivism.

Another literacy-caused cost, according to Barry Sanders, is a darkening seriousness. This is one point, though I’ve intuited it, I never previously grasped its exact significance. Sanders talks about the role of the trickster figure and archetype in oral cultures: playfulness, humor, mimicry, deception, and lying. But literary culture increasingly loses that quality, resulting in literal-minded fundamentalism and scientism where verbal constructs are mistaken for reality.*

I must admit that I’ve observed this in myself. As I’ve become more text-oriented, I’ve lost the creative playfulness I once possessed or once possessed me. My friend, on the other hand, has maintained that aspect to a far greater extent. She is less obsessed with a literary ideal of truth-seeking, something that so passionately drives me. She is far more content in the immediacy of life, and so probably less divided. Rather than truth, she most values pleasure and enjoyment; and she is a bit of a social butterfly.

* * *

For further contrast, I could speak of yet another old friend. He used to be as much of a book reader and writer as I still am. But for some reason he almost entirely stopped all literary activities for the past decade or so. Instead, he became addicted to video games, combined with depressive antisociality. It did cause a difficulty in our friendship, as not only had our preferred activities diverged but maybe our mentalities as well. We were in a different headspace.

We no longer had as many of those deep intellectual conversations that are motivated by studying and contemplating heavy literature. But in addition, his video game habit would be an example of tertiary orality. While it’s a loss of literacy, it’s not a return to full orality either. He too had lost the kind of oral creativity and playfulness we had when younger, such as when we’d take turns telling stories. Also, in isolating himself, he lost the habits of sociability, including how to talk to strangers.

This past year, he began microdosing psilocybin mushrooms and some LSD too. It seems to have broken down the psychic dam. In having become interested in a woman, he began to playfully text her and the creative impulse was reawakened in him. Texting also is part of tertiary orality, as a product of digital media (secondary orality arose from electronic media: radio, tv, etc). But since my friend has a literary background, he gave his texting a more literary bent.

But there is something about psychedelics, in particular. When my friend and I had our greatest creative output in playfully telling and writing stories together, we both had been doing psychedelics — the trickster, one might note, is sometimes a storyteller or else a story disruptor; one way or another, an active agent in the narratizing process. One could note that psychedelic usage is common in many oral cultures. There is an interesting relationship between psychedelics and language.

Psychedelics, without a doubt, very much tap into the trickster archetype (i.e., Lewis Hyde’s Hermes the Light; discussed in “Why are you thinking about this?”). They dissolve the boundaries, if only temporarily, that are artificially constructed; and so one gains access to a fluid immediacy. Those divisions proliferate in a literary culture and mentality. And if not occasionally softened to be made pliable, either through psychedelics or another practice (meditation, mindfulness, mind-wandering, getting into the zone, etc), they can become soul-deadening.

That said, our presently emerging post-literate period is a sledgehammer that destroys all that is good and worthy in literacy. It’s not like psychedelics that might just loosen up the mind and allow in fresh air to aid creativity. In the post-truth age of post-literacy, we find ourselves overrun by trickster-like trollishness, meme magic, and owning the libs. Donald Trump is the ultimate post-literary trickster figure as con man, specifically a television celebrity of secondary orality.

That is the polar opposite of the trickster psychonauts —  Philip K. Dick (PKD), Robert Anton Wilson (RAW), and Terence Mckenna — that Erik Davis speaks of in one of his most recent books, High Weirdness (Low Trash, High Weird), a book my male friend has been reading. Though all having sought experience beyond ordinary language, they were still writers who remained creatures of literary culture. They weren’t seeking to destroy literary-based civilization, as part of a deranged post-literate vision of End Times or accelerationism.

What has really got me thinking is Barry Sanders’ A is for Ox. It’s one of those books that, though much of it familiar, has introduced to me new ideas, perspectives, and interpretations. It’s been challenging me to rethink certain things or else expand my understanding. Having been published in 1994 (the year I graduated high school), it apparently was forgotten about, unlike the writings of Marshall McLuhan, Walter J. Ong, and Neil Postman that grew in influence over time.

It’s impact on me is similar to Postman’s Amusing Ourselves to Death. Published in 1985, I was nine years at the time; and only got around to reading it last year. Postman was discussing the media world I grew up in, and so it was fascinating to read of examples from my childhood media consumption, from the perspective of an academic. Likewise, Sanders was also writing of my generation and with far more biting critique, if sometimes overwrought moral panic — sort of amusing, in reminding me of the strange fear-mongering of that era.

Several decades of hindsight gives one some vantage. While his scholarship is impressive, I’ve felt an impulse to constantly argue with the author in that his occasionally extreme conclusions probably only applied to a small subset of Generation X. He was asserting that most of my peer cohorts had already become post-literates, but that doesn’t fit my early life experience, not even in the public schools of the Deep South. Literary culture was still dominant back then.

* * *

Then again, the more I read of Sander’s book — about half way through — the more I’m convinced he was onto something. While the full effect of his prediction might only be appearing now, he could’ve been more right about my generation than a superficial take would give it. After all, one of the largest and strongest demographics of MAGA support for Trump is, sadly, that of GenXers. For 45-64 year olds in 2024, data from the Roper Center shows 54% having voted for Trump (How Groups Voted in 2024).

The Associated Press reported that voters between the ages of 45-64, roughly those of us in Gen X, voted for Trump over Harris 52% to 46%, a six-point margin. That’s even wider than the three-point margin by which Trump carried his fellow boomers (51%-48%) and a one-point increase in Gen X support for Trump from 2020″ (Christopher J. Scalia, Trump’s Dramatic and Ironic Gains with Gen X). Many of us have become cynical in embracing a post-truth world and its attendant reactionary politics. Trump’s illiterate and anti-intellectual style apparently appealed to a large number of GenXers.

“Trump’s delight in irony has its dangers. You don’t have to be a Harris supporter to see how his habit of challenging rhetorical conventions is parallel to his disregard for political standards. It also has the drawback of encouraging cynicism: If every convention is mockable, if every norm is bogus, if nobody can ever reliably be held to sincerely mean what they say, the overall political ethos is likely to echo Nirvana’s Gen X anthem, “Smells Like Teen Spirit”: “Well, whatever, never mind.””

Maybe too many in my age bracket really were long ago affected by a weakening and erosion of literary culture. It isn’t only about the decline of book reading. Sanders makes an unusual argument. Though we GenXers did receive an early education that prioritized literacy with high rates of kindergarten attendance, what was being lost was the foundation in the orally-experienced ‘Mother Language’ that transforms literacy into a literary mentality. And his explanation is persuasive.

To not get into the weeds, let’s put it simply. The premise is that full literacy builds upon orality. If not mentioned by Sanders, this touches upon Walter J. Ong’s theory of secondary orality. GenX was the first generation to be raised on electronic media, not merely exposed to it as also happened to the prior generations. It’s because GenXers, with divorced parents or both parents working, were latchkey kids that were left alone with a panoply of old and new media: telephone, radio, boom boxes, Walkmans, CD players, television, cable, VHS players, video game systems, Game Boy, desktop computers, etc.

As a literary mentality isn’t only about reading text, an oral mentality isn’t only about hearing words. Oral mentality only fully develops in face-to-face dialogue with others, not in passive listening to recorded voices that disallow living engagement and interaction. This is the danger of parents having used the boob-tube as a babysitter, however worse it is now with giving infants a personal tech device. There is also a vast difference between singing with others in a band or choir and singing alone to a song played on the radio or streaming service.

We live in a time of the disintegrating oral-literary matrix. That’s where Sanders brings in a unique perspective that helps us to better understand the relevance of secondary and tertiary orality. Rather than being in total opposition, orality and literacy have been co-developing for the past few millennia. It formed into a relatively stable culture and social order, having ruled during the Gutenberg Parenthesis now coming to a close. Whatever is replacing it could take generations or centuries to similarly stabilize, assuming it ever does.

In any case, I’m gaining new insights from A is for Ox. Thinking back on my own early experience, maybe I did get a better oral grounding than many GenXers. My mother, a speech pathologist, was always a conversationalist and I spent a lot of time with her, as the youngest child and a momma’s boy. But I also was taught how to orally make an argument and debate by my father, a professor. So, my life experience could be taken as evidence of the orality-literacy link.

Interestingly, this can be made into practical advice and policy. If this view is correct, the best way to increase literacy, as an ability but specifically as a mentality and culture, is not to teach literacy as early as possible. Instead, it’s to immerse children in full-throated orality. That might mean keeping kids away from all media technology during this pivotal and formative phase of development. Instead, young children should spend as much time as possible around others, of all age groups. They need to be socialized first in the dialogical world of a living community.

* * *

Where Sanders line of thought gets especially intriguing is his Jaynesian-like theory about the literary-induced formation of individuated self-consciousness. It makes one wonder. What if many GenXers, along with many in the following generations, really haven’t fully individuated, as compared to those in the older demographics born and bred in the oral-literacy dynamic. Maybe it was more than a spike of lead toxicity and a shift of neoliberalism that so harmed my peer cohort.

My brothers have told me that it’s specifically middle-aged rural Iowans who are the most reactionary, the most MAGA. Older rural Iowans, instead, are some combination of old school Democrats, former union members, land conservationists, and moderate conservatives. It’s possible that a stronger oral-based literacy could’ve been instrumental in moderating their politics by having tempered their mentality.

If so, this makes for a case that we maybe need both more orality and more literacy. It’s a failure not only of a changing media environment, with parents not controlling and supervising, and with tech companies targeting children. To my mind, it’s certainly hard to entirely blame parents who are more stressed than ever, have longer commute times, sometimes are forced to bring work home with them, and in general have more demands on their time and energy.** Besides, how are they to compete with the pervasive influences of the larger society (Judith Rich Harris, The Nurture Assumption).

There also might be a vicious cycle going on. If the present crop of parents, mostly GenXers and Millennials, didn’t get that early oral foundation, few of them would have the example and experience, nor knowledge, to be motivated to do anything different with their own children, even for the privileged few who do have the energy and time to do so. It might be natural for these parents to give their kids a smartphone or tablet, since children’s entertainment media have been normalized for their entire lives.

My two above-mentioned friends are more similar to me, in having had educated parents, each with at least one parent who was verbally-inclined. The female friend’s mother was an English teacher and, like my mother, a talker. As for the male friend, his grandfather was an English professor and his father almost got an English PhD, with their having been much verbal play and banter in the family, along with use of an extensive vocabulary. So, if these two friends later drifted away from reading and writing, they nonetheless got the initial grounding in it and, maybe more importantly, a grounding in orality.

Even that visually-focused friend would’ve received both a strong oral foundation and a strong literary exposure. So, if she never developed as strong of an inner voice that is the basis of the individuated self and literary-mindedness, she has spent her entire life around highly literate people in this and other liberal college towns and creative hubs (Iowa City, IA; Portland, OR; & Corvallis, OR). Also, at one point, she did read and write more. So, she internalized that, however much her visuospatial abilities remained central.

Also, both of these friends grew up here in Iowa City, one of the leading literary towns in the country. As it’s a highly educated population, there would be the pattern of how such people tend to talk to children more than do the under-educated. Those embodying literacy say more words, use a larger vocabulary, and speak in more complex sentences. It’s an oral experience that is shaped by literacy, as the literacy is founded on orality.

Yet even in a place like this, there is the takeover of secondary and tertiary orality, if less dramatic. Literary culture will linger here for much longer. What could be the nail in the coffin, though, is that primary and secondary education has de-emphasized reading entire books and hand writing essays, partly because literary capacity and attention span has atrophied with students. If literary culture disappears even from college towns, that could be disruptive or even devastating for society.

The female friend mentioned here briefly subbed in the local public schools. Rather than being taught by a teacher, students are given a tablet with which to do all their work. The teacher’s main role, from how it sounded, was merely to help the kids and keep them on track. The teacher monitors the students working on their learning programs. This is necessary because the new generations of kids struggle to follow directions and stay focused. Another substitute teacher I know says that she has to repeat directions constantly. So, besides being unable to read long-form text, they’re challenged even to follow the spoken word.***

Many teachers have complained that administrators expect them to be entertainers. From addictive Tik Tok viewing and such, kids these days supposedly have an attention span shorter than that of a goldfish. Compare that to the heyday of a public literary culture, as part of the oral-literacy matrix. Neil Postman describes the Lincoln-Douglas debates (1858). The audience stood for several hours listening to highly literate argumentation. In other debates of that era, it wasn’t uncommon to take a lunch break and then continue for another several hours.

Without that immense capacity for civic engagement, it’s questionable if democracy is possible. There is a reason that, upon being freed, the former slave communities went to such effort to gain literacy. But it seems that literacy is only as strong and functional to the degree it retains its roots in orality. Maybe even early scholarship, built on the literacy of formal Latin as a dead language, was able to operate in inculcating modern intellectuality and science because it was enmeshed in the larger culture where orality still reigned. The academic, when they left the university after a day’s work, returned home or stopped at the pub where the Mother Tongue was spoken.

* * * * *

*Note 1:

That said, the other side of fundamentalism is biblical criticism, and the other side of scientism is scientific objectivity. It’s the serious-minded pursuit of truth, largely an unconcern for oral cultures, that makes the literary mind unique. The high level abstraction of literacy creates the concept of an unchanging truth that can be captured (e.g., natural las), as related to the idea of an unchanging self (i.e., WEIRD bias; see Joseph Henrich, The WEIRDest People in the World).

Such a static and stable worldview is a prerequisite for modern scientific research and technological development, along with such things as democratic governments built on unchanging ideals. To the literary mind, this is a serious endeavor — the joking, mercurial trickster isn’t welcome. The reason for this seriousness might be that, unlike orality, literacy isn’t a natural state that has existed for most of human evolution. It requires a lot of work to create and sustain a literary mentality, both in the individual and in society.

A similar point was made by Julian Jaynes about individualistic (ego-)consciousness, as the contained self or propertied self (Brian J. McVeigh). He connected two points. First, ancient people were able to accomplish amazing physical feats without almost any technology or infrastructure, of which would seem impossible today (e.g., Great Pyramids, not even using slaves). Second, schizophrenics exhibit near tireless energy. Maybe maintaining rigid egoic boundaries is severely taxing on the body-minds energy reserves. The fluid, non-egoic self has a lot more energy to work with.

This could be a contributing factor, besides physical health issues (diet, toxins, etc), for increasing prevalence of mental illness. But it could even have something to do with the mitochondrial dysfunction that underlies so many other diseases and disorders (Chris Palmer, Brain Energy). As part of the metabolic system, it could be that mitochondria are being over burdened by modern stressors, and one of those stressors may be the entire post-oral media, starting with literacy. That is even more true with how the height of literary culture required the introduction of sugar and stimulants to make extended mental focus far easier.

**Note 2:

By the way, I despise the ignorant who claim people work less today than in the past. The world was a different place prior to the neoliberal breakdown of extended families and communities (e.g., parishes). Employed individuals may do less paid work than average compared to the past. Yet in many ways, they’re doing more unpaid work than ever before. That would include unpaid work from one’s job as well, such as when the boss emails you something to be done outside of the workplace.

Part of this is because, until quite recently, most of the parenting was often done by alloparents, typically family living in the same house or nearby — it takes a village to raise a child. Also, all the housework, yardwork, gardening, shopping, etc used to be divided among numerous adults or done together. Then there is the fact that older siblings, in the past, usually stayed home to help as well; and didn’t move out until marriage and sometimes not even then. But today, parents have to do it all by themselves, especially with professional childcare being so expensive.

Also, even if earlier last century an individual worker with a formal job might’ve clocked in 50-60 hours per week, nonetheless it was usually only one parent working a job outside of the home. Divided by two parents, that was actually only 25-30 hours per week outside the home. That one job often was able to support the entire family, sometimes with far larger families at that; sometimes with subsistence farming to ensure food: a garden, egg-laying hens, and possibly a milk cow.

Few women were employed, for various reasons. But now both parents are most often working jobs out of necessity, along with having to do all the work that was once done by a housewife, older children, grandparents, aunts, uncles, cousins, neighbors, etc — pooled labor potentially allows for less labor per individual (e.g., a multigenerational household versus the same people living in multiple residences). In constantly moving for education, training, and employment, the isolated nuclear family now has immense pressure placed upon them. And most of the work they’re doing, of course, isn’t be documented in the job stats.

Put this in context of evolutionary norms. Going by the data, the average hunter-gatherer may only work about a third to a half of what is done by an employed modern Westerner (original affluent society; see Marshall Sahlins). And much of that tribal work was communal, social, and relaxed. They were rarely in a rush, as talking and singing was as important as the work itself. Other than food procurement and preparation (15-20 hours per week), a large part of it was busy work, not necessarily anything that had to be done at a specific time.

Compare that to the modern Western worker: 40 hours work a week (for each individual, often longer for salaried positions), combined with maybe another 20+ hours in preparation for work, commute time, driving around, appointments, shopping, cooking, housework, yardwork, childcare, finances, answering work-related email, health-related activities, stress-reduction, etc. For many people, on workdays, they’re preoccupied doing one thing or another from waking to sleeping. Then on weekends, they’re running around doing everything they didn’t have time for during the week.

Some of that work, in a hunter-gatherer lifestyle, happened naturally with no effort. One got exercise merely by existing. And generally speaking, in having little stress, hunter-gatherers didn’t need to spend the time to reduce and ameliorate stress nor collapse at the end of the day from stress-induced exhaustion. In the modern world, almost everything becomes either work or somehow compensation for the demands, harms, and problems of work. Nearly everything revolves around the concept of work. Whereas hunter-gatherers prioritize leisure and social activities.

Some evidence indicates that might’ve been true of many premodern populations, particularly prior to the industrial revolution. “Certainly historians of medieval work life routinely assume the work week was much less than 312 days because of 50 or 60 days of religious holidays” (Gregory Clark & Ysbrand van der Werf, Work In Progress? The Industrious Revolution). In Dancing in the Streets, Barbara Ehrenreich made the same point. There was some major social event on a fairly regular basis. Much of the labor that medieval peasants did was simply in preparation for the next round of partying.

Like hunter-gatherers, socializing is what mattered most. A large reason of this was simply the nature of the work. Agriculture requires intense work during planting and harvesting. But for most of the rest of the year, such as from late fall to early spring, there is far less to do: repairs, toolmaking, etc. The socializing was, in many ways, essential to survival. It strengthened bonds of community. That is what helped people to make it through hard times, not the mere labor of an individual.

In addition, both hunter-gatherers and medieval peasants relied heavily on the bounty of natural resources. Yes, this took some work, but not nearly as much as agriculture. Gathering firewood and plant foods, checking traps and fishing lines, etc isn’t generally arduous work, as it’s typically done at an easygoing pace. The premodern world wasn’t a rat race. At the same time, nature exposure and sunlight were health-promoting. Ironically, modern Westerners have to work so much partly for costly healthcare to deal with the stress-related diseases caused by work and unnatural conditions.

This is where Sanders argument breaks down a bit. Though the new media does have powerful effects, it’s in many ways being blamed when it’s often a side effect. Or rather our relationship to that media is being shaped by other factors. When people worked from home as multigenerational farm families, there would’ve been no need to use television as a babysitter, even if television existed. Sometimes, it’s conditions unrelated to media that determine how media is used and the effect it has on people.

The breakdown of the orality-literacy matrix is part and parcel of a longer term breakdown of the entire social order that began with the early modern enclosure movement and land reforms that created landless peasants who became capitalist workers (Enclosure of the Mind). That was followed by industrialization and urbanization. None of that was being driven by media changes, if media changes exacerbated them. Orality had been weakening for centuries, but it was so gradual as to be imperceptible.

If we are to blame media, it would be literacy that was of primary fault. It’s what created the individual that replaced and weakened all of the social ties upon which orality depended. It was one thing when literary culture was limited to the elite: aristocrats, writers, clergy, etc. But it inevitably was going to spread, something that already began in the late Middle Ages. The tumult from the 14th to the 17th centuries was very much a product of a literary onslaught upon orality. Then literacy slowly destroying orality eroded the very foundation of literacy.

An oral culture requires people with tremendous amounts of free time where nearly all work is social and where socializing is prioritized over work. But it’s not about people necessarily having conversations all of the time. Much of orality involves simply being around people with most communication expressed non-verbally through embodied presence and interaction. It’s ironic that, with loss of oral culture, we feel ever more compelled to drown ourselves in constant noise.

***Note 3:

The loss of full orality also comes up in Sherry Turkle’s Alone Together (2011). Trained as a sociologist and psychologist, she is one of the leading media scholars in the world. In her research, she has done many interviews. Writing 15 years ago, her main observation is how controlled, curated digital interactions had already, for many, replaced real life intimacy with all of its messiness. The younger generations have preferred the ability to determine the pace, edit their comments, construct a persona, and maintain distance.

Actual conversations with a living, breathing person feels too risky and overwhelming. Once the most defining feature of humanity, the ability to casually and pleasantly talk with another human being has become a prospect of anxiety and threat. Many young adults fear they might say something wrong or simply not know what to say at all. They explain that they don’t know how to either start or end a conversation. So, they just avoid them altogether (Paul Barnwell, My Students Don’t Know How to Have a Conversation).

This points to how, in contrast, a traditional literary-based education actually required learning how to speak in public. Oftimes in the past, rhetoric itself was taught, along with debate and oratory. Or if nothing else, students had to regularly read or recite text in front of the class, as was common in my schooling. In addition, almost all teaching was done orally. The teacher spoke to the class and, when called upon, students answered questions out loud. Until quite recently, it was rare for students to have media tech, other than a calculator, in a classroom.

Related to dialogical ability, Turkle also had noted what, at the time, was an empathy decline. From the late 1970s to the late 2000s, there was a 40-48% decline in US college students. This was presumably related to the fear-mongering about rising narcissism (Jean M. Twenge & W. Keith Campbell, The Narcissism Epidemic, 2009). This fits in with the dire mood carried over the the 1990s, of which infected Barry Sanders’ mind. Evidence points to that children develop cognitive empathy toward others before they can internalize it in developing their own inner sense of self. Research does show that novel reading, specifically, does increase development of empathy. Literacy is key.

But having grown up in politicized mass media that was seeping in right-wing culture war, I’m always circumspect about moral panic about ‘kids these days’, as the same game was played on my generation and earlier generations as well. That isn’t to say I’m dismissive, though. I take all charges seriously. My concern is mostly how inter-generational conflict creates distortions. In the end, I want to see an evidence-based argument, not just accusations. Even then, all evidence must be held lightly while always looking for counter-evidence, larger context, and alternative interpretations.

Empathy appears to be a good example of why to remain skeptical. We have to distinguish between spikes, trends, and cycles. For example, violent crime spiked in the 1970s to 1980s, as a result of childhood lead toxicity. Then it went down after environmental regulations were put into place. Something similar may have happened with empathy, whatever might be the cause in that case. The landmark study that showed declining empathy, once updated, later indicated a rise in empathy among the young, almost returning to the high levels of the 1970s.

“Changes in empathy over time in young Americans move in cycles and can go up and down. Most pertinently, both perspective taking (cognitive empathy) and empathic concern (emotional empathy) increased between 2008 and 2018, contradicting complaints that today’s youth lack empathy, and painting a more optimistic picture of late Millennials and Gen Z young adults” (Indiana University Lilly Family School of Philanthropy, Empathy Among Young Americans on the Rise).

The stereotypical narrative is that loss of empathy is driving narcissism (and individualism), largely because of online anonymity, selfies, main character syndrome, etc. It’s the claim that the egoic self is becoming stronger. But the supporting evidence is weaker than assumed. This is where Sanders gets some credit for a different kind of critique. Instead of narcissism, he thought it was the complete opposite, a weakening of individuated self-development. What was replacing it was what he considered to be pseudo-tribalism, the self being suppressed or stunted before it gets the chance to assert itself. That fits what some others suggest:

“The handwringing about narcissism misses the mark. The effects of our predicament do not promote grandiosity or the assertion of some imperial self. Something like the opposite seems to be the case. Studies going back decades suggest that self-image and “ego strength” have declined over time, while reported feelings of emptiness, uncertainty, and inadequacy have increased.4 Though largely unreported in the press, efforts to replicate the original claims for a “narcissism epidemic” have failed.5 And all the comparing that people do on social media does not boost self-confidence but undermines it.

“Narcissism is not a helpful category. If anything, beleaguered or demoralized might be better terms for the effects of our self ethic at the individual level” (Joseph E. Davis, Is There Truly an Epidemic of Narcissism?).

Many people, including experts, have speculated that social isolation and loneliness would cause falling empathy, rising narcissism. But the newer data forces us to question that: “Neither economic factors (such as the inflation rate or unemployment rate) nor worldview factors (such as trust in institutions or optimism about the future) explained these changes in empathy. Instead, changes in empathy were related to interpersonal dynamics, such as changes in how frequently people socialized and their feelings of loneliness. Empathy increased when socializing decreased and loneliness increased” (Alison Jane Martingano, Generation Empathy: The Surprising Surge of Compassion in Modern Youth).

One speculation is that, “It’s possible that being lonely acts like a ‘social hunger,’ driving people to seek out and empathize with others.” That might challenge Sanders’ view. It’s not clear, though, since I don’t know if he ever directly refers to empathy, sympathy, compassion, narcissism, egoism, etc — none of those terms are listed in the index. He does indirectly touch on this, if in other words. In arguing that the Nineties youth lacked interiority, they couldn’t recognize the interiority of others and so could show no moral concern for the lives of others — hence, their being drawn into violent gangs where life was cheap.

Sanders seemed to have an exaggerated view of how many GenXers were in gangs. Besides, it more likely had to do with childhood lead toxicity, childhood poverty, drug wars, zero tolerance policies, mass incarceration, etc than anything to do with media. If there was a rise in gang activity in the mid-1990s, the same had been seen in the mid-1800s, the late-1800s, the 1920s, and the 1960s — gangs were already in America by the 1700s (OJJDP, History of Youth Gangs; Wikipedia, Gangs in the United States; & gab1930s, Gangs: “1766 Early Manifestations of Gangs”).

I’m fairly sure literacy wasn’t ebbing and flowing alongside gang activity. The draw into gang life seems to go in a cycle, re-emerging every 30-40 years. There is no evidence, as far as I know, that connects it to a takeover of illiterate low-empathy narcissists. I doubt criminal activity and violence, individual or organized, has much of anything to do with media changes. Anyway, over the past several decades of secondary orality turning to tertiary orality, violent crime stats have mostly shown a steady downward trend, albeit Covid-19 caused a momentary blip.

By the way, about loneliness, that’s an interesting topic in and of itself. A number of scholars, such as Hannah Arendt, have argued that loneliness or something similar has been a major force whenever totalitarianism shows up. But it’s interesting that some research, as already mentioned, elicits empathy. I’m not sure what to make of that. All I can say is it seems to confound a lot of speculation that has been done. It sometimes feels like certain thinkers are trying to throw together everything bad that concerns them, and then look for the data to confirm their assumptions and conclusions.

Religion and Shamanism: Stress, Uncertainty, Rituals, and the Supernatural

In reading and writing on various topics these past months, I’ve had some straggling thoughts that were coalescing in my mind. The specific topics tumbling around have to do with religion, the right-wing, stress, health, psychology, behavior, and social order (Religion, Spirituality, or Something Else; What does stress do to the mind? And why?; & Working the Reactionary Mind Into a Froth). These are recurring themes in my work. And in recent years I’ve been slowly bringing them together in a coherent picture, maybe even incorporating it all into a meta-theory.

About religion, two points I made. I interrogated the WEIRD social construct of ‘religion’ itself. Many scholars have long suggested that this categorical term may not apply to other cultures, as it specifically formed in the context of Western society during the Protestant Reformation (Kwame Anthony Appiah, Captive Gods: Religion and the Rise of Social Science). I just came across a short, if highly informative, discussion about this on the Anthropology subreddit (Are there any known cultures or tribes that had no religion?).

But I also contrasted organized religion proper against spiritual experience. It comes down to defining religion, which is trickier than one might think. And it does seem important to distinguish it from belief in spirits, a spiritual realm, or an immanent spiritual (or animating) force in the world. Indigenous hunter-gatherers, typically as animists, were less likely to separate the spiritual from the material. Their spiritual beliefs, as such, were often proto-scientific attempts at describing and explaining the physical world (species, ecosystems, weather, climate, seasons, etc). And belief might not be the right word, as indigenous religion hews closer to direct experience.

“I think referring to belief in spirits as ‘religious’ is plainly incorrect. To a preindustrial group, what distinction is there between ‘spirits’ and wild animals? Wouldn’t some groups think of an owl as a ‘night spirit’?

“Its more of an inaccurate assessment of biology than religion. Their view of the natural world could be entirely rational and evidence based – but with limited technology, a ‘scientific’ tribesman could rationally conclude, based on available evidence, that some animals could teleport and possess human bodies (after all, parasites can). And if we translate their word for that animal as ‘spirit’, then we falsely call them ‘religious’. Or take the Okapi – Western anthropologists thought this was a ‘magical’ being and part of their religion – until they actually FOUND an Okapi. A lot depends on translation and our definition of what ‘religion’ means.”
~rfmaxson

Part of that same thread, another commenter clarified the point of the spiritual as supernatural or what Westerners would perceive and interpret as the supernatural. Unlike Western religion, animist worldviews are typically referring to concrete realities of a sort, if through a specific cultural lens of interpretation. What’s stated here gets to some other thoughts I have, but for the moment I’ll just plunk it down and let it sit.

“A problem with this is who determines what is supernatural? There are lots of things that can make a person enter an altered mental state, and if you do not fully understand the mechanism, even if you know a direct causal source, they can be are effectively the same as supernatural. The mushroom essence entered you, something was in that animal, and when it bit that person it passed into them.. etc.”
~TheNthMan

As for definition, let’s extend upon what’s already been said. The first commenter also left this next comment. He does name one particular scholar, Morris Berman, who argues for a lack of Western-conceived ‘religion’ in some cases. Also, he once again brings in the practical nature of indigenous spirituality, that of shamanism. The thing is shamans aren’t religious figures in how we think of them. They’re closer to healers and their authority is based on their success in actually healing people, not healing only souls but also bodies; sometimes also healing relationships, communities, ancestral wrongdoings, ecological imbalances, etc. They have to prove their worth by using advanced knowledge of disease, plant medicines, and healing techniques.

“If we define religion more strictly – as belief in an afterlife and/or a divine authority who should be obeyed – then Morris Berman argues that many groups certainly lacked religion (at least before contacting religious groups). He also argues that some modern groups are insincere believers – i.e. they get along easier with their neighbors by claiming Christian/Muslim faith, but it is of little importance in their lives and history. We should remember that to many groups, shamans have knowledge of medicine and philosophy, but NOT ‘sacred authority’. They are not priests. The power of their rituals comes from acquired skill, not divine appointment. This is especially true of nomadic groups, because in Berman’s view, it is agriculture that is the origin of afterlife belief and ‘sacred authority’. He argues for a surprising LACK of religion in cave art – we come from religious culture, so (even if we are atheists ourselves) we see religion everywhere. Of one famous ‘passing into the afterlife’ painting, he asks, aren’t they just crossing a river? Isn’t this just a record of a human migration that actually happened? Where is the afterlife here?”
~rfmaxson

Going into more details about what we mean, one comment broke it down into its components. He throws in an even older scholar, Émile Durkheim (1858-1917), who was one of the earliest to tangle with religion through cross-cultural comparisons. By the way, in Kwame Anthony Appiah’s Captive Gods, there is an entire chapter dedicated to Durkheim.

“Ultimately it depends on what you define as religion.

“But I’ll try to be a bit more substantive. If you mean a belief in a supreme being? No, Durkheim a hundred years ago had already noted that not all populations believe in God.

“If you mean a belief in an afterlife (eschatology)? Also no though it gets very complicated very quickly. For example Lienhardt mentions at the end of “Divinity and Experience” about a collective continuation of life, not a personal one. In other words there is an immortality of life itself, separate from divinity, but not of the person. But you also have eschatologies where there is a gradual entropic decay due to, for example, a lack of social dynamism on the part of the dead.

“If you mean religion as having a specialist shaman/priest role? There are plenty of places where virtually all people (or people of a certain gender) are considered shamans in the sense that they all have a shamanic potential whose development is part of a continuous maturation process and/or transcendence of humanity.

“If you mean a lack of cosmological consensus? Then that’s the experience of every anthropologist that does long-duration fieldwork, its a tale as old as fieldwork: “what happens when you die?” “I don’t know I haven’t died yet”. Especially in places like the Amazon where empiricism and epistemological precision is so highly valued, cosmologies are more often than not very lose, mutating frameworks for a continuous debate, nothing remotely resembling a canon.

“The problem is that the secular idea of religion is heavily dependent on a sedimentary view of the world. From this perspective you have different layers (like a cultural layer, a biological layer, a physical layer) each one serving as a basis for what supersedes it. So religion is conceived as a projection upon a common inhuman biological or physical reality, in that sense a society without a religion is just a society that agrees with the observers metaphysics.”
~notenome

To pull out one bit, it’s stated that, “Especially in places like the Amazon where empiricism and epistemological precision is so highly valued, cosmologies are more often than not very l[o]ose, mutating frameworks for a continuous debate, nothing remotely resembling a canon.” I don’t know much about the Amazon region overall. But anyone who follows my writings knows that I regularly return to the Piraha, one of those epistemologically precise Amazonian cultures, as based on linguistic precision that disallows non-attributed claims and abstract generalizations.

[As a side note, the Piraha could be a remnant of a particular kind of culture that was more common before mass genocide and assimilation. They represent a far opposite extreme of WEIRD hegemony. But the indigenous cultures that survived into modernity probably have most often been those that are the least different from imperial conquerors and colonial settlers, those most able to accomodate to the WEIRD and change their cultures to fit into the WEIRD so as to be perceived as less threatening. Any culture that appeared too alien would’ve been targeted for genocidal elimination. The Piraha may have survived simply in being so isolated and so small in number, while in an area with little military or economic interest.]

The Piraha are an example, according to Daniel Everett, of indigenous non-religion but not non-spirituality. They see ‘spirits’ (or what a WEIRDo might interpret as such), if Everett had no idea what they were seeing. In one incident, he and his family, as missionaries, couldn’t see a spirit or else didn’t know what to look for, even when the whole tribe pointed at it across the river. In that case, the Piraha might’ve been referring to a specific species, ecological pattern, the way the light filtered through the canopy, etc that was beyond Everett’s perception and conception. But in any case, the Piraha considered it objectively and obviously real — and out in the open! It makes one wonder that it wasn’t really a ‘spirit’ in at all.

To add to the confusion, it’s not only a problem of Western language being potentially inapplicable to non-Western cultures and their experience of reality. Colonial imperialism and post-colonial globalization have had a massive impact of Westernization. It’s not only that Western language and ideas have been enforced on other cultures but it has altered those cultures as well. So, many religions may have only become such because of Western demands in treating them as religions, and during colonialism legally or even violently forcing them to comply with Western religious norms.

“Yes and no.

“It is incorrect that “even the most primitive” had some concept of a higher power, as the concept of a High God is a remarkably provincial one that was superimposed onto other cosmologies over the last few hundred years. For example, Christian missionaries and proto-anthropologists (and plenty of straight up anthropologists) often encountered the names of ancestors and forces or breaths (short handed in English to “spirit”) and shoehorned them into a Judeo-Christian template. This is something that the northern Ugandan writer/anthropologist/poet, Okot p’Bitek, wrote about in-depth. See here [Decolonizing African Religion: A Short History of African Religions in Western Scholarship] for a link to one of his books about this. Many cultures adapted to this categorizing and so their indigenous cosmologies were transformed.

“Despite this, the whole category of “religion,” whether organized or unorganized, is one that, again, is provincial. It especially comes out of the way Western European life was reorganized during and after the Protestant Reformation. The idea that we can divide up our experiences into secular and religious is a fundamentally modern and Western one, whereas for most of human history the stuff we think of as “religious” wasn’t separate from all the other stuff. To bring it back to the previous ethnographic example, contemporary northern Ugandans don’t consider spirit possession, divination, or mediumship (shamanism) to be religion at all, and their word for religion comes from the foreign Arabic word for religion: dini. The majority of Ugandans will say their religion is Christianity or Islam, but it doesn’t mean they don’t also practice “traditional religion.”

“In short, all peoples have had what we think of as “religiousness. I wouldn’t even call them “belief systems” or “supernatural” ideas because, you guessed it, those concepts are primarily Christian ones. If you want to read more about this intellectual history, one good first stop (but not the last by any means) is the work of Talal Asad.”
~BasicCableHolidayLog

This brings me to another Reddit discussion I noticed (Why do socialists often think religion will wither away in a socialist society?). Karl Marx famously claimed that religion was the opiate of the masses. But he wasn’t arguing that socialists should see the religious as the enemy. The point wasn’t that, once leftists were in power, they should abolish religion. He simply meant that religion was a non-answer to problems that had to be understood in material terms. Once material needs were taken care of, religious answers would offer little or no consolation and attraction. Hence, organized religion would become moot or at least lose its prominence. Certainly, it didn’t represent polar opposition and a totalizing threat to the leftist project.

“From this perspective, many socialists think religion will gradually wither away under socialism for three main reasons:

  1. “Reduction of alienation – If exploitation, insecurity, and powerlessness decline, the psychological and social need for compensatory belief weakens.
  2. “Human powers become visible – Achievements that once appeared miraculous (collective provision, universal care, solidarity across classes) are recognized as human products.
  3. “Ideals become immanent – Moral aspirations previously framed in theological terms are embedded in everyday social practice and institutions.

“That said, your point is important: religion is historically adaptable. Marxists who expect religion to disappear don’t necessarily deny adaptation; rather, they assume that as the social function of religion changes, its distinctively supernatural content becomes less necessary. What may persist are ethical traditions, symbolic language, or community practices, but increasingly detached from strong metaphysical commitments.”
~Ill-Software8713

Though I largely agree, I’d make the additional point that it’s not limited to only class analysis: poverty, inequality, socioeconomic status, dominance hierarchy, power disparity, permanent underclass, worker control of the means of production, etc. Economics is just one aspect of public health and environmental health. Another commenter came closer to my own view, of which I’ve written about lately (What does stress do to the mind? And why?; & Moral Imagination: Conservative vs Traditional, Reactionary vs Radical).

“If some one says “There Are No Atheists in a Trench when it gets bombed” this is a argument against trenches and warfare not for theology.

“If you look at famous examples Luther vowed to become a monk in a thunderstorm. Where he felt powerless. When do people go to religion if they are sick if there loved ones are dying.

“And even in the bible the burning bush, with what does he address Moses? “I have indeed seen the misery of my people in Egypt. I have heard them crying out because of their slave drivers, and I am concerned about their suffering.”
~CryptoAktivist

About the abovementioned “strong metaphysical commitments.” That is what’s seen with the Amazonian “empiricism and epistemological precision,” as exemplified by Piraha and other tribes. Such cultures don’t concern themselves with beliefs as overt dogma, theological or mythological, supernatural or metaphysical. If you ask them about god(s), afterlife, survival of souls, or whatever, they’d simply have no opinion on the matter. It’s outside the scope of their experience and they’re not prone to speculation and abstraction, as their language limits themselves to concretely verifiable claims and immediate lived reality.

Having no serious problems, they have no use for prayer and supplication, rituals and priests. In fact, they don’t even bother with shamans, as they lack all figures of authority. That is the interesting point. Animism seems near universal outside of modern civilization of mass urbanization and industrialization, particularly outside of WEIRD culture. But animism doesn’t necessarily lead to shamanism. That emergence of shamanism, as some Jaynesian scholars have argued, represents a step in a new direction.

Shamans might’ve been the first charismatic figures who stood above and outside the communal identity. According to some scholars following in the footsteps of Julian Jaynes, that is the foundation upon which formed shaman-prophets, shaman-chiefs, and shaman-kings; upon which further formed god-kings and god-emperors. Manvir Singh, in Shamanism: The Timeless Religion, argues that shamanism, or at least the potential of it, exists in all humans and commonly expresses in diverse societies. Shamanic initiation and practice involves an active alteration of the psyche:

“There isn’t a good word that captures the transformative effects of shamanic practices. So I propose the term ‘xenize’, from the Greek prefix xen meaning ‘foreign’ or ‘other’. We can say, then, that asceticism, magical surgeries, and death-and-rebirth rituals all xenize a specialist—that is, they apparently turn the specialist into a different kind of entity, one more credibly endowed with special powers” (p. 66).

He clearly demarcates shamanism, in this sense, from religion. A xenized specialist doesn’t require any religious trappings at all. As Manvir Singh, various authority figures, from doctors to tech leaders to demagogues, can come to be perceived in this manner (Moral Imagination: Conservative vs Traditional, Reactionary vs Radical). Hence, no claims of the supernatural are required, nor of divine authority.

If there is no particular reason to suspect shamans would measure higher on social dominance orientation (SDO), Manvir Sing’s version of shamans as xenized experts certainly often merge with the SDO personality. That’s simply because it’s a position of authority, as an early development of power disparity, and those seeking to abuse authority would be attracted to that social role and line of work. Indeed, Singh does mention that it’s not unknown for shaman’s to use their power and privilege for self-gain, including demanding sexual payment from women and sometimes with a threat added (e.g., if they don’t comply, they’ll give birth to a non-human animal).

That’s where we can get to the point about why shamanism and religion takes hold at all. We should go back to the point that, “If some one says “There Are No Atheists in a Trench when it gets bombed” this is a argument against trenches and warfare not for theology.” That is the left-wing argument for public health (How Conditions Change Your Brain; We Need To Talk About HealthA Theory of Societal Retardation; Signaling In Our Body-Mind and Our Body Politic; & Sickly Left-Wing Authoritarians Don’t Understand Health).

The main health factor is nonzoonotic (human-spread) infectious-parasitical disease, as explained according to parasite-stress theory and the behavioral immune system. In many tribal communities, sudden, severe, or unknown diseases are often attributed to supernatural intervention (witchcraft, spirit anger, or sorcery) rather than purely natural causes.

This is why both such diseases, authoritarianism, shamanism, and world religions arise and/or concentrated near the equatorial zone. Like many others, Amanda L. Toth “observed a significant relationship between latitude and the likelihood that a particular culture group is described as exhibiting beliefs in interpersonal magical harm. This indicates that there may be a relationship between beliefs in interpersonal sorcery and parasitic and infectious disease prevalence and richness. It is unknown why only harmful shamanistic magic, or sorcery, was correlated with latitude” (Shamanistic Beliefs and the Behavioral Immune System).

But under bad conditions, the same pattern will occur further north, such as happened in Germany and Russia in the early 20th century. And I’d note that Nazi scapegoating of Jews isn’t all that different in motivation than an equatorial tribe that buries people alive who are perceived as possessed, so that the intruding spirit can’t escape with their dying breath. It’s not only disease, though.

“Here is a crucial clue: shamanism often arises among people exposed to uncertainty. A case in point is the recent rise of shamanism among the Buryat in Upper Mongolia. Following the collapse of socialism in 1989-91, the economic rug was pulled out from under the Buryat. This led to terrible poverty and starvation among a people whose cultural identity had largely been rubbed out over a series of generations. In this existential vacuum, the Buryat shamans blossomed like wildflowers as people sought new ways to control the uncertainty in which they had found themselves.”
~Thomas T. Hills, Masters of Reality

In Shamanism, Manvir Singh agrees with that appraisal: “uncertainty breeds rituals” (p. 48) and “rituals worldwide seem to bring solace” (p. 53) (Moral Imagination: Conservative vs Traditional, Reactionary vs Radical). This is why authoritarian states are sometimes referred to as political religions, as they’re obsessed with rituals and for the same reason (Authoritarian Dance and Music).

Even if that poverty and starvation didn’t cause a disease epidemic, the stress and desperation alone would induce the seeking of security and comfort, as part of norm enforcement, ingroup protection, xenophobia, and philopatry. Within that instinctual impulse of group survival, there is an interesting pattern about uncertainty and it’s perceived cause.

“Overall, an overwhelming 96% of the societies had supernatural explanations for disease, and 92% had supernatural explanations for natural causes of food scarcity. For natural hazards, the figure was 90%. […] Among social phenomena, 82% of societies held supernatural explanations for murder; for warfare, it was 67%; for theft, 26%.”
~Emma Young, Ghosts and gaps: Supernatural beliefs fill similar unknowns across cultures
(in reference to J.C. Jackson, et al, Supernatural explanations across the globe are more common for natural than social phenomena).

Hence:

“Overall, supernatural explanations were more prevalent for natural rather than for social phenomena. Researchers also found that societies with higher social complexity were more likely to deploy supernatural explanations for social phenomena than societies with lower social complexity. [Danica] Dillion thinks that supernatural explanations may be more common in larger, urban societies because it’s harder to discern the causal agents of social incidents in societies with more complex social webs
~
Conor Feehly, Why We Believe That the Supernatural Causes Natural Events

The increase of complexity, exaggerated with mass urbanization and industrialization, almost always corresponds to an increase of uncertainty. And it’s undeniable that society at present, between bureaucracy and technology, is more complex than ever in human existence. Combined with other stressors and trauma, this causes everything to feel daunting and overwhelming.

Then as people feel more uncertain from stress (sickliness, risk, threats, danger, poverty, insecurity, scarcity, competition, inequality, etc), they’ll have reduced cognitive function (need for cognition, cognitive complexity, divergent thinking, mental flexibility, perspective shifting, exploratory behavior, etc) — as related to the personality traits ‘intellect’ and ‘openness to experience’ — to perceive, comprehend, analyze, explain, and deal with that complexity. Potentially, it turns into a vicious cycle where problems are permanently entrenched.

This might be the advantage of shamanism, in not merely assuaging anxiety and fear, as happens with religion, but actively promoting the opposite. The use of psychedelics are effective for healing mood disorders, trauma, and addiction; specifically by helping to rewire the brain and reset new cognitive patterns, while increasing ‘openness’. But most modern religions are far less effective, if at all, to achieve this beneficial and transformative end.

Authoritarian Dance and Music

Here is a thought that has been brewing for a long while. It has to do with how a kind of authoritarianism (and conservatism) has seeped into every crack and crevice of American society and culture, even as public opinion has gone leftward for decades (American Leftist Supermajority). The seed idea may have been planted in my mind with an observation I came across decades ago, I think in Jeff Gordinier’s X Saves the World (2008). He described that period centered on the Nineties that was the final turning point. There is a stark contrast between how that decade began and how it ended. It was the last of the teen years for the last wave of GenXers. I was one of those Slackers in the Doomed Generation, in having graduated high school 1994. Two of my closest friends, three years younger, brought in the very tailend of our generation.

In my senior year, the band Nirvana was at its peak when the lead singer Curt Cobain died, whether it was suicide or murder (everyone knows Courtney Love did it). But it was back in 1991 when was released the music video for “Smells Like Teen Spirit.” It showed people ecstatically jumping and thrashing about as individuals, certainly not the kind of dancing that’s meant to impress others — Grunge music always had an anti-authoritarian ethos. Then near the end of the decade in 1998, Britney Spears’ music video for “Baby One More Time” premiered on MTV with highly coordinated dancing, ironically while singing about loneliness, all decked out in a sexy school uniform.

For anyone familiar with the Nineties, this shift was visceral. In the middle of that decade, there was a sudden appearance and popularity of girl and boy bands, catchy pop music, and pop country music with yet more coordinated dancing, just done in lines. This was a dramatic change from what came before. The brief flourishing of the counter-culture in mainstream awareness, following the Cold War thaw, was quickly co-opted by commercial interests. Departing from simple vocals and acoustics, the new popular music was more upbeat, smooth, and heavily produced. Music had finally reached its full form as a consumerist product, just as society entered the digital age.

Before then, from the late ’80s to the early ’90s, there was a laidback mood where freedom, autonomy, and individuality was prized — think of the humorous caricature of Portlandia. The Cold War had ended and so there was no longer a great foreign enemy, no clash of civilizations, no threat of nuclear apocalypse — the supposed End of History. Running from 1987 to 1994, one of the most popular tv shows of that era was Star Trek: The Next Generation. It portrayed a post-scarcity, multicultural, liberal, secular, and communist space utopia where individuals meritocratically fulfilled their potential, lived their dreams, and pretty much did whatever they damn pleased, all supported by a friendly and caring big gov as a welfare state or rather democratic confederalism.

In that period, after the Cold War ended, the new culture wars hadn’t yet fully heated up, as Fox News didn’t launch until 1996, if right-wing think tanks had been forming and right-wing talk radio had been simmering in the background for years, and if conflict was emerging as with the 1992 Los Angeles riots. Also, though the number of school shootings had been increasing over the decades (likely because assault weapons were put on the civilian market beginning in the 1960s), the worst school shootings with high victim counts didn’t begin until 1998 (around when assault weapons finally became more popular and common), the same year as President Bill Clinton’s impeachment. Approaching and then entering the new millennia, what followed was the anti-WTO protest in Seattle, the Y2K panic, the stolen presidential election, and the bust of the dot-com bubble.

And of course, the 9/11 terrorist attack happened soon after. A new era of moral panic was launched into the stratosphere with the War On Terror that was emboldened by the imperial presidency and the surveillance state (Federalist’s “Vigorous Executive” and Project 2025’s Imperial Presidency). The fear-mongering and violent media portrayals turned even many liberals more authoritarian, as research showed. In the following decade, the Aughts or Noughties as you prefer, all the structures of authoritarianism were further strengthened or new ones put in place, including the full entrenchment of the one-party state with two right wings as a banana republic (The American Dream of Democracy). It was definitely not the early Nineties any more. The youth culture of GenXers was no longer dominant.

Into the next century and millennium, carrying over from the late ’90s, there was a continuation of the coordinated dancing craze, akin to how one imagines the dance manias of the Middle Ages (I’m trying to envision Britney Spears doing a dance routine with scrofulous peasants). It was combined with a return of movie musicals and the emergence of musical tv shows: The Singing Detective (2003), Hannah Montana (2006), High School Musical (2006), Glee (2009), etc. If I had never heard of a glee club when I was younger, they had returned with a vengeance among Zoomers in high schools. Before Covid-19 hit, I remember going to such a performance that my niece was in. If not nearly as impressive as shown on tv, there was the singing and coordinated dancing. At the time, it felt like I was watching some weird cult ritual.

Having laid out what has changed from the ending of the Cold War to the beginning of the War On Terror, let’s discuss what it might mean. There was rising of tension, conflict, and fear, a sense of decadence and decline with the American Empire having seen better days. As expected, this led to a right-wing backlash of reactionary politics and authoritarianism, including the establishment of the imperial presidency and the surveillance state under the Bush regime, along with the return of illegal COINTELPRO tactics. Following that, as empowered with unsuppressed and politicized racism against the first black president, the Tea Party was taken over by Fox News and used to create the foot soldiers that would later become MAGA, with Donald Trump later taking advantage of the imperial presidency to its fullest force. Simply put, it has been a total shit show.

But what does pop music have to do with a neo-fascist takeover? I’m glad you asked. What immediately comes to mind are books about the role played by music and dance. In William H. McNeill Keeping Together in Time, he describes the experience of this kind of coordinated collective activity, such as an army marching in cadence through call-and-response (Hunger for Connection). It’s what some call hiving and rhythmic entrainment (Music and Dance on the Mind). It’s not only a doing an activity in sync. The psyche is actually altered. In choirs, some people report feeling a shared sense of self into which they merge (Choral Singing and Self-Identity). The individual is lost in the group. So, it seems natural that, as society gets worse and people become more stressed, collective groups and activities would become more attractive, from identity politics to coordinated dancing. This is magnified by the re-tribalization of society with it’s post-literary culture (global village & secondary orality).

This has long been a key element of all forms of authoritarianism: British Empire, Soviet Union, Nazi Germany, etc. [By the way, the earliest erosion of literary culture began in the mid-1800s (Neil Postman, Amusing Ourselves to Death).] It’s what led Pascal Quignard, once a major supporter of orchestras, to change his mind, as explained in The Hatred of Music. It’s one thing to hive out with your tribe or local church choir, but it’s whole other thing to mass assimilate into the Borg. The latter wasn’t possible until mass modern sound systems and mass media like radio and tv, as Walter Lipmann warned would bring on totalitarianism in his 1922 Public Opinion. The Nazis were brilliant in putting on hi-tech performances with lights shining into the air like pillars and powerful speakers that made speeches audible to everyone in a crowd of thousands. And of course, the Nazis loved to march, as well as use music like anthems. They knew how to entrain people into a collective experience and identity.

But my argument goes to a more fundamental level. Sure, all of this is understood by authoritarian leaders, Machiavellian demagogues, and social dominators. They know full well how to use these techniques to manipulate people, pull on their emotions like strings, and turn them into a mindless mass. Even so, people have to already be in the pliable mentality to be manipulated. That’s what extreme stress induces (e.g., every early 20th century country that went totalitarian had high rates of nonzoonotic infectious diseases, as explained in the behavioral immune system; Sick Individuals = Authoritarian Societies). No one is above this, as the authoritarian impulse is a shared survival response in human nature. It’s just what happens to humans when they feel threatened, real or imagined.

Certain kinds of stressors, including high mortality, increases the attraction to ritual activities, superstitious behavior, and supernatural beliefs (Dmitris Xygalatas, Ritual; & Manvir Singh, Shamanism), as well as increases fundamentalism, collectivism, and authoritarianism (parasite-stress theory, behavioral immune system). As another kind of stressor, high inequality — as an indicator of competitor threat — increases mistrust, paranoia, fantasy-proneness, and conspiracy theory (Keith Payne, The Broken Ladder), with high inequality being associated with social dominance orientation (SDO) (dominance behavior, inegalitarianism, power disparity, dark triad (Machiavellianism, narcissism, & psychopathy; + sadism), & low ‘honesty-humility’). And of course, there was the global pandemic and shutdown with Covid-19 with the predictable rise of right-wing movements and governments around the world. In desiring a sense of safety and security through belonging, people are particularly drawn into group identities and all that’s involved with them, along with an impulse to become or submit to authoritarian leaders (SDOs).

The thing is authoritarianism can manifest in many ways. The United States in the 21st century is neither Nazi Germany nor Soviet Russia. A while back, I went to my niece’s college graduation ceremony. Wow! The symbolism, robes, ritual objects, and the formality of the process. Everything about it screamed authoritarianism and dominance hierarchy. Even the inspiring speech given basically told the graduates that they were now a part of the elite with paternalistic privilege and noblesse oblige. Having read Agner Fog’s scholarship on regality theory, in Warlike and Peaceful Societies, I easily recognized what kind of event I was observing. It’s easy to forget how, in neoliberalism, universities are ultimately authoritarian institutions that create the professional, managerial, and capitalist class — the supposed ‘meritocracy’ — that operate above the dirty, ignorant masses so as to maintain hierarchical social control. Regal culture is an interesting topic, by the way (What does stress do to the mind? And why?). Everything I’m talking about here could be framed as regality.

I see this authoritarian impulse emerging in American society in lesser ways. Many decades ago, high school prom was a rather informal event. Yeah, the expectation was to get dressed up a bit, and parents might take pictures. But the general idea was that the young adults were transitioning into adulthood. The purpose of prom was to have fun, often with plenty of partying, and with the assumption that these emerging adults were now beginning to be responsible for themselves. It was an event that only involved adults in the most minimal ways. But recently, my nephew had prom. All the family was invited to a prom promenade where the couples walked across the stage while being admired. The ritualistic performativity of it seemed odd. More importantly, it was that it needed to be more fully controlled by adults. In an authoritarian society, everything is controlled, and so maturity is suppressed, adulthood delayed — the reason adulting suddenly seems hard for those leaving home after high school. In a sense, authoritarian subjects never grow up. They simply transition from being dependents of authoritarian parents to dependents of a new set of authoritarians: husband, boss, clergy, police, ruling elite, etc.

That dependency is how GenZ grew up in a world of fear and stress. They never had a free-range childhood. Everything about their early lives was controlled, managed, and supervised by adults. They didn’t just hang out with friends. They had playdates. They didn’t run around freely after school, on weekends, and in the summer. They had organized groups, activities, and events. Even into their teen years, they were given far less freedom and autonomy. Many helicopter parents have been still protecting their children into college, extending childhood into their progeny’s 20s. It was a result of the totalizing ethos of ‘Stranger Danger’. Though violent crime rates were lower than they’d been in generations, the combined trauma of War On Terror, 2008 Great Recession, Covid-19 pandemic, January 6th insurrection, and now fascist takeover has heightened moral panic into paranoid dread that has overwhelmed people and burned them out, settling into a state of constantly buzzing angst and free-floating anxiety that is so normalized that most have come to not even notice it or else simply become traumatically dissociated and numb.

We Americans live in a highly authoritarian society. The country was formed from military imperialism, settler colonialism, genocide, theft of the commons, primitive accumulation, exploitation, indentured servitude, convict labor, and racialized slavery. Then in the 20th century, after barely beginning to improve democracy and civil rights, there were two fascist coup attempts, the Business Plot and the Ultra Plot. That was followed by the OSS (later renamed CIA) having formed an alliance with organized crime during World War II (& continuing that alliance in the post-war period; see Whitney Webb), the CIA overthrowing democracies and assassinating democratic leaders, and the FBI having used COINTELPRO, including the FBI-assisted assassination of the left-wing charismatic leader Fred Hampton.

That was mixed with McCarthyism, Lavender Scare, blackballing, blacklisting, union-busting, militarized policing, war on drugs (a war on the oppressed), mass incarceration, school-to-prison pipeline, privatized prisons, regulatory capture, neoliberal deregulation, inverted totalitarianism, dark money, Citizens United, and much else (Whitney Webb, Anne Nelson, Jane Mayer, etc). It built up over time. President Franklin Delano Roosevelt cemented the ties between big gov and big biz, President Dwight Eisenhower used the CIA for covert operations, President Richard Nixon put in some of the worst right-wing Supreme Court judges in history, President Jimmy Carter established neoliberal deregulation and politicized evangelicalism, President Ronald Reagan put a smile on political evil, and President Bill Clinton normalized it all as precedent. It was a long-term bipartisan effort, if the Machiavellian masterminds (Paul Weyrich shadow network, Bush crony network, Epstein crony network, etc) were those with the specific schemes (Powell Memo, Project 2025, & Rainbow Revolution).

Obviously, the darkness of American culture is nothing new. That is all territory I’ve covered before. My purpose here, however, is to describe what authoritarianism feels like from inside it as a culture, far beyond the politics and power structure; what it feels like even to those who wouldn’t identify as authoritarian, who might consciously denounce it. We who have been indoctrinated with authoritarianism as ideological realism have a hard time recognizing it for what it is, since we’ve never known anything else. Still, if it was established centuries ago, and if the worst elements have been worsening for generations, my argument is that something finally broke in the 1990s, if it was hard to understand what was happening back then and the consequences took decades to become fully apparent. What the prior fascist coup plots had failed to accomplish through the direct approach, the neo-fascists found a way to do it behind the scenes, by rotting out democracy from within and co-opting institutions.

Authoritarianism isn’t only about dictators, military parades, dogmatic ideologies, and groupthink conformity. It’s also about the kleptocratic takeover of government and public life (e.g., corporate platforms manipulating public debate), the destruction of the commons and the public good (e.g., elimination of most public transportation and third spaces), the big biz consolidation of nearly all media, the elimination of third spaces, and on and on. In addition, it’s the loss of individuality, simultaneously as loneliness takes over (a well known common feature of fascism, as many have noted such as Hannah Arendt) — there are fewer places left remaining for individuals, as citizens and fellow humans, to co-exist and co-relate.

More importantly, authoritarianism is a cultural and psychological mentality. When in an authoritarian society, when under the harsh conditions that promote authoritarianism, many people take on authoritarian patterns of thought and behavior without recognizing it, even when consciously they might identify themselves as non-authoritarian. It simply becomes the way society operates, the ways of acting that become common, the activities that everyone else is doing. If one isn’t actively resisting it and separating oneself from it, one is immersed in that authoritarianism by default.

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Edit – 5/15/26:

Occasionally, I’ll finish a piece like this and feel uncertain about how most readers will receive it. I’m not sure I made a strong enough case that is persuasive and compelling. But it’s partly a difficulty of the topic itself, specifically in the context of almost no one being familiar with the scholarship on authoritarianism, social dominance, and regality culture. Agner Fog’s work is particular important in this context. Most of the authoritarian research and theory was done in response to 20th century totalitarianism, especially Nazism. And it tended to focus on the average authoritarian follower, not on the authoritarian systems and cultures. The concern usually involved individual psychology.

That is problematically narrow, so Fog argues. His framework is more along the lines of Luke Kemp in Goliath’s Curse. These kinds of thinkers are taking the largest view possible to take in all the factors that support and promote authoritarian dominance on a collective level and mass-scale. But they’re also getting at what it’s mean to be in such a society. Most authoritarian societies don’t match the common stereotype. The banality of evil can be so banal as to not appear evil at all. Much of authoritarianism is simply regimented conventionalism and conformity. But for those of us who have grown up in that world, it might feel natural and normal. Authoritarianism becomes interpellated as identity and internalized as ideological realism, just the way the world is.

Authoritarianism still does appear in blatant forms, such as Trump’s MAGA ICE-Gestapo. Trump even attempted to have a military parade in his own honor. But for the most part, authoritarianism has become extremely subtle and advanced, just blending into the background of the culture. So, it most often slips by unnoticed. Consider the power of media. Watch one of those old World War II propaganda films. It’s shoving indoctrination right in the viewer’s face. But ever more people today are too media savvy to be as easily pulled in by such blatant tactics. Propaganda now is built deeper into the media structure. Think of how the Pentagon uses its resources as bribery to gain control over editorial control of film scripts. Or look to how right-wing news media as infotainment literally brainwashes people (David Brock  Ari & Rabin-Havt, The Fox Effect; & Jen Senko, The Brainwashing of My Dad).

As another example more in line with the above main text, take suburbia where populations measure high in authoritarianism and conservatism (James Loewen, Sundown Towns). Every house and every street looks the same as the next. Even what’s allowed in yards is determined by restrictive covenants. Even the weeds are controlled. Yet to the people living there, it might feel idyllic. They wouldn’t think of themselves and their neighborhood as authoritarian. Infrastructure, urban planning, neighborhood associations are powerful forces not only in shaping the world we live in but, more importantly, in shaping our psyches. To have that control offers the power to control entire populations. This relates to land reform as moral reform, something that ruling elites have understood for centuries (Enclosure of the Mind). The average person, though, is clueless.

Sickly Left-Wing Authoritarians Don’t Understand Health

The following is an overview and summary of recent thoughts about shared conditions. Or actually, in many cases, I’ve been contemplating this info for years and decades. I already covered some of this in recent writings. But here I bring in a few other points, such as about food systems. And I emphasize how it relates or should relate to left-wing concerns, as well as why so few leftists seem concerned or simply less open-minded, less curious. While the main focus is on health, I was considering other factors that affect us and our society. And I want to further my thoughts on the problematic relationship of the far left to science, not only health-related research and theory but also the social sciences. I gathered these thoughts while commenting at Charles Gregory’s From Marxist Hunks to Fascist Thugs. He recommended turning it into an article and so here we are.

As for the title, I purposely made it catchy and a bit antagonistic. Partly, it was just that it amused me — authoritarians of all sorts are irritating, and so I figured there is no harm in mocking them. And as a radical left-winger myself, I felt it fair game for me to throw a barb at my fellow left-wingers. Plus, it does sort of get straight to the point. Far left-wingers, specifically economic (pseudo-)leftists like Marxist-Leninists, really are obsessed with the canon of old texts in the way fundies apologetically masturbate over scripture. But these same dogmatic (pseudo-)leftists are often clueless of anything written in living memory or so it can seem sometimes. I’ve been trying to wrap my mind around that. These types love to attack right-wingers as ignorant and uneducated, which is fair game. Yet the incuriosity among left-wing authoritarians no less problematic. What is this disconnect between ideology and intellect?

The main point, though, isn’t to be provocative or mean-spirited in dismissing authoritarians. Rather, my intention is to advocate psychological and sociological self-defense, in the way Noam Chomsky has spoken of intellectual defense (albeit his close association with Jeffrey Epstein indicates he didn’t learn his own lesson well enough). That requires awareness, knowledge, and dialogue (We Need To Talk About Health; A Theory of Societal Retardation; & Signaling In Our Body-Mind and Our Body Politic). There are too many people who might think of themselves as liberal-minded but have become authoritarian, who might think of themselves as independent-minded but have become dogmatic and conformist, who might think of themselves as egalitarian but have become domineering. The ideological rhetoric and labels used can obscure this reality from others but, worse still, hide it from the individual’s own recognition. That’s why it’s important to study these fields, to see the signs both in others and in oneself. Only by knowing how conditions shape us can we change those conditions to get different results.

* * *

Rather than mere body positivity and mental illness acceptance, we should actually be helping people to improve their health, not just as individuals but as an entire society. Yet often those on the broad left who push back the most against a health focus are Marxists and other economic left-wingers. Those are the very people who are most critical of culture war, identity politics, and wokeness. They’d claim they’re for concrete bread-and-butter issues. It’s just they define everything according to economics, often crudely to my mind, what could be called economic fetishism. I wonder if many of them, without realizing it, have internalized the economic framing and priorities of neoliberal capitalism, and so they’re less able to radically imagine economics as related to collective health.

That’s in response to Gregory’s piece. I don’t have any criticism of his argument, if I might put a different emphasis on it or add some layers to it. My own take hinges more on one of his concluding statements: “The left needs to reclaim a body-politics rooted in the transformation of material conditions, not only in representation or individual optimisation.” The right-wing has typically made health about producing the superior and successful individual (i.e., the individual who is above the masses, who is capable of dominating others). But the left’s take on it should be about collective wellbeing through public health policies and programs. There are some nods in this direction with healthcare reform, if it’s extremely inadequate to the size, scope, and complexity of the problems we face.

For some reason, many hardcore left-wingers seem to perceive an interest in and concern for health as limited to reactionaries, be it right-wingers (e.g., gym bros) or liberals (e.g., vegans) — apparently, it’s bourgeois to worry about sickliness and to want health. But there is also a common leftist disinterest in scientific research, which particularly seems strange to me. Many left-wingers, specifically on the far left (e.g., Marxist-Leninists), would rather reference a 19th century political philosopher than a 21st century political scientist, as if knowledge hasn’t advanced over the generations. This kind of hermetically-sealed intellectuality reminds me of axiomatic self-certainty of right-wing libertarians and objectivists (Conservative Mistrust & Ideological Certainty (part 2)). The obsession with traditional left-wing texts, as sola scriptura, is a sign of authoritarianism and conservative-mindedness (i.e., not being open to new info and ideas, perspectives and experiences).

For example, in the main leftist subreddits, I rarely see a discussion of something like the scientific research on high inequality. It corresponds with an increase of illness, physical and mental, along with more mistrust, paranoia, conflict, aggression, impulsivity, etc. So, obviously, disparities aren’t only about economics in an overt sense. Even for those who aren’t poor, high inequality appears to cause people to feel and act poor (Keith Payne, The Broken Ladder). The wealthy are worse off too, if no where near as badly. More than anything, it distorts, deranges, and destabilizes everything (Kate Pickett, Richard Wilkinson, Thomas Piketty, Peter Turchin, & Walter Scheidel). The result is a stressed-out and sickly society. This should be a leftist issue, but I see little left-wing talk about it beyond a standard economic analysis of rich people being bad.

There are other areas of health-related research that get almost no attention from leftists at all. There are studies that show how diet and nutrition not only impact mental health but also what could be called social and moral health. The only book I know of to cover this scientific material in detail is Mark Hyman’s Food Fix, and he does mention how it relates to issues of poverty, racism, etc. But some health experts have long been aware of the relationship between nutritional content of diet and prosocial behavior. Of what I know, the earliest book to explore it is Weston A. Price’s Nutrition and Physical Degeneration (1939). It’s mostly remained a niche topic of alternative health, in spite of how central it is to human functioning and flourishing.

Still other areas of research and theory are even more straightforward. Consider the behavioral immune system and parasite-stress theory. Exposure to nonzoonotic infectious-parasitical diseases decreases ‘openness to experience’ (liberal-mindedness, social liberalism) and increases conservatism, authoritarianism, fundamentalism, xenophobia, etc. I’ve argued that a major cause of liberalization of society had to do with improved hygiene, vaccinations, sewage systems, and water treatment plants. That is what the municipal socialists got right, but it’s also where Scandinavian social democrats seem to have a better grasp than the average American left-winger. The present right-wing turn no doubt is partly a result of the Covid-19 global pandemic, according to the behavioral immune system and parasite-stress theory (Sick Individuals = Authoritarian Societies; & Filth of Rome, Health of Alexandria).

It’s a pretty damn important topic. Some have noted that the only countries that went totalitarian earlier last century were those with some of the highest rates of infectious disease: tuberculosis, polio, Spanish flu, etc. That includes Russia. A large reason that the USSR failed as communism (i.e., direct worker control of the means of production) is likely because initially it was dealing with such a sickly population that induced mass authoritarian social control. And then likely why that authoritarian state capitalism lost its power wasn’t mere economic problems but the improvement of public health that had liberalized large parts of the population who, then, no longer wanted to be under authoritarian rule. These are things that are harder to understand without a health lens.

I suspect that Nazi Germany would’ve followed a similar path. They too were funding health research and implementing major public health improvements. Even if the Nazis had won WWII, the next generations of Germans would likely have liberalized. Authoritarianism is an evolved threat response. But once the threat is resolved, authoritarianism loses its attraction in the public mind. That is when authoritarian governments either reform or collapse. That is one of the interesting things about authoritarianism, it’s obsession with health. That probably explains why it’s the US right-wing at the moment that has prioritized health in a way that the left-wing has not.

After this period of disarray and dysfunction, I wouldn’t be surprised if we get another right-wing leader like Theodore Roosevelt or else someone like his nephew, Franklin Delano Roosevelt. Both used authoritarianism to solve problems. Then society would swing back the other way again. TR explicitly stated that left-wingers were right about the problems they complained about (Capitalists Learning From Socialists). And to steal their thunder, he advocated that elites should take care of those problems. Otherwise, left-wingers would do so in a way that the elites wouldn’t like. We’re in the opposite scenario. Leftists now won’t even acknowledge these problems, at least not sufficiently. But if we leftists, specifically non-authoritarians, don’t deal with it, it will continue to be dominated by right-wing authoritarians who use health concerns as a ploy for power.

On audiobook, I was listening to Christine Kenneally’s The Invisible History of the Human Race. I’ve read some of it before, but I wanted to refresh my memory. She is one of those rare writers — like Derrick Jensen, Luke Kemp, Agner Fog, Robert Sapolsky, etc — who can synthesize vast amounts of diverse info. I’m fairly sure it was from her that I first learned of an interesting area of research on food systems. The focus is on how they form perception, cognition, behavior, cultures, social order, and politics. But one has to wonder if dietary nutrition itself might be altering development. To know for sure, one would have to look at the overall food system and the total diet.

[As a side note, there is evidence that something is unique about wheat. The populations that eat the most wheat have the highest rates of certain psychiatric disorders and neurocognitive conditions: depression, anxiety, bipolar disorder, ADHD, schizophrenia, etc. A while back, I started what was to be a long-form essay on the history of wheat, as interpreted according to food systems, dietary ideology, nutrition studies, and the social sciences. It was to be a piece paired with my prior writing on beef (Ancient Dietary Ideology Persists).

In that other piece, I briefly spoke of grains: “While many like Charles Darwin, in his letters, saw agriculture as necessary and beneficial as part of Western evangelism, so as to destroy primitive culture and independence*, others instead perceived the opposite danger of Westerners becoming too civilized; too weak, emasculated, and impotent.” And because of Christian symbolism, the civilizing of heathens often involved having them grow wheat. It could be observed that, as described by Weston A. Price in the 1930s, the healthiest and most prosocial peasant-like rural farmers left remaining in Europe and the British Isles were eating such mainstays as barley and oats, not wheat. That would be a carryover of the old feudal diet of peasants, as wheat had previously been limited to the wealthy.]

As discussed in Kenneally’s work, Nathan Nunn found that plough-based agriculture, historically used for wheat, required the greater strength of men and so increased patriarchy as compared to hoe-based agriculture, such as barley. And Thomas Talhelm showed that wheat-growing populations are more individualistic and analytical, while rice-growers are collective and holistic thinking. (Talhelm explained it socioculturally. But a likely contributing factor is that environments, wet and warm, conducive to rice farming are also conducive to infectious disease.) That pretty much sums up wheat-based Western culture, at least in its modern form: patriarchal, individualistic, and analytical. But interestingly, before the Little Ice Age ended and agriculture improved, wheat was a rare crop in Europe.

The first dependable surplus yields of wheat didn’t happen in the West until the early 1800s. White flour suddenly became cheap and common. So, our notion of wheat bread as part of a wholesome American diet is only a couple of centuries old. It’s likely no coincidence that it’s when individualism took off. Some of that wasn’t an accidental side effect, though. The emerging capitalist elite saw the old communal self of lingering feudalism as a threat to the new economic and political system. As part of land reform, there was moral reform that sought to restructure human psyche and identity by restructuring the land itself: flattening hilly roads, dredging and straightening waterways, walling in land, systematizing of agriculture, etc (Enclosure of the Mind). This process, though, had begun much earlier (Containment of Freedom).

That could partly explain why the Enlightenment and early modern revolutionary period happened precisely as the food system was changing. That includes the colonial trade introducing sugar, tea, and tobacco; all mind-altering substances. There is a fascinating historical account I came across (“Yes, tea banished the fairies.”). It was first printed in a newspaper around the 1840s. An itinerant preacher in northern England asked an old man why the fairies disappeared. He said it was because tea (i.e., caffeine) replaced nappy groot ales (alcohol, mild psychedelics). We do have scientific studies on the effect of such substances. Psychedelics, for example, increase ‘openness to experience’. Groot ales, by the way, were systematically eliminated by law. They were replaced with hops that was able to preserve beer for transportation in colonial trade.

One might also note that there are no indigenous stimulants in Europe. A number of thinkers, including Michael Pollan, have argued that the introduction of stimulants made possible modern industrialization, allowing long hours of intense focus, from sedentary office work to night shifts involving dangerous equipment (The Drugged Up Birth of Modernity). Joseph Henrich, in The WEIRDest People in the World, does discuss sugar and caffeine as well. But he also brings up other factors that shaped individuality, such as Vatican marriage laws that broke up kinship networks and the Protestant promotion of mass literacy. Such things unintentionally individualized and liberalized Western culture.

Besides stimulants, modernity also brought with it increased availability of suppressants, such as opium. That’s even true with alcohol. In the Middle Ages, alcohol was watered down. Once again, it was about the lack of surplus grain yields. There weren’t extra grains to make large amounts of alcohol. Gregory touches on this topic in terms of leftist concerns: “early Marxists were very critical when it came to drinking. Alcohol clouds one’s judgement, so drinking beer after a day’s work acts as an opioid, stopping the working classes to realise their situation, and thus, reach class consciousness.” It’s odd that Marxists and other economic left-wingers have entirely forgotten this old strain of left-wing thought. The understanding of material conditions has been overly simplified, as if many leftists are now less capable of complex thought. Maybe it’s a sign of declining literary culture.

[This is practical info. Although as leftists we should focus on the large-scale collective most of all, this knowledge is equally applicable at the level of individuals, as well as to families, neighborhoods, and communities. But it’s not only that left-wingers usually lack the requisite info. Oftentimes, left-wingers are among the most sickly people I meet. It’s understandable, as many people become radicalized leftists because of chronic stress, economic struggle, prejudice, oppression, trauma, and on and on. As it’s personal, these people can sometimes be the most driven activists.

But in putting all their energy into the cause, they often sacrifice their own health in the process. I know hardcore left-wingers who self-medicate through alcohol, junk food addiction, and media overconsumption. Many don’t appreciate the necessity of stress management, nature exposure, animal-based nutrition, physical activity, etc (What does stress do to the mind? And why?; & Signaling In Our Body-Mind and Our Body Politic). No matter their good intentions, this will leave them compromised and so not operating at their best, which is problematic if sickliness causes them to be drawn into authoritarianism (The Threat of the Fake Left).]

If you really want to do a deep dive into what makes cultures liberal or authoritarian, egalitarian or hierarchical, matrifocal or patriarchal, there are several books that offer immense detail: Agner Fog’s Warlike and Peaceful Societies, Luke Kemp’s Goliath’s Curse, David Graeber and David Wengrow’s The Dawn of Everything, etc. I believe it’s in Sapolsky’s Determined (or maybe Behave) that he discusses still other kinds of factors. Populations in deserts and arid grasslands have patriarchal and warrior cultures (Mongols, Plains Indians, early Semitic tribes, etc). Populations tend to be monogamous or polygamous in copying the sexual behavior of animals in their environment, maybe to do with shared ecological pressures. And much else. It’s fascinating stuff.

While we’re at it, we could also throw in media influences: cultivation theory (George Gerbner), global village (Marshall McLuhan), secondary orality (Walter J. Ong), etc. And we shouldn’t forget how judges, when hungry or sitting in an uncomfortable chair, are more punitive and less likely to give out pardons. Even liberals become more supportive of right-wing authoritarianism when exposed to violent footage like the 9/11 terrorist attacks. Or on a milder level, getting liberals slightly intoxicated induces conservative-minded stereotyping language (i.e., simplifying heuristics in response to reduced cognitive functioning). Nature deficit disorder also shuts down ‘openness to experience’, decreases awe, downregulates the default mode network, lessens focus, and reduces healing.

There are endless examples like this. These are the kinds of material conditions that are entirely off the radar of the typical left-winger. Yet such conditions determine every aspect of our experience and psychology, thus influencing collective action and shaping an entire society. Without this knowledge, we’re blind in not understanding our own human nature — then again, some left-wingers deny there is a human nature, in falsely believing in a blank slate. The implications of the evidence are immense. We tend to take all such factors for granted. Or we don’t think of them as being significant at all. Since most of us have never known any other conditions, we don’t realize how different we’d be if our present conditions were changed. But imagine if we ever did take this knowledge seriously and applied it. Imagine how the world could be transformed.

Signaling In Our Body-Mind and Our Body Politic

One of my favorite topics is health. But I’m particularly interested about the overlap of all kinds of health: physical, mental, social, moral, economic, political, and environmental. And at all levels: individual and collective, private and public, elite and masses. All of it combined, we’re a stunted and deranged society (A Theory of Societal Retardation). And I’ve speculated that a healthy population is precisely what made possible such potent and effective left-wing movements in the past, from the American Revolution to the Coal Wars (Magic Trick). It’s what we’ve lost since then, the likely cause of the demoralized and disorganized left unable or unwilling to defend itself.

The present health epidemic as an existential crisis isn’t merely caused by a lack of knowledge, if we could always use more knowledge. Rather, it’s a lack of imagination, specifically radical imagination, including our ability to reimagine the past so as to imagine a new future — knowledge is impotent without imagination. It’s more that we’re stuck in an old paradigm, even as the foundations of it crumble beneath our feet (A Paradigm Shift of Paradigm Shifts). One of the main problems is that health has largely become depoliticized on the broad left. Without a fight, leftists have ceded the territory to the right-wing that dominates it: alternative health, gym culture, MAHA, etc (We Need To Talk About Health). Think of the crunchy-to-alt-right pipeline.

As a leftist promoting health culture and a healthy culture, Charles Gregory argues that our present failure is largely a result of neoliberalism, commercialization, consumerism, hyper-individualism, culture war, and body positivity (From Marxist Hunks to Fascist Thugs). He makes a good point and, without a doubt, that plays a large role. Still, that can’t explain why Marxists, in particular, have also fallen prey in typically seeing a health focus as reactionary, be it right-wing or liberal — reactionary in being a distraction from the supposedly real issues of labor solidarity and political revolution. While these new leftists too often want to reduce everything to crude economics, old school leftists understood public health and a healthy proletariat was core to strong left-wing organizing, from municipal socialism to Black Panther’s community food programs.

I wonder, though, if there might be something more complex going on. In the late 19th to early 20th century, American society was in the middle of a mass transition that shook society (The Crisis of Identity). What was being left behind was tight-knit rural kinship networks and communities with traditional lifestyles, food systems, and diets. People’s lives had been organically organized within natural environments and according to seasonal patterns, by which the whole social order operated. Up to that point, Americans were still more or less living as humans had done since the Agricultural Revolution. So, when the majority suddenly adopted urbanization and industrialization, it was easier to identify the possible causes and consequences of the transformative changes.

People could contrast the world before (e.g., yeoman farmers) and the world after (e.g., factory workers), as the old way of life lingered in living memory into the post-war period, during which the last of the small family farms survived (e.g., the rural barter economy lingering into 1940s; Joe Bageant, Rainbow Pie: A Redneck Memoir). Populism and Progressivism operated in that window of heightened awareness, which is why it was the most impressive period of public health reforms. It was understood what had been lost and so it was recognized what needed to be regained and rebuilt or remade into something new. But we’re now at a point when that living memory has almost entirely disappeared, besides a small number immigrants who come from countries that have experienced far less modernization and Westernization.

As for Americans born and bred, we’re so far into late stage modernity that almost no one alive remembers what society was like before mass media, car culture, and capitalist realism. And the several youngest generations have never known anything other than immersive distraction and addiction of personal tech, internet, social media, streaming services, online shopping, dating apps, texting, video chat, etc. We take a sedentary lifestyle of staring at screens all day as normal and desirable or simply inevitable. We’re sickly, out-of-shape, alienated, stressed-out, and in many cases traumatized. It’s almost beyond us to imagine what superior health would even look and feel like.

But if you want to get an idea, look at the photographs in Weston A. Price’s Nutrition and Physical Degeneration. It was in the 1930s that he studied healthy traditional populations and wrote about them. That was the decade, for example, when seed oils — oxidative, inflammatory, and mutagenic (Catherine Shanahan, Dark Calories; & Dr. Catherine Shanahan On Dietary Epigenetics and Mutations) — replaced animal fats as the main source of fatty acids in the American diet. Seed oils, originally an industrial byproduct (requiring extreme heat, pressure, and solvents), was repackaged as a health food because of concerns about what had been the unsanitary conditions of meatpacking plants, as revealed in the influential The Jungle (1906) by the muckraker Sinclair Lewis.

Seed oils were branded and advertised as pure and clean, if in reality they were rancid and harmful, not to mention smelled and looked horrific without deodorizing and bleaching chemicals. Unsurprisingly, in the decades that followed, there was a rise in cardiovascular disease, a condition once so rare that just a generation before most doctors had never seen a case of it. Yet bizarrely, it was animal fats and saturated fats that got blamed. This brings us to a key point. We are so sickly today because of how our evolved physiological signaling gets blocked, disrupted, altered, or confused. The taste of fat, for most of human existence, almost entirely came from animal fats. That fatty taste tells us the food is nutrient-dense, ensuring everything the body needs.

Whereas seed oils give that same signal while offering none of the essential and conditionally essential nutrients, instead being a net harm. With the taste of fatty acids, the body keeps thinking that a mass influx of nutrition is coming, but it never arrives. The person eating the industrialized standard American diet (SAD) just keeps shoveling in more of the nutrient-deficient ultra-processed foods. What the body is really hungering for isn’t more calories but the nutrition that animal foods would supply, such as fat-soluble vitamins that either are hormones (vit. D3) or act like hormones (Vit. A, K2, E complex) in regulating multiple systems in the body and directing how other nutrients are used. (The body can produce vitamin D3 on its own, but only if it has plenty of cholesterol from animal foods and plenty of sunshine.)

That is to say fat-soluble vitamins are some of the most important and powerful signaling molecules that are essential to human health, development, vitality, and flourishing. Furthermore, when one eats whole foods, one isn’t only getting this or that nutrient (Hubris of Nutritionism) but an entire nutritional matrix, in dynamic interaction, that provides diverse nutrients and cofactors — likely some not yet discovered or studied — in the exact ratio they’re needed (True Vitamin A For Health And Happiness; & Calcium: Nutrient Combination and Ratios). If supplementing is better than nothing, most optimally we should eat a natural diet. To isolate nutrients as supplements can cause mixed signaling or unintended side effects (e.g., without sufficient vitamin D3, sufficient calcium might end up in arteries, joints, the brain, etc, instead of in bones, but fortunately foods like dairy contain both).

There is another way that seed oils, in replacing animal fats, can send incorrect signaling. The source of fats is an indicator of the season, according to foods available seasonally. In nature, the only time of the year when there is greater availability of omega-6s, the main fatty acid in seed oils, is in the late summer to autumn. Likewise, it’s the same season when most high-carb foods (fruit, squash, etc) are available. The combination of omega-6s and carbs tells the body that winter is coming or, near the equator, that the dry season is on its way. In response, the body begins producing and storing extra fat in preparation for food scarcity and hard times; and its in fat cells that extra nutrients are stored. The problem is we now eat this winter signaling combo year round, with the predictable result of rising obesity everywhere. Body positivity, in pretending the problem doesn’t exist, is a dangerously pathetic response — the fact is genetics explains little of obesity (Identically Different: A Scientist Changes His Mind).

Like fat-soluble vitamins, fatty acids are also major signaling molecules. Different fats, alone or with other nutrients, determine various outcomes. Consider that stearic acid, common in red meat and tallow, increases fat-burning (see croissant diet). (As a side note, a low enough carb diet, in inducing ketosis, also burns extra fat through thermogenesis. So, a beef-based keto diet would really ratchet up this effect.) Other fatty acids, though, serve other purposes. Omega-6s particularly trigger inflammatory pathways and that is magnified when combined with arachidonic acid, an animal fat. Yet the mix of arachidonic acid with omega-3s, instead, downregulates inflammation. The only reason so many have blamed arachidonic acid for inflammation is because almost all Americans today are getting excessive omega-6s through seed oils. There is argument, by the way, about whether excess omega-6s need to be lessened or merely balanced by more omega-3s.

Signals operate within specific contexts. Change the context and the signal is changed. So, the same nutrient might have opposite effects, depending on what else is in the diet. This is where it’s ignorant and idiotic to say any given nutrient is inherently bad no matter the context (offer a counter-example, if you know of it), at least in its natural state as part of a traditional diet — animal fats are natural, but industrial seed oils are not (get your seed oils in the natural form of seeds). That is the failure of blaming saturated fatty acids. Stearic acid and C15:0, the latter high in dairy and certain cold water fish, are both saturated fatty acids that actually improve cardiometabolic health. That is likely one of the main causal factors of increased prevalence of CVD over the generations as plant foods, lean chicken, fake mylks, and low-fat foods in general increasingly took the prized place of full-fat red meat and full-fat dairy.

My purpose here, though, isn’t to limit the scope to diet and nutrition; much less wanting to make an argument about the carnivore diet. I used the above examples partly just because I have much knowledge in that area. But the basic point being made is seen across various fields of health. The larger issue is that altered signaling affects every aspect of modern life. This is where I wonder if a large part of alienation isn’t merely structural in the Marxist sense of economics, psychological in relation to media, or some other focus but has to do with the total package of disconnection as signaling interruption, a full onslaught of confusion. The human species evolved with numerous signals from the body and environment that affect physiology, neurocognition, psychology, and behavior. Let me give different kinds of examples.

Consider how structured, cushiony running shoes incentivize coming down hard on one’s heels. This is an unnatural act that no one would do while barefoot. That’s because the bare heel hitting the ground would signal discomfort and pain. But in muting that signal, a harmful running style is partly compensated for. What can’t be compensated for, though, is the long-term destruction of joint tissue and increased injuries from the pressure transmitted up the legs. The point of running on the midfoot or forefoot is to soften that blow. In addition, the synthetic material of shoes ungrounds people from the earth’s electron flow and rhythm (e.g., Schumann resonance). If you observe people in thick shoes, you’ll often notice how oblivious they are to both their own bodies and the world around them. They’re literally disconnected from the earth.

As for another example, let’s return to the issue of media tech. It’s not only the content of media, the echo chamber, algorithmic manipulation, AI psychosis, mean world syndrome (cultivation theory), propaganda, psyops, and everything else along these lines. It’s not only what is being done to the individual but also what the individual isn’t doing that they otherwise would be. There is more visceral disconnection with nature deficit disorder. Nature is a bevy of signals for human functioning. This includes solar cycles and sunlight. Instead, we’re being overexposed to artificial blue light (screens, light bulbs), from morning to night. But in nature, intense blue light only occurs around noon time. Later in the day, it will disrupt sleep and hence healing, while worsening our mood. The early morning light, though, is also important for resetting the circadian rhythm.

There is also how different factors might exacerbate each other. About alienation, the new tech-immersive culture does socially isolate people, as well as disrupting normal social development. Many in the youngest generations are struggling with social behavior, including developing and maintaining close relationships. Probably in Lost Connections (or maybe Stolen Focus), Johann Hari shares an observation of two guys he eavesdropped on in a coffeeshop. It apparently was their first time meeting offline, and they talked to each other as if they were posting to separate social media feeds. One would give a monologue about his life. Then the other would do the same. But neither was responding to the other, nor likely was either listening. They entirely lacked the capacity for normal human conversation, as humans have been doing since language was invented.

An idea occurred to me. It isn’t necessarily just that online culture has taught young people to sometimes relate in extremely bizarre ways. Think about isolated individuality now being considered the norm from which everything else deviates. For instance, knocking on someone’s door, even that of a family member, without notifying them first potentially being perceived as an offensive intrusion. Even calling a close friend, instead of texting, can be considered irritating. Other humans in general increasingly feel like a nuisance to people. Maybe there is more going on that causes people to feel more closed off. What has come to mind is that the gut microbiome L. reuteri is now lacking in 90% of humans. It helps the body produce oxytocin, the bonding chemical. What if humans have become deficient in oxytocin? On a physiological level, the bonding signal simply isn’t there to a strong degree.

That decline in L. reuteri might be caused by antibiotic overuse and glyphosate exposure. Glyphosate is not only an agrochemical, of which is drenched on wheat to dessicate it, but also patented as an antibiotic, along with being a hormone mimic and endocrine disruptor (Stephanie Seneff, Toxic Legacy). It’s near impossible to find wheat in the US that doesn’t have glyphosate generously applied to it. So, every time you eat wheat-based bread or crackers, you’re likely killing off your gut microbiome. Even if L. reuteri tried to get re-established, it would constantly be under attack. Humans didn’t evolve to be sucking down glyphosate every day. It’s another problematic feature of SAD. Combine with the malnourishment and nutritional deficiencies, that also contribute to psychiatric disorders and antisocial behavior (Weston A. Price, Nutrition and Physical Degeneration; Georgia Ede, Change Your Diet, Change Your Mind; & Mark Hyman, Food Fix). It relates to why multiple health conditions overlap with shared underlying issues such as mitochondrial dysfunction (Chris Palmer, Brain Energy).

The modern industrialized diet, of course, is far worse for the poor living in food deserts. But even most foods available to the middle-to-upper class are part of the same food system. You can spend a lot of money on organic vegetables and fruit. But if it’s grown on mineral-depleted soil as most soil now is, and if it’s picked before ripe as is common practice, then you might be getting next to no nutrition from it. Also, organic just means industrial chemicals aren’t used. But organic can describe ‘natural’ sources of weedkillers and pesticides that can be harmful as well. Truly organic, in the traditional sense, is hard to find, as there is no way to achieve large-scale yields and profits that way. The advantage of animal foods is that whatever chemicals might be in the animal’s feed gets mostly filtered out.

The overall argument here is about stressors. We’re used to thinking about stress as an isolated social or economic effect. It’s something done to us by another person or by the system created by other people: abuse, bullying, hate crimes, political violence, police brutality, war, scarcity, poverty, inequality, toxic workplace, overwork, unemployment, etc. But everything already abovementioned is a stressor, along with the totalizing conditions that encompass it all. Or else many of these factors could be thought of as multipliers of stress. If your body is compromised from a bad diet, toxin exposure, and such, any additional stress might be enough to push you over the edge into trauma, depression, psychosis, addiction, punitiveness, sadism, etc. Excess stress (i.e., high allostatic load) is a chaos agent. It disrupts all normal functioning (What does stress do to the mind? And why?).

That’s because humans didn’t evolve to deal with persistently overwhelming stress. For most of human and pre-human existence, challenging events and suboptimal conditions were usually minor, temporary, resolvable, and/or escapable (Robert Sapolsky, Why Zebras Don’t Get Ulcers; Marshall Sahlins, The Original Affluent Society; Luke Kemp, Goliath’s Curse; David Graeber & David Wengrow, The Dawn of Everything; etc). It wasn’t until humans permanently settled down in mass urbanization that this changed, that the worst conditions could become entrenched continuously over generations and centuries. Then such stressed-out and traumatized people go into survival mode, an unhappy state to be in.

This doesn’t only alter physiology but also epigenetics, which then get passed on and reinforced by culture and behavioral modeling. Famine, for example, signals the body to put on extra fat. It doesn’t only do so for the individual who experienced famine but also for at least two generations following. In one rodent study, a Pavlovian response — jumping in response to a scent followed by a shock — formed into an epigenetic signal that carried over seven generations (Resmaa Menakem, My Grandmother’s Hands). According to other evidence, signalling can somehow get passed across vast stretches of history (Christine Kenneally, The Invisible History of the Human Race; & Society: Precarious or Persistent?). Whatever causes this transgenerational transmission, what’s amazing is that it can shape people at a fundamental level.

The extreme authoritarianism we’re presently experiencing is surely contributed to by our being in such an extreme unnatural state. As one factor to consider, inequality has been rising for generations and now is higher than ever before. As Keith Payne notes in The Broken Ladder, inequality seems to psychologically signal scarcity where the wealthy too act like they’re poor, even when objectively there is abundance; hence resulting in all kinds of psychological and social problems (Kate Pickett, Richard Wilkinson, Thomas Piketty, Peter Turchin, Walter Scheidel, etc). Worse still, as research shows, such vast disparities draw into power those high in social dominance orientation (SDO), the typical authoritarian leaders. To set it into motion, the recent global pandemic, according to the behavioral immune system and parasite-stress theory, would’ve signaled an authoritarian response in the population, thus creating the authoritarian followers to be manipulated by SDOs (Sick Individuals = Authoritarian Societies; & Filth of Rome, Health of Alexandria).

What would normally signal open-mindedness, mental health, prosocial behavior, and social liberalism is lacking. Understandably, we’re at a moment of moral panic. Everyone can sense something is wrong. Numerous indicators of a dysfunctional and dangerous society are apparent. But even for those who lack the knowledge to intellectually understand any of it, they can feel it in their bodies, as do we all. Such signaling doesn’t require even awareness. It’s built on primitive instincts that preceded the development of rationality or even consciousness. It’s just something that we understand in our bones, that colors our vision. We’re compromised, weak, and vulnerable. Our body-minds and our society respond accordingly. If we want a different kind of society, we’ll have to create different signals, those of health and happiness, abundance and trust. What signals in our body-mind expresses in our body politic, and vice versa.

Should Trauma be Broadly or Narrowly Defined?

Not to know what happened before you were born is to remain forever a child.
~Cicero

No man can know where he is going unless he knows exactly where he has been and exactly how he arrived at his present place.
~Maya Angelou

This is an assessment and summary of the evidence on trauma, in response to two books and to the reviewers of them, specifically one reviewer. The books in question are Michael Scheeringa’s The Body Does Not Keep the Score and Lucy Foulkes Losing Our Minds. Both authors challenge what they perceive as an overuse, misuse, and abuse of trauma labeling, the latter in the context of the claims about a mental illness epidemic. And that might be true to an extent, if maybe the difficulty is with trauma itself. Our understanding of trauma might be inaccurate or partial, although Foulkes is a lot more tentative in admitting that the dividing line between normal and diagnosable is fuzzy, as well as somewhat arbitrary. Scheeringa’s work is the worst of the two. He attempts a takedown of Bessel van der Kolk’s The Body Keeps the Score, a popular author and book that has been rightly critiqued for various reasons. There are serious allegations against his scholarship, practices, and behavior (with clients, in the workplace, etc), but we won’t discuss that here, as our focus of concern is elsewhere.*

Even for reviewers who found Scheeringa’s main argument to be persuasive, some like Paula Carino noted that, beyond that, “things get weird. Scheeringa claims van der Kolk is pushing a “socialist or Marxist agenda” (oh heavens, not that!) to reshape society and public health policy with the help of his overdramatic lefty pals. Cue eye-roll: And what sociopolitical agenda are you pushing, Scheeringa? He repeatedly rails against van der Kolk’s “skewed moralism,” defined as prioritizing one moral issue (in this case, care for the disadvantaged) over other values like “fairness, tradition, liberty, and loyalty.” I don’t know about you, but those words scream MAGA to me. (Though to his credit, he concedes that moralism is at least better than amorality.)” (For Those Keeping Score at Home). While reading and before I read any review, I began thinking Scheeringa was a contrarian and a crank. To suggest he sounds like MAGA is just another way of saying he is caught up in the reactionary mind that is crippled or distorted.

With the same intention as Scheeringa, there is another reviewer, Diana Fox Tilson, who claims to have debunked van der Kolk (Your Body Is Not Keeping The Score); as part of a debunking series that also takes on Gabor Maté and Peter Levine (Your Personality Does Not Cause Cancer; & You Don’t Need to Release Your Trauma). Yet she too is critical of Scheeringa: “Some writers have served a neoliberal agenda by using a definition of trauma that is too restrictive. In The Trouble with Trauma, for example, Michael Scheeringa insists that only directly experiencing life-threatening events counts as traumatic. In part two of “What is Trauma?”, I looked at three different definitions of traumatic events from the DSM IV, the DSM 5, and the ICD 11, and none of them align with Scheeringa’s definition. Scheeringa uses this extremely narrow view of trauma to argue against spending tax dollars on services to support marginalized populations, and to dismiss the idea that living in a chronically unsafe environment can cause a trauma response or contribute to chronic stress” (Who Gets to Say They Are Traumatized?). MAGA, neoliberal, etc — different ways of labeling someone as conservative or right-wing in a problematic sense.

Reading through Tilson’s writings, I appreciated her emphasizing the problem with scapegoating victims, be they poor, minorities, or whatever else. But at the same time, I wasn’t sure she was being entirely fair to those she was critiquing, such as Maté in the first installments of her series. It felt dismissive and reductionist. In having read and listened to him, I never got the sense that Maté is an uncaring person or careless thinker. It’s not a matter if he is right about everything, but I’m not convinced that his views are wrong either. Other people reacted to the ‘takedown’: “I think it’s foolish to say our personality has nothing to do with if a disease manifests. Chronic stress is proven to deteriorate an organism” (Beni Oren). “[Y]ou lose me. And it’s not because I DO think that unresolved trauma is the sole cause of chronic illness and disease, or that doing the work of finding that trauma in the body and working with it from that place is a panacea, or that if you’re ill it’s your fault for not feeling your feelings well enough. It’s because it doesn’t seem reasonable to suggest that any of these authors are actually making those claims either” (Lucy Hearn). Another commenter went into more detail:

“I am shocked at how many people are seeing judgement and BLAME in Mate’s work? I hold an MA Ed. in Trauma Studies and I have been teaching about it for more than a decade. I can easily explain the biology of trauma and it’s detailed processes and relationship to autoimmune disease. BKS is also 11 years old and the research has continued to explode in support-and it wholly validates Mate’s original suppositions. Scientists and doctors in a wide variety of fields outside of trauma support the trauma-physical disease connection: metabolics, nutrition science, exercise physiology, microbiome, epigenetics, cardiology, immunology, neuroscience, endocrinology….and on… Furthermore, the physiology of emotions stored through out our bodies (peptides) has been established research since 1985 with Dr. Candace Perts work (the woman who discovered the opiate receptor in the brain)-and that work is currently being more deeply understood with the research focused of fascia” (Melanie Lynn  Brown).

I almost feel bad about challenging Tilson. I suspect we have more views in common than not or at least some similar values. It’s just something feels off in her appraisal. If I understand correctly, she wants to maintain trauma as a narrow label and formal diagnosis. Whereas I come more from larger perspective, such as influenced by Derrick Jensen’s culture of trauma. Part of her bias would be her career as a psychotherapist, as opposed to being in a line of work like sociology, anthropology, epidemiology, population biology, public health, etc (Melanie Lynn Brown, YOUR THERAPIST is more likely NOT Trauma-informed.). Yet she stated agreement when I wrote that, “Much of the trauma among victimized populations is the overall environment, culture, and social order that develops and rigidifies around old collective traumas.” When she recommended Lucy Foulkes’ Losing Our Minds, I briefly explained my broader perspective. In response, Tilson said that the author “doesn’t disagree with you in her book.” So, I’m not quite sure what she is pushing back against in wanting to maintain what appears to be a constrained definition of trauma, if not as extreme as Scheeringa. She never further responded to me to clarify her position.

I got the audiobook version of Foulke’s book, but I’ve only made it part way through it. As far as I can tell, I don’t disagree with most of what Foulkes argues. Nor is she necessarily contradicting my argument. But my main point may not have as much to do with her analysis and critique. I’m stepping back to take in a broader scope of context: environments, conditions, systems, structures, institutions, and other shared factors. The world has been dramatically changing for centuries, but particularly the past few generations. This is where I see the likes of Tilson not taking in the whole picture. Elsewhere, she writes that, “One of Maté’s critics also pointed out that our lifestyles in the 21st century are positively cushy compared to our ancestors.”** Okay, Boomer. Maybe that’s her view as someone in the middle class with mostly a middle class clientele. But the majority of Americans are increasingly stressed out and struggling, exhausted and overwhelmed, sick and weakened, compromised and vulnerable. Those kinds of people, generally, aren’t inclined to go to psychotherapists, even if they had quality healthcare insurance and could afford it.

The failure of the mental health framing, as conventionally used, is that it’s mired in the capitalist realism of neoliberalism, globalization, hyper-individualism, social Darwinism, power disparity, dominance hierarchy, a permanent underclass, class war, exploitation, economic struggle, poverty, a homelessness crisis, and much else. With more complexity and nuance, we need to think about what it means for an entire society to be severely unhealthy in multiple areas and on multiple levels. Inequality, as a key area, has never been this high in all of history, with plutocrats reaching trillionaire status. And that is one of the most extremely damaging of stressors (Thomas Piketty, Richard Wilkinson, Kate Pickett, Keith Payne, Peter Turchin, Walter Scheidel, etc). It not only increases mental illness, addiction, and alcoholism but also mistrust, paranoia, conflict, aggression, etc while overall destabilizing and deranging society. It also promotes into power those high in social dominance orientation (correlated to dark triad & low ‘honesty-humility’), which furthers inequality and worsens everything.

There are other causal and contributing factors. The sickening modern food system, along with the culture and ideology of diet, is completely foreign to traditional ways of eating that humans evolved with and it’s debilitating (Weston A. Price, Mary Ruddick, Georgia Ede, Sally Fallon Morell, Mark Hyman, Georgia Ede, Chris  Palmer, etc). It not only relates to mental health but also moral and social health, such as greater rates of violence and crime. But it generally compromises people and suppresses human potential, including neurocognitive development, while making people feel unwell and drained (e.g., taking more sick days and operating at a lower level of functioning). As a specific dietary component, seed oils are oxidative, inflammatory, and mutagenic (Catherine Shanahan). And by the way, autistics have higher rates of de novo mutations (i.e., not inherited). It’s not only malnourishment but also food additives and agrochemicals. I’m not sure about psychiatric disorders, but I do know that some substances in the industrialized standard American diet (SAD) do alter neurocognition (The Agricultural Mind). Such things as glutamate and propionate, commonly found in ultra-processed foods, help to cause, increase, or exacerbate autistic-like symptoms in animal models. Some autistic have been helped by elimination of these.

As a toxin, glyphosate or Roundup is one of the worst (Stephanie Seneff). It’s a hormone mimic and endocrine disruptor. But also as an antibiotic, it can wipe out the gut microbiome and likely harms mitochondria (a bacteria). Widespread fire retardants also mess with the hormonal system, as well as negatively affecting neurocognitive development. Then there are the well known toxins like heavy metals still pervasive in old homes, schools, and industrial areas; as well as often concentrated in certain foods (rice, mushrooms, etc) and in many unregulated products from other countries (e.g., China). That’s on top of microplastics, PFAS, etc; of which we have no clue about the long-term effects and consequences. By the way, about the microbiome, L. reuteri is one of the oldest and most common gut microbes. All humans used to carry it, but now 90% of the population lacks it. One of the main effects of L. reuteri is boosting oxytocin, which strengthens bonding. It’s possible this contributes to the hyper-individualism, social isolation, and culture of mistrust that has taken over. We ‘ve gained better knowledge on the brain-gut-microbiota axis. The link between the brain and gut has four pathways, one of which is direct. Many of the neurotransmitters are produced in the gut, with the gut being the first brain to evolve, although commonly called the second brain. There may even be a microbiome in the brain, as some evidence indicates.

There are many other factors, such as increased sedentary and indoor lifestyle. Our schooling and jobs require ever more motionless, long-term, hyper-focus (e.g., staring at screens for hours) and we compensate with increased drug use, both uppers and downers: caffeine (often as energy drinks), nicotine, kratom, meth, cocaine, ADHD meds, alcohol, marijuana (or THC & CBD), etc. This is worsened by nature deficit disorder and excessive blue light (fluorescents, LEDs, screens) that disrupt deep sleep. We also have little clue what non-native EMFs might be doing to us. The concern about 5G is that it operates on the same wavelength as biology with little research having been done on it. Last but not least, the media system and tech is an exacerbating factor. There has never been so much vast and rapid transformation. It took millennia for mass literacy and literary culture to be established, the basis for all of modern civilization. After only having been in place for a few centuries, the Gutenberg Parenthesis is coming to an end. Now we’re entering the global village (Marshall McLuhan) and secondary orality (Walter J. Ong). Not to mention such things as propaganda systems, propaganda model of the news, psyops, troll farms, bots, algorithmic manipulation, echo chambers, media addiction, AI psychosis, cultivation theory (mean world syndrome), etc.

Foulkes, though, does mention the global pandemic we just went through. She surely understands that the disruption and social isolation surely increased stress and mental health issues. But there is likely one aspect she isn’t familiar with. As a pressure on evolved instincts, exposure to nonzoonotic infectious-parasitical diseases increases population levels of conservatism, authoritarianism, fundamentalism, ingroup bias, xenophobia, punitiveness, etc (behavioral immune system, parasite-stress theory, & pathogen avoidance). Basically, it suppresses the liberal-minded personality trait ‘openness to experience’: cognitive empathy, interpersonal trust, intellectual curiosity, exploratory behavior, intelligence, divergent thinking, etc. Actually, diverse stressors shut down ‘openness’: fear, anxiety, risk, threat, danger, trauma, etc (e.g., mortality salience). It’s an evolved survival response (threat reactivity, terror management theory) similar to conservation-withdrawal, sickness behavior, and disgust response. When it’s elicited, people tend to isolate themselves to their perceived ingroup: family, community, race, ethnicity, nationality, religion, etc. But for most of human evolution, such stressors were minor and/or temporary, with no possibility of shit life syndrome.

It’s the combined accumulation and interaction among all factors that is the worst. The problem is that it’s mostly limited to studying each factor in isolation, as magnified by the silo effect of research and theory, scholarship and expertise. Yet trauma isn’t merely a single event that happened to an individual, assuming one even can remember a specific event. Often, this is not the case when it’s some combination of chronic, complex, and hazy, along with secondary or vicarious trauma of being inescapably trapped in a traumatized and traumatizing society maintained through a victimization cycle (Resmaa Menakem, How Racism Began as White-on-White Violence; Mark Pratt-Russum, Hazy Trauma: The Legacy of Medieval Brutality in White-American Violence; & Trauma, Embodied and Extended). Rather, it’s the overall conditions, epigenetic status, and allostatic load of debilitating chronic stress that breaks down the body-mind in entire populations and across generations (social determinants of health, weathering hypothesisadverse childhood experiences, Sapolskian stress, etc). In a society like this, none of us are unscathed, if obviously some are more susceptible to trauma than others. It’s good to keep in mind that the majority of Americans are in the lower classes, many of them falling ever lower over time as disparities grow ever larger.

“What if we acknowledged that poverty itself—stand alone, no other factors—CAUSES physical disease? This isn’t metaphorical. Your body literally transforms under financial stress through a process scientists call “allostatic load”—the cumulative biological burden exacted on your body when you’re forced to adapt to hardship. What if human bodies’ ADAPTATIONS to social toxins to ensure SURVIVAL were celebrated— not serially sectioned in addiction treatment, placating psychiatric facilities, and sentenced to state pens? What if creating the conditions for survival safety was seen as the necessary medicine? When you can’t pay rent, your hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis doesn’t politely wait for payday. It floods your system with cortisol and adrenaline, preparing you for a threat as real as any lion roaming the savannah. These aren’t just feelings—they’re measurable biological markers that stick around, altering your hormonal baseline until your body’s stress response system looks nothing like the economically secure” (Melanie Lynn Brown, The Biology of Being Broke).

This onslaught is overwhelming to individuals and society. The DSM couldn’t even begin to capture what’s going on. I wonder if our very formal conception of trauma is insufficient. Chronic stress can be more traumatizing than a single violent event. We are so compromised, not to mention alienated and dysfunctional, that it takes less and less to traumatize us (Robert Sapolsky, Why Zebras Don’t Get Ulcers). That’s particularly true in terms of transgenerational trauma with diverse collective traumas being within recent history (national trauma, historical traumatransgenerational trauma, transgenerational epigenetic inheritance, epigenetics of anxiety and stress–related disorders, & intergenerational communication of violent trauma). In one study, the extremely specific behavior of trauma, in rodents, persisted over seven generations. That would be the equivalent of a couple of centuries for humans. And there is other strong evidence supporting this view as applicable to humans (Christine Kenneally, The Invisible History of the Human Race). There is too little appreciation for epigenetics. And most of this harm goes untreated, unresolved, unhealed. Combined with moral injury, it builds up not only over a lifetime but over the generations. We’re barely beginning to grasp what trauma might mean.

“What white bodies did to Black bodies they did to other white bodies first.”
~Janice Barbee

“Did over ten centuries of medieval brutality, which was inflicted on white bodies by other white bodies, begin to look like culture?”
~Resmaa Menakem, My Grandmother’s Hands

* * *

Notes:

*Arguably, personal and professional failings aside, at least parts of van der Kolk’s basic framework of trauma remain accurate and relevant, if possibly large sections of his book should be trashed (Emi Nietfeld, What the Most Famous Book About Trauma Gets Wrong). For those who’d rather ignore it because of the author’s reputation, that is fair and, instead, they might turn elsewhere. For a text that builds, extends, and improves upon van der Kolk’s work, check out Resmaa Menakem’s My Grandmother’s Hands. Though he studied under van der Kolk (and David Schnarch, as well as trained with Peter Levine), Menakem has a better understanding of the collective and historical angle. He incorporates “the groundbreaking research of neuroscientist Rachel Yehuda, who has shown how trauma gets passed on from generation to generation in the very expression of our genes” (Ekua Hagan’s interview of Resmaa Menakem, My Grandmother’s Hands).

There are other books along these lines, in relation to embodied, inherited, and shared approaches to stress and trauma: Stephanie Foo, What My Bones Know; Aimie Apigian, The Biology of Trauma; Babette Rothschild, The Body Remembers; Nadine Burke Harris, The Deepest Well; Gabor Maté, The Myth of Normal & When the Body Says No; Mark Wolynn, It Didn’t Start With You; Jennifer Mullan, Decolonizing Therapy; Judith Lewis Herman, Truth and Recovery & Truth and Repair; Derrick Jensen, A Language Older Than Words & The Culture of Make Believe; Christine Keneally, The Invisible History of the Human Race; etc. For balance, you could consider the opposing position advocating grit and resilience: George Bonanno, The End of Trauma. Indeed, there are entire cultures, like the Piraha, who appear to be resistant to trauma and mental illness, whatever that might suggest for the rest of humanity.

**This view is also argued by Foulkes, in referencing Greg Lukianoff and Jonathan Haidt’s The Coddling of the American Mind. But Foulkes admits that the news reporting and public debate on it has been effectively reduced to the Fox Effect. Still, there are legitimate points to be made in support of concern and criticism. A simple example given by Foulkes is that of schools banning peanuts to protect kids with allergies. Yet it’s precisely regular consumption of peanuts that reduces the development of such allergies. It’s similar to childhood exposure to bacteria and viruses strengthening the immune system, significantly decreasing lifelong incidence of infections. The other side, though, is there has never before been a time in human existence when the immune system was being so heavily taxed, antagonized, and overactivated.

If Foulkes and Tilson have little in common with Scheeringa, their words are slightly weighted, if unintentionally, in favor of Scheeringa’s reactionary stance. But that doesn’t make them reactionaries. In fact, Foulkes even quotes from van der Kolk without offering any critique, indicating she is open to a broader view. It’s just that they’re good liberals of the comfortable upper middle class. But they’re not on a mission to destroy the woke mind virus. They take seriously the problems of our society. Even so, in spite of being well-educated professionals with requisite expertise, they don’t have the breadth of knowledge adequate to grasp what’s going on. And I do sense that, if unconsciously and unknowingly like many in the privileged and disconnected liberal class, they’ve been lured into the reactionary trap of culture war narratives.

Working the Reactionary Mind Into a Froth

About the broad right, there are many straightforward points but also some odd bits about the psychology and behavior: dominating and being dominated, closed-mindedness and control, rejection and specialness, social isolation and group identity, stress and trauma, anxiety and fear, threat and danger, loss and struggle, victimhood and victimizing, boredom and melodrama.

I’ve been slowly making sense of it all over time, as I add new pieces to my previous understandings. But even going by the most basic level of research and theory, there are already more than enough pieces to form a clear picture.

As I often repeat, and it bears repeating, there are diverse theories, conditions, factors, traits, facets, patterns, and expressions that interlink and overlap or closely correspond:

Socio-political conservatism, right-wing authoritarianism (RWA), social dominance orientation (SDO), fundamentalism, patriotism, honor culture/concern, need for certainty, need for closure, thick boundary type (Ernest Hartmann), terror management theory, behavioral immune system, parasite-stress theory, purity thinking, mortality salience, confirmation bias, motivated reasoning, prejudice, xenophobia, mistrust, paranoia, aggression, punitiveness, etc.

This further  involves the reactionary mind, Burkean moral imagination, and anti-traditionalist nostalgia (invented traditions, revisionist history).

To be clear, as the above list suggests, there isn’t a single right-wing mentality. It’s a constellation of features that’s particularly seen across populations, but not in every individual.

Consider that RWA (low ‘openness to experience’) and SDO (low ‘honesty-humility’, high dark triad) measure independently, while diverging on many features. But all of it combines in right-wing identities, groups, parties, and movements. As such, the typical authoritarian leaders are SDOs and the typical authoritarian followers are RWAs, with the far right consisting of Double Highs (RWA+SDO). In practical terms, both RWA and SDO predict conservative politics.

Additionally, honor concern — defined by conservatism, conventionalism, conformity, religiosity, and fundamentalism; and group-based prejudice, xenophobia, aggression, unforgiveness, retaliation, violence, inequality, hierarchy, status, reputation, integrity, etc (e.g., patriotism) — is distinct, if also sharing major aspects with RWA and SDO.

“Results identified group honor concern as the most distinct, sharing only moderate overlap with RWA; masculine and feminine honor concern were strongly positively correlated with RWA. […]

“Honor concern shares several similarities with both RWA and SDO. Akin to higher RWA, honor concern encompasses values of upholding traditional norms and ingroup purity. Akin to higher SDO, honor concern encompasses beliefs that social groups are hierarchical and ordered by status. […]

“Domains of honor concern share theoretical similarities to RWA, including emphasis on following cultural honor norms and traditions (similar to feminine honor concern), and SDO, by emphasizing status-based differences between people or groups with higher versus lower honor concern (similar to group honor concern) and that dominance and aggression are relatively appropriate responses to status challenges (similar to masculine honor concern; Barnes et al., 2014; Uskul et al., 2022). Domains of honor concern also share empirical similarities to RWA and SDO by predicting greater political conservatism (see Barnes et al., 2016; Martens et al., 2018; Mirisola et al., 2007; Wilson and Sibley, 2013). Yet, one prediction based on generalized prejudice theory (Bergh and Brandt, 2023) is that honor concern may uniquely predict prejudice by emphasizing both values and status. […]

“By contrast, people’s masculine honor concern appears to be particularly strongly associated with greater SDO, consistent with their theoretical similarities that societally advantaged groups (e.g., men) are assertive, strong, and use their high-status position to protect their loved ones (Barnes et al., 2012). However, Barnes et al. (2014) also reported mixed evidence for the association between feminine honor concern and SDO, instead suggesting that feminine honor concern was strongly related to RWA due to their overlap of valuing traditional norms (e.g., familial loyalty).”

Olivia K. Nop & Matthew D. Hammond, A meta-analysis and test of the overlap between honor concern, right-wing authoritarianism, and social dominance orientation

Though individuals may vary, it seems unlikely that most conservative populations wouldn’t contain all three.* So, in how they play out in the real world, it’s impossible to entirely separate them. Just understand that they involve distinct conditions and factors, causes and mechanisms. If with differing motivations, they’re complementary in being able to work together within the same social order and often toward the same ends.

[*As a qualification, the only way to drive a wedge between RWA and SDO is to extremely and carefully suppress high inequality, power disparity, and dominance hierarchy. Only SDO is directly about anti-egalitarianism. Whereas RWAs, more than anything else, simply want to belong and conform, to be accepted and included. There are rare situations where RWA might coincide with a limited form of egalitarianism, specifically as small-scale communitarianism. Think of the collectivist Shakers, Pietists, Hutterites, etc.]

As linked to status-based honor types, SDOs want to dominate and RWAs want to be dominated, while both agree that dominance hierarchies are to be enforced on low status groups and outgroups, as well as enforced on those who don’t want to either dominate (egalitarian-minded) or be dominated (liberal-minded). But note that RWAs tend to be the most compliant with and submissive to SDO machinations when under stress (e.g., RWAs being more anti-immigrant when immigrants are portrayed as not assimilating).

Hence the reason SDOs go out of their way to stress RWAs so as to gain and maintain their dominance position. That is the only way for SDOs to enforce social control.

Stress likewise has a role to play in suppressing liberalism and controlling liberals, as will be discussed further on. Egalitarianism is also compromised under certain kinds of stressors, specifically high inequality that promotes power disparity and dominance hierarchy. Specifically, RWA is elicited by threat, risk, danger, and mortality (as well as certain forms of disease, nonzoonotic infections and parasitism); SDO by competition, rivalry, scarcity, and inequality.

This is why liberal and egalitarian mentalities can be like hothouse flowers. They require the most optimal conditions of flourishing that, if possibly having been more common in the Paleolithic era, are now rare in modern society, especially under late stage capitalism.

* * *

In addition, like sociopolitical conservatism, RWA specifically has correlations with lower levels of educational attainment, literacy, critical thinking, and IQ (Chris Mooney, The Republican Brain).

That relates to why Fox News viewers are more misinformed than those who don’t watch news at all. These are people who lack intellectual self-defense that requires knowledge of psychology, sociology, media studies, rhetoric, cognitive biases, and logical fallacies. They are easy marks for con men, demagogues, and propagandists.

That deficiency in turn corresponds to lower ‘openness to experience’ and ‘intellect’, and thus lower in everything related to it: need for cognition, intellectual curiosity, exploratory behavior, tolerance for cognitive dissonance (negative capability), cognitive flexibility, perspective shifting, fluid intelligence, original problem solving, pattern recognition, aesthetic appreciation, and much else.

With less cognitive load and cognitive complexity, such people tend to rely on simplifying heuristics like stereotypes and groupthink. Along with ingroup bias and group narcissism, this is also why they’re prone to prejudice and bigotry.

It’s the natural expression of compromised and/or stunted neurocognitive development. It’s related to: poverty, inequality, chronic stress, trauma and PTSD, adverse childhood experiences (ACEs), childhood heavy metal toxicity, malnourishment, parasite load, infectious disease exposure, etc. You see this pattern of factors and conditions in conservative communities with the worst of it being in conservative states, always accompanied with the RWA-SDO dynamic and combined with honor culture.

Cognitive-impaired heuristics involve identifying oneself as part of a group and identifying others according to groups. These are built on stereotypical social roles, norms, and expectations. Everything is turned into a readymade package where one doesn’t have to go to the trouble of understanding unique individuals, specific contexts, etc. It’s all modeled, learned, and internalized from a young age; and so taken as ideological reality, the order of things, the way the world works.

A place for everything and everything in its place. Just determine your role and follow the script. All [fill in the blank] are [fill in the blank], look [fill in the blank], and act [fill in the blank]. Anyone who doesn’t comply will be forced to do so or else be punished, shunned, eliminated, at least when stress (threat or competition) is involved.

* * *

Part of my thought on the  matter is based on family members, along with some friends and coworkers. I don’t know that my personal sample is representative. But I frame and interpret what I’ve learned through experience according to the scholarship I’ve studied: history, political science, cultural studies, psychology, media studies, ecology, health studies, and anything else that seems insightful and useful.

Observations of people I personally know are my way of grounding otherwise abstract research and theory.

As an example, it’s one thing to intellectually read about cultivation theory and mean world syndrome, as developed by George Gerbner. Then it’s something else entirely to have firsthand watched the lived effects of right-wing media as a steady indoctrination and decline that occurred over decades; as I’ve seen among those I’m close to and as others have shown with their own loved ones (Jen Senko, The Brainwashing of My Dad).

In my case, this has mainly involved my parents who I personally know in detail like no one else. Not only did they raise me but I’ve spent much of my adulthood around them, often on a daily basis, as they returned to town in the early Obama administration. Later during the COVID-19 shutdown, I moved in with them and have remained since. I see the media they consume, listen to what they talk about, and observe how they act. I’ve noted the results of changes over time.

My mother most closely fits the standard demographic profile and psychological pattern of the average Fox News viewer: US-born, older, white, middle class, non-urban, fundamentalist, conservative, and Republican; although she is college-educated and had a professional career, if not high status (speech pathologist in public schools).

She falls into the predictable mean world syndrome. Having been tolerant and positive-thinking when younger, with increased exposure to Fox News propaganda and fear-mongering, she has been drawn into a dark worldview and has made some horrendous statements.

For instance, in believing right-wing narratives that are repeated ad nauseum until they feel like reality itself, she has on a few occasions said that leftist protesters should be shot or hung from trees, of course always while Fox News was on. That is stereotypical mean world syndrome: authoritarianism, fear and anxiety, exaggerated threat perception, and punitiveness.

Keep in mind that she is now in her 80s and has been showing neurocognitive decline for a long time, if it’s been gradual over decades. So, as her mind is no longer entirely there, she doesn’t necessarily know what she is saying and its significance, much less how she is being manipulated. It’s simply her reacting to the fear and hatred instilled in her.

That is basic level right-wing mentality. Those victimized by Machiavellians are manipulated into victimizing others or into supporting those who are doing the victimization (police, ICE, etc).

* * *

My father is of similar demographics as my mother, of course, but with the higher education of a PhD. He prefers other kinds of right-wing media: Hoover Institution, Heritage Foundation, Imprimis, Hillsdale College, National Association of Scholars, Epoch Times, etc. He draws some of his propaganda from closer to the source of the propaganda mills, such as think tanks.

In many ways, he interests me more, partly because he has been in positions to influence others. He fits the main target of propaganda operations, as explained well by C. J. Hopkins:

“The primary aim of official propaganda is to generate an ‘official narrative’ that can be mindlessly repeated by the ruling classes and those who support and identify with them. This official narrative does not have to make sense, or to stand up to any sort of serious scrutiny. Its factualness is not the point. The point is to draw a Maginot line, a defensive ideological boundary, between ‘the truth’ as defined by the ruling classes and any other ‘truth’ that contradicts their narrative.”
~ Why Ridiculous Official Propaganda Still Works (quoted in Hillsdale’s Imprimis: Neocon Propaganda)

As a retired professor, he has a moderate intellectual bent, if not particularly well-informed or curious to remedy that lack; and he still reads books, if mostly Christian apologetics and inspirational texts.

In spite of having spent his career split between factory management and university professor, he surprisingly doesn’t demonstrate much independent thought of questioning and skepticism. I suppose a critical intellect is neither required nor desired in functioning within the corporate structures of neoliberalism and in teaching students, as the new aspiring business class, to do the same.

In the end, though more intelligent, he isn’t particularly more intellectually driven than my mother. It’s not only disengagement from thinking carefully and learning new info. Simultaneously, it’s a general disengagement from the world and others, an all-purpose incuriosity. Yet he used to be highly engaged, in a basic manner. He often belonged to organizations and held leadership roles. He was respected and, most of all, he loved to obtain praise.

He was all about status (i.e., high SDO) and, to a large degree, adheres to gendered honor norms. He sort of likes being a patriarch and a leader in his community.

From a young age, he internalized a need to be perceived as an important person. I don’t know that this was a natural tendency or a product of his early life experience. But in either case, it became core to his psychology and identity.

His father was a minister in a small town, which meant he was part of the local elite, as a big fish in a small pond. Their family had automatic membership at the country club. They were always kept in a nice house and always ensured to have a nice car, gifted by a local car dealer.

As the son of a minister, my father was expected to play the role of a Christian leader, groomed to be a patriarch one day. If his father or older brother wasn’t around when adults were meeting, it fell to my father as a child to lead group prayers. One could imagine that, eventually, such expectations would either go to one’s head or else radicalize one in opposition to it.

Obviously, my father wasn’t radicalized. He accepted it all, without question. It seems to have shaped everything he did as an adult.

Straight out of college with ROTC training, he became an army officer and instantly held authority over people with years of actual army experience. And immediately after that he got his first of many jobs as a factory manager, followed by being a professor in mid-life. That is to say he was always an authority figure in dominance hierarchies and has never known anything else.

In that manner, he once had been highly engaged. But that has changed over time. Maybe it’s because dominance hierarchy itself has changed, no longer being as respectable. Or at least, not as straightforward as it once was now that anyone, even blacks and women, can climb the ladder and join the elite.

The Kiwanis group, for example, originally was a civic organization solely consisting of businessmen who were community leaders, and all white men in most early chapters. Now Kiwanis includes women, minorities, and the working class. It no longer is a group identity that exudes elite status, as it once did.

These kinds of civic organizations are in decline with aging membership far past their prime. Belonging to them no longer inspires hope for the future of a community ruling elite. And in my father’s local chapter of Kiwanis, the members as a group have become less interested in community projects, in spite of dedication to community service having been the stated purpose around which such groups formed earlier last century.

It’s left my father not only disengaged but also demoralized. He’s also unhappy that it’s no longer an old boys’ network where men can tell crude jokes without judgment and censure. The female members, in his mind, have ruined it for those like him. And it makes him feel worse that others would see this as misogyny.

* * *

But to be honest, my father’s misogyny really has increased over time or else become more apparent. And my mother too has become more right-wing.

From the 1970s to 1990s, my parents belonged to organizations where women were often the leaders. Our family’s church, Unity, when I was growing up had mostly women as ministers, as well as having been openly ‘woke’ (e.g., doing same sex marriage ceremonies). Obviously, this kind of thing didn’t bother them as much in the past. Or if it bothered them, it wasn’t enough that they openly complained about it.

Did society leave behind those like my parents? Or was it that many such people, as they’ve aged and cognitively declined, simply alienated themselves from their fellow humans by having become ultra-conservative, even authoritarian and domineering?

* * *

There is another particular aspect that interests me. It relates to disengagement.

Right-wing mentality operates by isolating people. In perusing books, I came across a summary of Rebecca Solnit’s The Beginning Comes After the End:

“While the white nationalist and authoritarian backlash drives individualism and isolation, this new world embraces antiracism, feminism, a more expansive understanding of gender, environmental thinking, scientific breakthroughs, and Indigenous and non-Western ideas, pointing toward a more interconnected, relational world.”

That’s the whole point of belonging to an exclusive and exclusionary group that only allows certain people to join. But the further one falls into that constraining ideological worldview the smaller becomes one’s group identity and social circle. It harms even the right-winger, which sadly drives them further into the ideology harming them.

That is what I’ve observed with both of my parents. It’s a shrinking down of their social world over time, as they increasingly turn inward.

When younger, they were somewhat socially liberal and they socialized with diverse people. But importantly, they were generally open to all kinds of experience and ideas. Their lives were relatively expansive and flexible, more friendly and welcoming. They weren’t yet stuck in their ways. They hadn’t yet retreated into fear and anxiety, safety and security.

The change happened gradually, only reaching an extreme in recent years. It’s not only how they’ve withdrawn into a reactionary worldview, as reinforced by a right-wing echo chamber. Simultaneously, they’ve pushed away many who don’t fit into that increasingly insular reality tunnel.

If they remain caring people on a personal level toward those they know and identify  with (as is common among many authoritarians and social dominators*), my parents’ social and political views have become more fearful, prejudiced, judgmental, and sometimes callous or mean-spirited. This occurs with perceived outgroups (poor blacks, LGBTQIA+ individuals, leftist protesters, etc), especially foreigners (Palestinians, Iranians, Latino immigrants, etc).

[*My cousin has said the same of my uncle and aunt who are ‘liberal’ Democrats. My cousin explained that her parents have often expressed prejudice, but will make excuses for those they personally know. The black person or poor white who is their friend, neighbor, or fellow congregant is good people; unlike most others of their kind.

I’d note they’ve spent their whole lives in a conservative community. The town they live in is small, rural, and working class. Following neoliberal union-busting and offshoring, there was a vast rise of unemployment and poverty. The county shifted from a Democratic and union stronghold to hardcore MAGA Republicanism.]

That’s the reason my brothers rarely visit or call my parents. They just don’t want to be around that hateful ugliness, don’t want to hear it. That avoidance saddens my parents, of course, and further contributes to their negative mentality.

Even I’ve been wondering where my breaking point might be.*

How long will I rationalize away my parents’ support of political evil? I’m talking Zionist genocide, wars of aggression, ICE brutality, police abuse, and on and on. Do I wait until there are millions perishing in death camps, assuming we’ll eventually get to that point, to see if my parents are still on board with neo-Nazism?

At some point, even with neurocognitive decline and being out of touch, it’s no longer as compelling of an excuse to argue that they’re victims of a highly advanced system of spin and disinfo, indoctrination and propaganda. As MAGA fascism becomes more blatant and devastating, it’s getting harder to believe that my parents don’t understand what they’re supporting, that the sadistic cruelty and violent oppression isn’t exactly what they want.

[*4/14/26: My father recently crossed into overt fascist territory. About the Iran War, he admitted to all the facts. Iran poses no direct and immediate threat to the US, has no nuclear weapons, has no program for producing them, and has officially stated an intention not to have such a program. In fact, they have a fatwah (religious decree) against nuclear weapons, which is no small thing in a theocracy. Though they have every right and good reason to defend themselves against aggressors.

Yet merely because Iran has nuclear power plants, my father states that it’s inevitable they’ll develop nuclear weapons. So, in pre-empting an imagined threat of Iranians possibly entertaining a thought crime, he supports the mass killing of innocent people and destruction of another society through authoritarian violence, militarized imperialism, war of aggression, war crimes, crimes against humanity, and political evil. That is the exact same logic of Nazi Germany in justifying every country it attacked and invaded, that Germans were merely protecting themselves from threats.]

* * *

My parents understandably feel rejected by others. It is an accurate perception, to a significant degree. Many of their fellow Americans, including their own family, really have rejected their values, woldview, and identity.

But I’ve been wondering if the right-wing mentality achieves this end intentionally, if not with full consciousness. Through their behavior and words, my parents in rejecting ever more people (gays, trans, feminists, minorities, immigrants, foreigners, etc) likely find themselves, in turn, rejected by ever more people. This particularly includes their two oldest sons.

Even when it’s not outright rejection, I do know they simply feel out of sync with the society around them. As the general public has gone further left, my parents have marched rightward. But in their mind, they’ve simply remained who they always were, stood still as the world moved around them.

In rewriting their personal history and in remaking their identity, they don’t recognize how extreme has been the transformation in themselves. They genuinely don’t remember how liberal-minded they once were.

My mother used to be pro-choice, my father used to have a Playboy subscription, etc. It was the Seventies, to be fair. Everyone was a bit crazy back then. Even President Richard Nixon was pushing hard left domestic policies: increased funding for social programs (Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, family support, etc), and advocated universal healthcare reform and a universal basic income.

With the liberal consensus in the air, most of the population was on board with the liberalism. Everyone was doing it. And it was a time of expanding civil rights. Liberation was in the air. How times have changed!

My parents spent the first half of their life becoming more liberal and, in the second half, they reversed course. It hasn’t been a happy fate that they’ve embraced, albeit unconsciously.

If your chosen group only allows people who are exactly like you, and if being like you means judging and hating upon anyone not like you, then it’s more probable than not that your group will end up small and will, over time, become ever smaller. That is what illiberalism means, unless you successfully plan an authoritarian takeover and force your illiberalism over the entire society — the preference of the far right my parents have become aligned with.

That sense of isolation and alienation, in being politicized and weaponized by right-wing media, becomes an all-encompassing and totalizing identity.

As Corey Robin argues in The Reactionary Mind, the ideological mindset and its attendant politics is built on a sense of loss, typically portrayed as something have been unjustly stolen or destroyed, and so requiring to be regained by any and all means, any and all costs:

“Failure is its most potent source of inspiration. Loss – real social loss, of power and position, privilege and prestige – is the mustard seed of conservative innovation.”

And:

“But as that sense of conflict diminishes on the left, it has fallen to the right to remind voters that there really are losers in politics and that it is they – and only they -who speak for them. ‘All conservatism begins with loss,” Andrew Sullivan rightly notes, which makes conservatism not the Party of Order, as Mill and others have claimed, but the party of the loser.

“The chief aim of the loser is not – and indeed cannot be – preservation or protection. It is recovery and restoration. That is one of the secrets of conservatism’s success. For all of its demotic frisson and ideological grandiosity, for all of its insistence upon triumph and will, movement and mobilization, conservatism can be an ultimately pedestrian affair. Because his losses are recent – the right agitates against reform in real time, not millennia after the fact – the conservative can credibly claim to his constituency, indeed to the polity at large, that his goals are practical and achievable. He merely seeks to regain what is his…”

But in creating a narratized identity of loss, that sense of loss becomes manifested as reality, a self-fulfilling prophecy. The right-winger loses themselves in their own dark fantasies. The abstract rhetoric of loss becomes reified as a totalitarian ideology that consumes people like a boa constrictor swallowing its prey whole.

* * *

To demonstrate this in another area, my parents left the large mainline Methodist church they had been attending for about a decade.

As well-established and well-known members of that congregation, they had been part of an extensive social circle that was enmeshed in the larger local community. But it was also a congregation with lots of activities and opportunities for involvement. My father had taken on important roles, such as having been on the board that made important decisions. He genuinely felt like he was contributing and so was of value.

But that church was liberal and ecumenical. In rejecting the liberal preference for non-rejection (tolerance, acceptance, & inclusion), my parents ended up self-rejecting themselves from that broad inclusivity. They were being influenced by right-wing rhetoric that told them such social liberalism was wrong and unChristian. So, instead, they joined a small fundamentalist church with a congregation that is tribalistic and parochial, with a theological bunker mentality and persecution complex.

I’m starting to think this isn’t an unintended side effect but the very core of the reactionary right, precisely how it’s mentality operates and how its identity is maintained.

It’s similar to why cults must separate individuals from their former social networks of family and friends. In its place, a new identity is created. It tells them that they are special, privileged, and superior; that they have the truth and all others are lost in dangerous lies; that outsiders don’t understand, can’t understand.

Then the more cut off, isolated, and lonely that individuals are made to feel — dejected, demoralized, or even desperate — the more they’ll cling to the authoritarian ingroup identify offered to them as a lifesaver, a refuge.

* * *

There is some strange compulsion in this. In all cases of people I know, there is no self-awareness of what it’s doing to them. Once inside that mentality, it’s hard to ever get out again or even to find the motivation to try. The trap is triggered and the trapdoor closes behind.

After some time, being so tightly enclosed feels like safety, security, and certainty. It’s known and everything outside of it becomes threatening, as it reminds the individual there is something else that exists beyond.

Right-wingers often complain about liberals and leftists. They can’t understand why those with principles of tolerance won’t tolerate their intolerance. They try to spin this as hypocrisy, as if liberals are required by definition to tolerate everything without moral discernment, critical thinking, and ethical concern for its affect on others.

If optimally including as many as possible, those on the left reject those who would, as is happening as we speak with the Trump regime, actively target the broad left, everything it stands for, and all those who find protection under it. That this attack would be rejected and why it would be rejected is self-explanatory, for those who want to understand.

I’m seriously starting to think right-wingers want to be rejected so as to feel embittered about having been rejected and to further rationalize their behavior that caused it all in the first place. It’s precisely the mechanism as a vicious cycle that makes it so potent and effective. They need that sense of loss, that sense of being on the defense to maintain their core identity.

The purpose of the Burkean moral imagination is to obscure, enclose, and isolate (Corey Robin).

As already noted, this relates to the need for conflict. As reactionary right-wingers want to be rejected, they likewise seek to elicit reaction from others and so to bring their perceived adversaries into their worldview of animosity, struggle, and competition (Reactionaries Seeking Reaction). They need to recruit people to play a role in their socially constructed and politically enforced melodrama, if and when others will respond to their ‘hail’ and become interpellated.

They are trying to trap others as they have been trapped. Oddly, pulling others into their worldview, even as narratized enemies, might make them feel less lonely. The point is to create a shared worldview, if done through fear and hate.

That is why stress, specifically threat, is so important. But stress as trauma, competition, etc also works, as do disease and mortality salience. In the broad sense, ‘threat’ can be almost anything.

As research shows, stress will make right-wingers even more right-wing, while also drawing liberals and left-wingers into the reactionary mind (Paul R. Nail, et al, Threat causes liberals to think like conservatives). In the end, even merely reacting to the reactionary turns one’s mind toward the reactionary. It’s like wrestling with the allegorical pig that gets you muddy but only leaves the pig happy.

They don’t only want to dominate people but also their minds and imaginations. At the same time, what gets them excited is the perceived threat that their enemies might win, that the inferior are conniving and sneaky (Schizoid Reaction: Enemies are Weak and Strong). A threat has to feel compelling in order to be motivating.

This is part of why every right-wing accusation is an admission of guilt or a statement of intent. They claim to be threatened while threatening others, so as to create a totalizing situation of threat. And in forcing their victims to defend themselves, they of course interpret that as further stress.

At one point, while enforcing violent oppression, an official of the Trump administration said that state violence and terrorism against the left wouldn’t be necessary, as long as the left just rolls over and plays dead. But any action taken to defend democracy and civil rights from right-wing attacks would be considered justification for further right-wing attacks.

Basically, they’ll attack the left if they do nothing and they’ll attack the left if they try to defend themselves. But in either case, it’s the fault of the leftist victims who were asking for it.

The real ‘threat’ posed by liberalism, in its fullest form and expression (under optimal conditions), is that it represents a mentality without threat. There is nothing more fearful, in the reactionary mind, as all that is not reactionary, from non-threat (i.e., safety) to non-rejection (i.e., inclusion), because it demonstrates and proves the reactionary isn’t inevitable, isn’t reality itself. All possibility of alternatives, or even the mere imagining of them, must be shut down.

* * *

That is the purpose of censorship and such. Ideological realism can only manifest through the enforced silence and invisibility of all else. It’s like the 19th century scientists who cut the vocal cords of living animals before dissecting them so that they wouldn’t have to hear them scream and be bothered by the potential for empathy.

It’s part of an entire culture of silence, a culture of trauma (Derrick Jensen, A Language Older Than Words, & The Culture of Make Believe). It’s a deafening silence. So much of right-wing ideology and the reactionary mind, specifically in its modern American form, is simply about mass, transgenerational trauma as part of a self-perpetuated victimization cycle.

That is what underlies the desire to be special, to be among the lucky and privileged few. The right-wing is about a dangerous world and the need for group dominance and status, for group power, protection, and privilege.

Though liberalism accepts and even celebrates difference, the twin force of egalitarianism tells us that no one is inherently and ultimately more worthy than anyone else. Rather than to become a victimizer among victims, rather than to be on the winning team of social Darwinism or religious salvation, it’s the anti-authoritarian and anti-dominance aspiration to end the victimization cycle entirely.

To desperately cling to specialness out of fear is no great victory, no worthy prize. It provides us nothing we need and nothing that can help us, even as it creates a mirage of safety and strength, my group against the world.

This can be brought back around to the need for melodrama of conflict and competition. The reactionary mind and Burkean moral imagination requires a ritualistic creation of enemies to be fought, usurpers to be overthrown, and threats to be scapegoated. In being cut off not only from others but also from their own vitality as part of an expansive self in a living world, right-wingers feel compelled to artificially pump up the grandiosity of their small-minded identity.

In the end, right-wing ideology is boring.

It closes down curiosity, fascination, and wonder; all things liberal-minded that drive people to play and create, to explore and experiment, to invent and innovate, to question and learn. It sacrifices the very heart of what it means to be human, the simple enjoyment of being alive in a shared world.

Ironically, right-wingers hate this self-caused boredom most of all. Of such soul-sucking ennui and soul-deadening alienation, no one would choose this sorry fate accept as a threat response, a trauma response. It’s mere survival, at all costs. Fear can motivate you to react against something, but it can lead to nothing greater, not even fear writ large as Cosmic War or Clash of Civilizations.

* * *

Those are empty fictions, illusions of meaning that slips through their fingers as they try to grasp hold of them. That is why right-wingers, even when they win, feel like they’ve lost.

And so they constantly look for the next division, conflict, and battle. If none is available, they’ll invent one. That is why, when right-wingers do gain power, they so often turn on one another in a bloodbath (e.g., Nazi leaders who, once Nazis seized control, immediately killed competing Nazi leaders). If external enemies are defeated, the next step is to look for internal enemies. In the right-wing world, there has to be someone to oppose and attack, scapegoat and eliminate.

Having had taken up this attitude was the later regret of the Lutheran pastor Martin Niemöller.

He was a German patriot, fervent nationalist, World War I veteran, social conservative, anti-communist, opponent to Weimar democracy, right-wing authoritarian, xenophobe, anti-Semite, and fundamentalist leader. He supported and voted for the Nazi Party, the defenders of everything he believed in, or so he thought.

As the famous quote of his words describes, Niemöller didn’t speak out in defense of the innocent when he had the opportunity. He silently and complicitly did nothing when Nazis put left-wingers, minorities, etc in death camps. It was only after he criticized Nazi religious policy that, like other religious dissidents and heretics (Jews, Mormons, Seventh Day Adventists), he suddenly found himself on the wrong side of persecution and oppression. After some time in prisons, he too ended up in a concentration camp.

Once the Nazis had taken care of all the enemies that he too wanted destroyed, the Nazis needed new enemies and then even mild critics like him were offered up as sacrifices. As he explained, in having stood up for no one else, there was no one left to stand up for him. As victims can become victimizers, sometimes victimizers become victims of their own desire to victimize others. (Israeli Zionists and MAGA evangelicals might eventually learn this lesson.)

It never ends.

Ever smaller differences are deemed a mark of sin and guilt, until the entire population is terrified into submission in knowing that any of them might be next. But at least, the right-winger isn’t bored. That’s what really matters, right? It’s why god-emperor Donald Trump is constantly ginning up violent conflict and, if he doesn’t perfectly succeed in getting the desired reaction, Fox News, Newsmax, and other right-wing media will spin it that way for the entertainment of MAGA followers.

It’s all about the entertainment, the excitement, about not being bored.* It’s almost like having a sense of meaning and purpose.

[*See: Boredom in the Mind: Liberals and Reactionaries, Violent Fantasy of Reactionary Intellectuals, The Fantasy of Creative Destruction, Reactionary Mind in Reactionary Times, & Erotic Fantasies of Moral Imagination.]

* * *

To the right-wing mind, anything along the lines of liberal democracy is simultaneously boring, weak, and dangerous. What is desired is to have the right kind of people to rule, with all others kept out. The struggle for power is exciting, whereas democratic process — especially as egalitarian mutualism — is the opposite. That’s why right-wingers prefer war. It’s the ultimate expression of their political vision.

But conflict and threat is also a political tactic.

Stress induces and strengthens the right-wing, reactionary mind. In general, the right-wing seeks agitation and anxiety, often combined with group narcissism and egoic inflation. The imagined greatness of threats and enemies is used to boost the narratized greatness of collective identity (Schizoid Reaction: Enemies are Weak and Strong).

It’s why they use moral panic, scapegoating, folk devils, witch-hunts, political religion, aestheticization of politics, society of spectacle (Guy Debord),  shock doctrine (Naomi Klein), flood the zone, the big lie, and fearmongering (e.g., cultivation theory and mean world syndrome).

It’s all about ginning up emotions. This is why the right-wing has come to dominate social media that operates through eliciting emotional responses to get clicks, views, and engagement. Anger, outrage, vengeance, lust, envy, schadenfreude, etc. It doesn’t matter, whichever emotional reaction is most intense and engaging.

The right-winger, though, is particularly an addict of fear; or at least that is so for RWAs, if SDOs (and honor types) likely would also be drawn to status-related emotions like pride and shame. As their tolerance builds, they need an increasingly bigger hit of their favored drug. This is the reason why right-wing power tends to be self-destructive. It constantly pushes toward greater extremes and atrocities, until it overdoses on its own terror, chokes and suffocates on it’s own ‘greatness’ (What does stress do to the mind? And why?).

Adolf Hitler in a bunker as Germany was being pulverized and invaded is the fullest culmination and final endpoint of the right-wing vision of totalizing violent conflict. Even Hitler found it a fitting ending of sorts. As he argued, the German people must prove their superiority by defeating all enemies and conquering the world or else, if proven inferior in battle, to be wiped from the face of the earth.

It was a Manichaean vision of absolutes. There can be tolerated the domination and rule of only one ideology, one group, one race, one religion, one party, one leader — one ring to rule them all. Any number of things can play this role. But whatever it it is, it must be absolute and totalizing. Even complete defeat and decimation would be preferable to being bored.

I’m not sure what conclusion to make and what lesson to take away. Maybe this: Don’t be a right-winger. Just don’t. It will end in a vale of tears, if you ever do gain power.

Ranita Ray’s Slow Violence: Book Review

In her book Slow Violence published last year, the sociologist Ranita Ray explained and explored her ethnographic study of the US education system. Beginning in 2017 and continuing until the COVID shutdown, her research was done in Las Vegas, Nevada. She observed classrooms in one of the country’s largest minority-majority school districts, but where most of the teachers are white.

It’s the kind of work I seek out.

It’s a scathing leftist critique of a dominant system that is part of larger problems in society. But also, it combines the personal with the objective and analytical, the scientific and scholarly. In writing about it, she refused a posture of academic neutrality by, instead, taking a strong position of righteous judgment toward unfair cruelty, social injustice, and collective failure.

I also appreciated how she talked about health. It went beyond physical, emotional, and psychological health.

She also referred to ‘political health’. And in relation to ‘political consciousness’, she spoke of ‘political well-being’. I like that way of putting it, as it properly radicalizes what is at stake. Such strong language may only be sprinkled throughout the text, but it stood out in my reading. While political health resonates with public health, it further points to the issues of power, specifically power that is held over others versus being empowered in oneself and holding mutual power.

Political health, without a doubt, is a fundamental and foundational requirement of democracy, of a free people. So, it’s no minor issue.

If public school teachers may not think of themselves as powerful, they are in relation to the children in their charge. The problem might be the very fact that teachers generally feel so powerless, in being employed within a dysfunctional bureaucracy where they have so little autonomy and self-determination, not to mention little respect in the larger society. Their only direct authority is over the students in their classrooms, and so those children could become the easy target of their frustration.

Giving Ray’s work an additional edge, she has a personal stake in the very structural and institutional prejudices she describes. She sees herself in the children she came to know.

During her childhood in India, her family scraped together just enough money to send her to a government-subsidized, English-based boarding school that was an institutional legacy from British colonialism. If getting a barely adequate formal education at all might’ve made her lucky, the school was so underfunded as to lack teachers for some classes.

Worse still, while there, she experienced what it was like to be stigmatized, denigrated, shamed, and punished for belonging to the lower class Indian culture that didn’t conform to white Western norms and expectations. If different than the US, she was part of an assimilationist project to separate her from her traditional community, to ‘civilize’ and Westernize her (speak proper English, eat with utensils, etc).

One can sense the anger, outrage, and frustration burning just below the surface of the author’s words and, on many occasions, stated outright. In the classes she sat in, she saw the maltreatment and abuse firsthand and, even as an expert already familiar with it all, she came away shocked at how pervasive it was. Plus, she was forced into the moral harm of not only witnessing the tragedy but also, as an academic researcher, in being forbidden to intervene when it was happening before her eyes.

All she could do was watch, take notes, and bide her time. But obviously, she wasn’t a neutral, detached observer.

So, she came to feel guilt about what she worried was her passive complicity in the very system she hoped to criticize and challenge. The book, obviously, was a cathartic experience for her. She finally could speak out, if it was too late for the children she saw hurt years before and who would now be outside the public education system entirely.

As much as it’s a scholarly work, Slow Violence also at times verges on a near jeremiad, and that is meant as a compliment of sorts. We need more people, especially scholars and public intellectuals, willing to speak uncomfortable truths and speak them without quibbling. She is to be commended for having the courage to say what so many didn’t want to hear, hence with much pushback.

But it should be clarified that Ray doesn’t limit herself to mere complaint and protest.

* * *

To demonstrate her left-wing credentials, Ray goes so far as to advocate school abolitionism, with a distinction between schooling and education. However, she only brings it up in her concluding thoughts, as her primary intent is to first and foremost show what’s happening in public schools, to simply wake up the public in recognizing there is a problem at all.

That advocacy indicates strong left-libertarian tendencies, though she never explicitly details her ideological principles and political commitments. This radical proposal, certainly, isn’t in line with right-wing attacks on public schools, as part of fearing an educated citizenry — liberal-minded and liberated — that might demand real democracy. She leans in the opposite direction. In her view, it’s akin to the prison abolitionist movement that itself took inspiration from the success of slave abolition.

If it’s not clear how seriously she takes this radical vision, the point is that we should feel compelled to have a moral reckoning about the history of schooling that has formed into present realities. In acknowledging the problems of how schooling is actually practiced, we should come to terms with how far that diverges from democratic aspirations, in how public education is conceived and perceived in the public imaginary. Then we can publicly debate the possibilities of what could take its place, or else how it could be reformed.

It’s necessary to survey the origins of public education in the US. It’s a history few are ever taught, in public or private schools. (This wasn’t a focus of Ray’s book either.)

Early 20th century Progressivism was often led by paternalistic right-wingers. One well known advocate was Theodore Roosevelt, an avowed elitist, racist, misogynist, conservative, fundamentalist, and imperialist. The movement to create universal education was once the darling of socially conservative right-wingers, specifically WASPS who were nativists and ethnonationalists, sometimes also white supremacists, eugenicists, and fascists.

In the moral panic of the late 1800s to early 1900s, right-wingers feared and hated the multicultural hordes of ethnic populations (i.e., hyphenated Americans) that flooded in as waves of immigrants and that formed into ethnic enclaves. Specifically, their animosity and prejudice was directed at: Catholics and Jews; Mexicans, Irish, Italians, Germans, and Eastern Europeans. These other ethnicities were sometimes deemed as non-white or as questionable in their whiteness, certainly not of the good sort.

These ethnics were perceived as unAmerican and, possibly, an enemy within. It was assumed they had greater loyalty to their ancestral homelands, their ethnic communities, and their traditional religions. There was particular paranoia about the Pope’s authority, as if the Vatican conspired to take over the US; an old conspiracy theory that went back to the country’s founding.

Those ties of traditional social order needed to be broken to make the ethnics into real Americans. It also helped weaken regional identities in creating a common American identification with the nation-state, as part of the modernizing process. Along with many other means, the Pledge of Allegiance required in schools was used to this end. Schooling was largely about citizen-making, as part of the Melting Pot.

Similar to the reservation school system, public education was intended to enforce assimilation by taking children out of their homes and communities. Public schools sought to compete with and replace private schools run by ethnic groups, as well as by the Catholic Church and other religions. The purpose was to eliminate ethnic identity and autonomy. This was the same period of English-only laws that forbade speaking and writing non-English languages in any official manner, especially in schools.

Then in the world war period and into the early Cold War, propaganda was actively part of the curriculum in the education system, combined with America studies at the college level. That legacy continues in the present education system that is a sanitized pedagogy serving the elite interests of the American Empire.

Another early stated purpose of public schools was to prepare children for the workforce in industrialized capitalism. So, it was also meant to indoctrinate and interpellate the youngest generation into capitalist realism, as rural communities and extended families were dissolved during mass urbanization. This was particularly important as many rural Americans and rural European immigrants had, up to that point, still been living in partly pre-capitalist economies, with lingering traditional cultures and carryovers from the Ancien Regime.

It’s surprising how long it took capitalism to fully take over by eliminating all that came before it.

Even into the early post-war period of the mid-20th century, some rural communities continued to operate based on kin networks, subsistence farming, access to resources on the commons (hunting, trapping, fishing), and a barter economy. Having been born in 1946 with his formative early years in the 1950s, the West Virginian Joe Bageant described this still existing pre-capitalism in his memoir, Rainbow Pie. His family literally lived off the land.

[For the longer historical context, in the United Kingdom, the last remnants of the Charter of the Forests (1217) wasn’t fully eliminated until the neoliberal-neocon revolution. That charter protected the commons for public use by the propertyless commoners (i.e., economic rights of the working class). It’s one of the most radical documents ever written, and some consider it to be a foundation of the US Constitution (Guy Standing, Why You’ve Never Heard of a Charter That’s as Important as the Magna Carta). Its final repeal happened in 1971 (same year as the Powell Memo), slightly over a half century ago and so well within living memory.]

During the Cold War, the public education system was revamped to better serve industrialized capitalism and the military-industrial complex, so as to better compete against the Soviet commies. That was when started the takeover of STEM education. With most ethnic cultures and communities destroyed at that point, and with immigration intentionally suppressed, schools could even more intensely focus on churning out subjugated worker-citizens for a modern economy in service to big biz.

So, it’s not only the failure of schooling, as related to democratic education and social justice, but also its ‘success’ toward ends we might deem questionable. To know how to fix education, we’d first have to agree about its legitimate reason for existing at all.

To Ray’s mind, the purpose of education isn’t merely intellectual achievement, to be ascertained by standardized testing, and to be rewarded with good grades, with any failing to be punished. And definitely she isn’t hoping for proper assimilation, be it as patriotic citizens or obedient workers. Instead, she envisions an education system that promotes health and happiness, even pleasure and joy, but certainly one that empowers students to take control of their own education.

Once again, it’s personal for her.

Since finishing her research, she has been looking into schools for her own child (Finding a Joyful School). She wants a space where curiosity, creativity, and play can flourish. Basically, if she doesn’t state it exactly this way, what she considers to be the ultimate goal is to induce open-mindedness and liberal-mindedness. That’s to say greater expression of the dual personality trait of ‘openness to experience’ and ‘intellect’ (FFM), which only happens under healthy, low-stress conditions.

The point is to support children in exploring and developing their fullest potential, with as much freedom and opportunity as is possible. Education systems and institutions should serve children, as part of serving the public good. If one is opposed to the total abolition of schools, then achieving that end is the most basic requirement to be met to prove their legitimacy and justify their continuance.

To have a free society, we’ll need an education system that supports and promotes freedom. Democracy has to be instilled from childhood onward. That would be the main point of departure from public schools as they function now. We the citizenry can tolerate nothing less.

* * *

Notwithstanding my praise of Slow Violence, there were some oversights and missed opportunities.

First off, Ray attempts a delicate balance of empathic concern for both sides of the equation. If her ultimate sympathy and allegiance is to the children she followed for years and came to care for, she also recognizes how difficult and troubled is the teaching profession. Teachers are underpaid and overworked, with expectations placed upon them that are unrealistic and unfair. As she advocates for students, she also advocates for teachers and better teaching conditions — it’s all of the same package.

Yet she rightly sees that as no excuse for the bigotry, cruelty, and ignorance among many teachers that is casually practiced and has become socially normalized, or else unrecognized and unacknowledged. That is why she correctly refers to it as slow violence, a concept more often used in environmental studies (e.g., childhood lead toxicity) and health studies (e.g., shit life syndrome).

She is correct to apply it to public education, from the perspective of social science.

Such slow violence is inseparable from structural, systemic violence. The schools themselves, as public institutions, are part of the problem. But of course, it’s about the communities and entire society that forms the larger context of lived experience. The sad part is that the public schools meant to be a respite and saving grace for these children more often than not contribute to their hardships. And too many teachers are part of the problem.

The missed opportunity in the book, though, is precisely that the author didn’t delve into what’s done to psyche, identity, and behavior under severe, chronic stress that so easily causes trauma and forms into PTSD, as part of victimization cycle. Calling it ‘toxic stress’ in The Deepest Well, Dr. Nadine Burke Harris shows how it relates to all aspects of health. American schools don’t represent healthy conditions for anyone involved.

Everyone is worse for it, and to an extreme degree.

It’s related to how high inequality causes problems not only for the poor but likewise for the economically well off (Keith Payne, The Broken Ladder). As the students are harmed, and as Ray was impacted by moral harm, so the same happens to many working within schools. It’s easy to forget how victimization perpetuates itself, with many of the victims becoming victimizers in turn. That is to say teachers aren’t protected from the stress, trauma, and oppression; especially as they’re products of the same schooling from their own early lives.

Teachers don’t stand above the fray but, rather, find themselves on the frontlines; and with little preparation for how to deal with any of it, much less the resources and support. What meager and superficial training they get for racism, abuse, etc is far from adequate. And if they step out of line once, if anything goes wrong, it’s the teacher who will be scapegoated with almost no one to step in for their defense.

Teaching in public schools is one of the hardest jobs in the world, and with little worthy compensation for all the hard work and heartache.

In addition, keep in mind that it’s not only the power differential and dynamic that creates an imbalance between teachers — mostly white, US-born, cisgender, able-bodied, and neurotypical — and their underprivileged students. A society like this is completely defined by high inequality, dominance hierarchy, and social Darwinism. The power disparities are found in all areas. Teachers too are disempowered by those who hold power above them in controlling the education system: administrators, school boards, PTAs, legislators, lobbyists, etc.

They are barely above the bottom of society. Many teachers don’t make enough money to meet their needs and so have to work second jobs or else, in some cases, live out of their vehicles. That economic insecurity or even outright desperation, for many, is layered upon physical, mental, and emotional exhaustion. Those who end up in teaching often have few other good options for, if nothing else, it’s a steady paycheck with basic benefits like healthcare.

Ray does understand this to a large extent and talks about it on multiple occasions. But I’m not sure she fully appreciates the significance of it, in what it does to the mind.

Yes, going by her account, most of the teachers she met had internalized problematic attitudes. Prejudice is as rampant in schools as it is in the society at large. As she points out, teachers are normal people and white teachers, specifically, are unfortunately representative of the average white American. I have no problem with her no-holds-barred condemnation of teachers who are plain bigots or who otherwise spread problematic views and fail to do right by their students.

But she doesn’t explore what shaped those people in the first place. Many teachers have been under extreme pressure for years, some for decades. It takes a toll as a deranging and corrupting force. Even if they had begun teaching as good liberals with the best of intentions, the entire system will wear people down and bring out the worse in them.

* * *

Social liberalism and liberal-mindedness has a tough time surviving the onslaught of illiberal forces (Paul R. Nail, et al, Threat causes liberals to think like conservatives). I’ve often referred to a number of specific examples in social science research.

As a clear demonstration, liberals who first learned of the 9/11 terrorist attack on television, in repeatedly viewing the violent footage played on a loop, were more likely to later support right-wing policies: Patriot Act, Homeland Security, expanded police powers, restrictions on civil liberties, etc (Dietram A. Scheufele, et al, September 11 News Coverage, Public Opinion, and Support for Civil Liberties). That’s an example of mean world syndrome, as explained by cultivation theory.

[As a side note, all of the the corporate MSM jointly and systematically having beaten the war drums, while pushing violent imagery and fear-mongering rhetoric, shifted public opinion from majority opposition to majority support toward the Iraq War. As part of mediated social construction of conflict (e.g., false reporting of non-existent WMDs) and as part of political spectacle, it took a lot of media-provoked-and-promoted stress and trauma to elicit greater illiberal and authoritarian compliance (Douglas Kellner, 9/11, spectacles of terror, and media manipulation). The so-called War On Terror was a War Of Terror on the American public mind.]

On a more basic level, simply getting liberals mildly inebriated increases conservative-style thinking of stereotypes, and the more drunk people get the more they express conservative views (Scott Eidelman, et al, Low-effort thought promotes political conservatism). Basically, as cognitive load and cognitive complexity was compromised, the liberal-minded fell back on simplifying heuristics. That would make them prone to prejudice and bigotry. If only temporarily, they became right-wingers.

As that shows, the kinds of stress that induce conservative-mindedness can be rather minor.

Other studies have found that, for judges, an uncomfortable chair or being hungry (and low blood-sugar) before lunch will cause them to be more punitive with longer sentencing, less likely to give pardons, etc. Now put that back into the context of the chronic, pervasive, and overwhelming stress teachers are under, probably including uncomfortable chairs as the least of it. Why would we be surprised that a dysfunctional system causes antisocial thought, attitudes, views, speech, and behavior?

Stress and trauma become internalized. It alters us at a neurological level. If it lasts long enough, if it remains unresolved and unhealed, it permanently restructures our brains and psyches.

The thing is that few people have the knowledge and awareness to understand how they’re impacted, not that there is much one could do about it when one has no personal control over one’s environment (e.g., work conditions in a dominance hierarchy and authoritarian society). Enculturation, indoctrination, and interpellation into oppressive systems tends to happen unconsciously and incrementally. No one would freely choose such a sad fate.

As a sociologist, Ray should understand better than most. She should know how this happens and so, optimally, she would’ve included it as part of her discussion. Sure, maybe it could be excused or at least explained as outside the scope of her work. Her focus was mainly on the children and how teachers affected them, not on what affected the teachers themselves.

Still, it’s such an important piece of the puzzle, arguably the piece that brings into focus the entire picture.

It was also relevant to the author herself, as we are all in need of intellectual and psychological self-defense. In the moments when she fell into moralizing about white teachers as individuals and as a group, one might interpret that as a stress-induced expression of right-wing mentality. If we are all responsible for what we do, ultimately that is a collective and mutual responsibility. As a fracturing of our common humanity, both identity politics and isolated individuality are dangerous illusions, as abstractions and distractions.

One could sense the reactionary impulse to frame and narratize it all as a Manichaean divide of dominant whites against all others, specifically where white teachers symbolically stand in for the entire ruling system of hegemonic oppression. As such, poor, powerless, and underprivileged whites are excluded, disappeared, and silenced, but also the system itself isn’t prioritized and interrogated to the degree that’s necessary.

How often did Ray ignore a troubling incident involving a poor white child because it didn’t fit the frameworking of her study?

What gets lost in it all is that the real divide is between the elite and everyone else, between the elite-controlled system and everyone caught in it. Turning whites and non-whites against one another is as unhelpful as doing the same for teachers and students. This plays into divide-and-conquer. Ray herself experienced the negative consequences of this false and counterproductive framing in how many people felt defensive when she spoke of it, in wrongly taking her critique as an attack.

Her take on it at times, if unintentionally, came too close to the gravity pull of a right-wing portrayal of group competition, us vs them. Genuine liberal-minded thinking can get suppressed and compromised without our realizing it. But fortunately, the author was partly able to pull back from the moralizing temptation. If she failed to offer a full class analysis, she did slightly acknowledge economic issues. For instance, it’s good she mentions that teacher pay is too low, but the stressors of our absolutely effed up society go far far far beyond that.

More likely than not, she understands that. I get that she was trying her best and the situation might be near impossible. Entrenched problems are hard to talk about and few want to face them or know how to. That’s all the more reason we leftists need to tread carefully, to communicate clearly, to avoid the most common traps of rhetoric and psychology.

If we want to push for left-wing solutions, we’re going to have to be tirelessly consistent and persistent in keeping the focus on the system itself, on the institutions and structures, on the conditions and other shared factors. That is the one and only point of leverage we have, in that it’s the Achille’s heel of right-wing influence and control. We must bear our entire collective strength on that pressure point.

This isn’t to say teachers shouldn’t be challenged and encouraged to question their own role in the system. But ultimately we leftists need to look upon them as prospective allies, as insiders who know the system and could help to change it. That’s all the more important in realizing so many on the left look upon teachers as heroes. If that is a fantasy, it’s nonetheless a genuine liberal ideal and dream about what public education should be.

We need to find a way of honoring the intent, while gently probing its failure.

* * *

That gets us to the other point that felt missing, if understandably.

As Ray maintained primary concern with the students, not the teachers, so she also kept a laser-like focus on what she considered the most disadvantaged students. That’s helpful to zero in on those who have been historically oppressed and disenfranchised, ignored and disregarded. But this might cause losing sight of the bigger picture, the system itself. In how both students and teachers are harmed by the same system and society, so is true of all students, far from limited to only those who are Black, brown, immigrant, trans, or what have you.

Even in writing on her own life, she doesn’t emphasize the socioeconomic class or caste of her family and her community. All we get is some comments that they were of limited means.

To my mind, class war and class prejudice is as important as other systemic problems and biases. The issues she is talking about, obviously, are a non-issue to wealthy minorities, immigrants, girls, LGBTQIA+ individuals, etc. It’s specifically the lack of wealth and privilege that underlies power disparities, that allows those in authority to treat perceived subordinates and inferiors badly without consequence.

What differentiates the teachers and students in her research wasn’t only race and such but also class.

Teachers, as mostly middle class whites (if often barely middle class), wouldn’t feel automatic racial sympathy for and solidarity with poor whites. That would particularly be true in the poorest white communities where the teachers were hired from elsewhere. Few of those white teachers would’ve grown up in the poor white community where they work nor in any other poor white community for that matter.

[It’s not unlike the fact that most teachers being women doesn’t make them any more open to disadvantaged girls in their classrooms, as her own research elsewhere shows (Mary Beth King, Research finds Black, immigrant girls of color face hostile classrooms). Sharing a demographic detail — be it race, gender, or anything else — doesn’t create an automatic link of shared identity, mutual respect, and moral concern.]

Or to consider the opposite scenario, if she had studied Black, brown, and immigrant students in elite private schools, she surely wouldn’t have made the same observations. The parents of those children could pressure the school administration, could sue teachers, or could simply move take their children elsewhere. White teachers, in such schools, would feel compelled to be deferential to those non-white students.

It all comes down to class. It’s just that, in the US, class has always been conflated with much else. The author failed to take that into account and disentangle it.

In the text, references to ‘poverty’ and the ‘poor’ only comes up a handful of times and only in passing. She only once includes the poor when making a list: “poor, Black, Latinx, brown, immigrant, disabled, and indigenous children.” Also, the only time she even mentions the “students’ socioeconomic status” was in reference to the teachers being “acutely aware” of it and having “pitied them” for it. But apparently, other than dismissing such pity as condescension, it didn’t merit even the briefest and most superficial class analysis.

I suppose it simply isn’t her area of expertise. A scholar can’t necessarily incorporate every possible factor and issue. But in it popping up every now and then in her language, she was clearly aware of it being relevant enough to be mentioned, if only in passing.

It plays into the previous point I made about unhealthy conditions, chronic stress, lingering trauma, and moral harm. Arguably, it’s economics that underlies, worsens, and exacerbates all else. It’s not the only thing, but the capitalist order we live in can’t be otherwise understood. It’s the economics that determines every aspect in the lives of children and adults, students and teachers.

* * *

The omission of class analysis is particularly striking as her previous book, The Making of a Teenage Service Class, was about racialized poverty and socioeconomic mobility.

And I would think that someone from India, where socioeconomic status has been historically structured according to caste and historically restructured according to colonial imperialism, would grasp this far better than most. For a long period of time, in fact, India was brutally ruled over by a Western corporation, the British East India Company, and so made to comply with proto-capitalist mercantilism. The Western imprint of economic power and dominance is stark in that country and one would presume she felt the legacy of it in her own childhood.

Then again, maybe it’s for that reason she wouldn’t as easily appreciate what economics means in the American social order. She came to the US as an adult. It’s possible her main American experience has been limited to places of higher education like the University of Connecticut, University of Nevada, and University of New Mexico where the whites she has personally known are mainly middle class professionals, from academics to teachers.

Whether or not she knows it, most poor Americans are white and most welfare recipients are white. Also related, as most prisoners in the US are white, it might be a safe guess to suspect that most children with single parents are white and most children in the school-to-prison pipeline are white too. Specifically about the author’s research, whites likely still represent the largest portion of the poor in US public schools, if that might be shifting or already shifted as a national minority-majority approaches.

All in all, even as minorities and immigrants are disproportionately targeted and harmed, the permanent underclass remains majority white.

I get it. We should be fair by understanding someone’s context of experience. This wouldn’t have stood out to Ray where she did her research in Las Vegas. The poor residing there are mostly non-white. That is likely true in some other states like California, as well as true all across the Southwest and, of course, in the Deep South.

But she would’ve gotten an entirely different view of society if she’d done her research in the rural areas and inner cities of regions elsewhere: Appalachia, Upper South, New England, Midwest, Great Plains, Far West, and Northwest. The poorest counties in the country are in Appalachia, one of the whitest regions in the country. The only area of worse concentrated poverty is the Pine Ridge Reservation.

Here in Iowa, the poorest and most disadvantaged, on average, are definitely on the pale side of the skin color spectrum.

As she knows the poor and immigrant minority perspective, I have some familiarity with poor whites. I went to public schools in the Deep South, that of South Carolina, that were an even mix of races and socioeconomic status, some of it white poverty. And  I’ve also spent time in the rural Upper South, from North Carolina to Kentucky. But most of all, the greatest portion of my life has been here in Iowa and elsewhere in the Midwest. This includes my own working class family in Indiana.

One specific example stands out in my mind (Victimization Culture and Lesser Evilism). West Branch is a neighboring town to Iowa City. I’ve known various people who have lived there, in some cases during their early life. One of these is a close friend who is white and experienced the dark side of that town. To be clear, it is racist, likely an old sundown town; as five black families disappeared, in the early 1900s, from one census to another.

My friend saw how minorities were driven out, including a cross-burning on a Black family’s lawn. But any perceived outsiders and pariahs, such as my friend and her family, were also excluded and persecuted. Oddly enough, her parents were even teachers, one in town and the other here in Iowa City. But they were perceived as low class because the family lived in a rundown old building, the location of a former business, by the railroad tracks.

For decades, one of the most respected community leaders was Coach Butch Pederson (Victimization Culture and Lesser Evilism). His reputation was based on bringing the town football victories for the high school team. But working in the school, he also taught classes and my friend sometimes had him as a teacher. In that role, he had another reputation from bullying kids, mostly white kids since it’s an almost entirely white town. My friend, as a neurodivergent, became a target of his sadism and it left her traumatized.

That’s the thing about oppressive societies. They harm everyone on the bottom of society. It gets built into the culture, social order, and institutions (economic, political, educational, etc). Consider areas in the US that had the most concentration of slavery in the past. To this day, these places have some of the greatest inequality, worst poverty, and most distrust, not only for Blacks but also whites (Christine Kenneally, Invisible History of the Human Race; Nicholas Kristof, When Whites Just Don’t Get It, Part 4; & Facing Shared Trauma and Seeking Hope).

This relates to why the Deep South not only has the highest rates of conservatism, authoritarianism, social dominance orientation, honor culture (honor concern), fundamentalism, and patriotism — all of them overlapping (O.K. Nop & M.D. Hammond, A meta-analysis and test of the overlap between honor concern, right-wing authoritarianism, and social dominance orientation) — but also a prevalence of aggression, abuse (child, spousal), bullying, hate crimes, violent crimes, accidents (guns, vehicles, boats, work), drunk driving, learning disabilities, high school dropouts, drug addiction, mental illness, cardiometabolic disease, STDs, teen pregnancies, etc.*

Under bad conditions, everything is bad for everyone, if it hurts some more than others, and so everyone acts badly. But the addiction to power and privilege is so alluring that many are willing to pay the price to maintain such a dysfunctional social order (Costs Must Be Paid: Social Darwinism As Public Good; & Capitalism as Social Control). Or else the oppressiveness of it all shuts down the mind so that they can’t imagine anything else.

The ruling elite there have sought to maintain a dominance hierarchy, that of both racism and classism. They’ve done so by disinvesting in all areas of public good, public welfare, public infrastructure, and public education; especially the latter as the wealthy children are sent to private schools.

My mother worked in public schools in the Deep South, and indeed it was in areas of former mass enslavement. Some of the poor white kids she dealt with were struggling with severe problems, and the schools were in no position to help them in the way and to the degree they needed. As a white woman, similar to most of the teachers in Ray’s research, I don’t know how my mother treated her students. I’m sure she tried do right by them, but it’s also likely she was carrying unconscious prejudices.

The point is disadvantages and underprivileges, oppressions and harm come in many forms. And it varies greatly from one population to another, in how the US is a vast and diverse country or, rather, empire.

* * *

White poverty gets overlooked because it doesn’t always match the stereotype of poverty (or at least not the stereotype that’s become fashionable), as portrayed among the Black and brown populations in the old inner cities and post-industrial metros. Poor whites sometimes can pass as not poor just by dressing slightly better. Indeed, research shows its easier for poor whites to become assimilated into middle class white communities. Yet they might remain poor, and some of the programs and services directed to minorities would be unavailable to poor whites (not to suggest DEI isn’t necessary).

In any case, the average poor white never escapes poverty, never finds their way into the middle class. They tend to get overlooked in the mainstream narrative of middle-to-upper class whites versus poor, underprivileged, and immigrant minorities. But what happens to poor whites is inseparable to what happens to poor non-whites. It’s all the same indifference and depravity that victimizes children before they’ve even had a chance.

As a blind spot for the author of Slow Violence, it might be a byproduct of the author’s higher education and university career.

Notoriously, academics tend to fall into the silo effect, and even told to stay in their lane. There is probably little interdisciplinary dialogue and in-depth research that, with complexity and nuance, specifically combines poor whites with other disadvantaged populations. For various reasons, experts in one field of study tend to not be experts in the other, nor tend to talk to experts in the other.

It’s not a unique problem in this case. I’ve come across plenty of scholarly (and journalistic) writings about poor whites where there is little or no discussion beyond that demographic. It’s the nature of present academia to narrowly focus on a niche area of study. Besides, wide-ranging curiosity and broad knowledge has never been typical, inside or outside academia.

It’s also likely a simple issue of geographic separation.

The worst white poverty and the worst non-white poverty are often concentrated in totally different parts of the country. Typically, to be near one is to not be near the other. A researcher might have to go to greater effort by traveling to multiple areas to see both and/or to find the few parts of the country where the two populations mix, such as in the Deep South.

A similar problem comes with identity politics where the emphasis is on what divides us (demographics, labels, citizenship status, etc), rather than what unites us or potentially might unite us (high inequality, capitalist oppression, economic struggle, labor organizing, etc). We live in a shared society with shared problems. That could inspire a humanistic vision of group consciousness, solidarity, the commons, and the public good. But that will never happen as long as every separate group, in isolation, is focused on its own concerns as being in competition with the concerns of others.

This is how the identity politics of disadvantaged groups plays right into the narrative frame of the identity politics of right-wingers. That is a conflict that the broad left can never win, as our only path of progress is to reframe it. The right-wing will always excel at dominating under divisiveness.

If left-wingers want to start winning again, we’ll have to recruit potential allies.

That’s what the Black Panther’s did with the Rainbow Coalition, under the charismatic and visionary leadership of Fred Hampton. Among others like feminists and AIM, he reached out to the Young Patriots, an organization of Southern poor whites who had moved to Chicago. Hampton didn’t see it as a zero-sum game but as an opportunity to create strength through numbers and solidarity.

Still, for its limitations and shortcomings, Ranita Ray’s Slow Violence is a much needed view into a problem that has gone unappreciated. As she points out, it simply doesn’t fit into any of the conventional narratives, neither on the Right nor the Left. But it’s just one key take among many others. No single area of scholarship will ever show us the full picture, as the amount of problems we face is immense and daunting.

* * *

All text below is taken from Ranita Ray:

It Never Seems to Be a Good Time to Talk About Teachers’ Racism
by Ranita Ray

Teachers like Ms. Connnell have recently been the targets of right-wing attacks for teaching a curriculum on America’s history of racial oppression, colloquially referred to as critical race theory. Many have come to these teachers’ defense, pointing out the necessity of including basic American history in school curricula. In these debates, people across the political spectrum tend to assume that white teachers–who make up 79 percent of the public school teaching force–are comfortably, and truthfully, teaching about America’s history and the present realities of racial oppression. However, my research reveals something different: a disturbing picture of what is actually happening. […]

What I discovered was rampant racism, cruelty, and indifference from teachers working inside public schools. Most of the teachers I observed were not, in fact, teaching about America’s racist history but instead were perpetuating everyday racial violence against their students inside the classroom. While the idea is not prominent in public discourse, I am not alone in finding teacher racism to be an everyday presence in the American classroom. One recent study, for example, found that teachers hold as much implicit and explicit pro-white racial bias as nonteachers do. Education scholar Michael Dumas has written about teacher racism and Black suffering inside the classroom, showing that these attitudes have concrete outcomes. And students themselves know this. Social media is replete with students talking about teacher racism, and they have often taken to the streets to protest it.

The curriculum I witnessed in action at the elementary and middle schools I studied was certainly multicultural, as it is in many urban school districts. Teachers lectured extensively about the civil rights movement, and students read books about Black families, such as The Watsons Go to Birmingham–1963, to learn about it. Teachers also received extensive anti-racist and cultural sensitivity trainings through the district and within the schools.

But what I observed in the classrooms didn’t reflect any of that. Just as Ms. Connell readily divorced past from present, another white teacher, Ms. Trevor, minimized racial oppression by suggesting it was similar to discrimination based on height. […] As all of these 9- and 10-year-old Black and brown kids started to bring in examples of various types of discriminated-against categories, such as height, weight, and age, I sate there documenting how Ms. Trevor’s lesson on the civil rights movement and segregation ended up having absolutely nothing to do with the matter at hand: racism.

Slow Violence: Confronting Dark Truths in the American Classroom
by Ranita Ray

p. 3

Ribbon had nearly 800 students in Las Vegas’s Clark County School District, which at the time served over 320,000 children. In 2017, approximately 24.5 percent of students in the district were white, compared to New York City’s current 16 percent, Chicago’s 11 percent, and Los Angeles’s `10 percent. Also in 2017, 70 percent of Clark County teachers were white, closely resembling the national numbers as well.

pp. 5-6

The American left tends to valorize teachers as altruistic, self-sacrificing, benevolent people, and the conservative right despises them for supposedly indoctrinating our children with liberal sexual education and histories of racial oppression that villainize white people.

Both of these are false and both of them justify teachers’ abysmal pay and heinous working conditions: you don’t need to fight for higher pay if you come for the love of leading our next generation, and you certainly don’t need higher pay if your job is to indoctrinate innocent children.

I spent three years among fifteen teachers and talked with hundreds of others across two schools and the entire district and found one teacher who had come to the profession motivated by altruism and a love for children and teaching. And only one other expressed any interest in cultivating some kind of political consciousness in the children they taught. The teachers you will meet in this book are ordinary people for whom it is a job, a means to make ends meet. Many of them are young and have, or had, other dreams and aspirations; they come to teaching because it is a stable occupation with health insurance and a retirement plan. Over 80 percent of public school teachers in the US are white and a little over 60 percent of them white women. It’s an accessible profession for them. But fewer and fewer teachers think it a desirable job. Yet they come, perhaps because there are several routes to it that are not time-consuming–provisional licenses, traditional and nontraditional paths for those with or without a bachelor’s degree.

Teacher’s attitudes to questions of racial, gender, or class inequalities resemble those of the general public. For example, Princeton, National Institutes of Health, and Tufts researchers found that teachers harbor as much racial animosity toward nonwhite people as the general public.

After the years I spent inside public schools in Las Vegas, I was not surprised to learn that in a survey conducted in the two months preceding the November 2024 election between Donald Trump and JD Vance over Kamala Harris and former educator Tim Walz. Among educators between the ages of 45 and 60, 41 percent planned to vote for Donald Trump. To sum up, while teachers’ unions backed Harris, the story of educators is more complex.

p. 257

The Census Bureau’s Household Pulse Survey in 2020 revealed that 3 percent of Black families engaged in homeschooling. By October of the same year, the number had gone up to 16 percent. Cheryl Field-Smith, a sociocultural scholar at the University of Georgia, has conducted research showing that a growing number of Black families are opting to homeschool to avoid racism in school. Online schools during COVID exposed some of the classroom slow violence to guardians of Black, brown, immigrant, and trans children, and many people newly confronted how many of these bullies are teachers. Black families who wanted their children to learn deeply about Black history and culture, freely and with dignity, also realized this could not occur at school.

p. 261

High-achieving poor, Black, Latinx, brown, immigrant, disabled, and Indigenous children become a testament to the great success of the US education system. Their academic success is supposedly a harbinger of a fulfilling life. But even good students were treated so poorly.

p. 262

After three years behind the closed doors of the American classroom and many more years of analyzing what I saw, it was clear to me that a focusing on the achievement gap is not only the wrong fight but often becomes a trap. The slow violence of the teachers at Ribbon and Dorena damaged and diminished their students, regardless of academic achievement.

A wide range of child abuse inside schools is not an uncommon phenomenon. CCSD took extensive precautions against student-on-student bullying or sexual harassment by teachers. The district hosted events, provided training around identifying student bullies and tackling them, and made sexual harassment trainings compulsory. the focus on sexual abuse and peer-on-peer bullying, serious issues no doubt, the districts treated as the be-all and end-all, ignoring issues of teachers bullying students.

pp. 265-6

David Stovall, a professor at the University of Illinois Chicago, wrote a paper called “Are We Ready for ‘School’ Abolition? Thoughts and Practices of Radical Imaginary in Education.” Three things stand out to me from the paper that give shape to the idea of school abolitionism in the legacy of the prison abolition movement. First, Stovall and other more critical scholars pf schooling have urged us to understand schooling as separate and distinct from education. Second, Stovall considers how schools in the US, as they are structured, demand and reward compliance. Finally, Stovall urges that in the tradition of prison abolitionism, we demand the impossible.

One of those impossible things is to insist on a more honest conversation about the stark power differential between teachers and students, especially little children who are ten-, eleven-, and twelve-year-olds. The realities of larger power relations that oppress Black, brown, immigrant, and trans people coincide with this fact that teachers have absolute authority inside the classroom and students in places like Ribbon and Dorena have close to none. That teachers have it hard does not preclude the fact that they are capable of immense harm, whether they always do or not, and that the colossal power differential between mostly white teachers and their Black, brown, immigrant, queer, fat, and trans children is a material reality, and it is unsafe. But because we assume teachers’ omnipresent altruism, we don’t look carefully. Yet, most of us can recall a mean teacher, someone who at one point or another hurt or harassed us.

This is also an organizational issue–the school is a workplace where teachers have managerial authority over the students they teach. Research on work and organizations has long established how those with authority are prone to abusing their power, especially against people who are otherwise marginalized. And in most city schools, the children are racially and economically marginalized and young. So, should what I witnessed really surprise us?

This type of everyday harassment and bullying–like being labeled as sexual predators, thieves, morally bankrupt–by adults who are meant to protect them can in fact alter children’s physiology. Researchers have found that psychological stressors such as everyday harassment activate the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis stress system. The hormones released by the HPA axis help us adapt; however, chronically elevated levels during childhood and adolescence can damage this system. Stress, like that from slow violence, can negatively alter a child’s brain.

Alongside engaging a deep conversation interrogating schools as they exist, we can demand a stronger teacher’s union that fights for better pay and working conditions for teachers; that fights for Black, brown, immigrant, and queer teachers inside the classroom.

What does stress do to the mind? And why?

Frescoes in Sistine Chapel by Michelangelo. (Wikimedia Commons)

Threat and Competition, Authoritarianism and Dominance

Stress, specifically severe and chronic, doesn’t only cause, worsen, or increase trauma, physical sickliness, mental illness, addiction, alcoholism, antisociality, dysfunction, impulsivity, aggression, and violence; doesn’t simply or inevitably damage people, waste human potential, and cripple a society. It’s not only a factor of harm, as the human species evolved to deal with stress, sometimes to thrive in it. Human nature always seeks to make the best out of a bad situation, even when it comes at great cost. The human reaction to stress always attempts, however imperfectly and inadequately in many cases, to rise to the occasion. This might be why collective action is often most impressively successful in response to the hardest of times, such as the New Deal following the Great Depression. Difficulties can force people to think more deeply and innovatively. It shakes up the stultifying status quo and lets fresh air into the public mind and imagination.

Right-wing mentality, behavior, and social order is an evolved adaptive response of survival toward threats and competition: mortality salience, terror management theory, etc. Real or perceived threats, risk, danger, violence, and death induces right-wing authoritarianism (RWA), as linked to low measures of liberal-minded ‘openness to experience’. Whereas competition, conflict, high inequality, dominance hierarchy, and power disparity induces social dominance orientation (SDO), which is positively correlated to dark triad (Machiavellianism, narcissism, & psychopathy; + sadism) and negatively correlated to ‘honesty-humility’ (HEXACO). RWAs are the stereotypical authoritarian followers and SDOs the stereotypical authoritarian leaders, with Double Highs (RWA+SDO) concentrated on the far right (Bob Altemeyer). Threats and competition tend to coincide, which is why RWAs and SDOs tend to operate in concert as part of shared authoritarian movements, groups, and power structures.

The point is that its adaptive, however distasteful and demoralizing this is to liberals and leftists. Though one doesn’t want to get stuck in such a worldview, our species might not have survived without this capacity. Think of parasite-stress theory and the behavioral immune system. Infectious diseases and parasites that are spread by human contact (nonzoonotic) increase conservatism, authoritarianism, xenophobia, and punitiveness — oppressively closing down society and closing ranks to exclude outsiders. Every society that turned totalitarian earlier last century had high rates of such disease. Yet it can motivate and inspire a population toward greatness. Look how the USSR transformed a feudal society into a modern industrialized global superpower almost over night, if it can’t be denied that it was done brutally. The Soviets didn’t just generally overhaul their society but, specifically, improved public health. The infectious disease rate dropped vastly. This is the likely cause for why the late Soviet period saw a liberalization of culture, an emerging openness as the strictures loosened. Ironically, authoritarian policies, by having improved health conditions, likely contributed to authoritarianism having lost its binding power over the public mind.

Germans stand on top of the Wall in front of the Brandenburg Gate, before this section was torn down in the hours before the West German leader walked through the Gate to greet his East German counterpart. (Wikimedia Commons)

Regal vs Kungic, Greatness vs Goodness, Work vs Labor

Extreme stress tends to bring out extremes in human nature, both good and ill. The negative extremes stand out because of how destructive and sad they can be. So much unnecessary struggle and suffering is the cost of a stressed-out society, especially seen in high inequality (Keith Payne, Richard Wilkinson, Kate Pickett, etc). Yet at the same time, stress puts the psyche into overdrive to confront, tackle, and resolve problems. Consider how humans come together during catastrophes (Rebecca Solnit, A Paradise Built In Hell). This can even be true for long-term stress. For the lucky few who survive the harm and aren’t ground down by it, for those who escape the worst of oppression and persecution, the challenges of a dangerous and deranged society can occasionally induce greater levels and expression of cognitive functioning. This is part of the survival response. The brain goes into high gear because it has to in order to match demands, but running at the maximum all the time has massive costs and consequences to health and well-being. Individuals, segments of the population, or entire generations are sacrificed for group survival.

This might be similar to the underlying dynamic for the old observation about creative genius coinciding with ‘madness’: emotional instability, psychiatric disorders, alcoholism, drug addiction, etc. The data does show that neurodivergence corresponds with mental illness, as well as physical illness — those with autism and/or ADHD are more likely to have mood disorders, addictive behavior, psychosis, dementia, metabolic syndrome, etc. It also fits an observation made by Agner Fog in his scholarly tome, Warlike and Peaceful Societies. What he calls a regal society is a combination of RWA and SDO; maybe think of it as dominance authoritarianism, beyond run-of-the-mill group conformity alone. Kungic societies, on the other hand, are a combination of liberalism and egalitarianism. But the distinction between the two stands out in cultural output. Many of the greatest artists in history were products of regality. In regal societies, literature, music, art, and architecture tends to be perfectionist, complex, meticulous, ornate, embellished, luxurious, and pompous; often large, conspicuous, obtrusive, glorifying, monumental, and permanent; as well as rule-bound, precise, controlled, formulaic, stylized, and repetitive. Regality is like porn. We all know it when we see it. But as few of us Americans have ventured far out of regality, the kungic is less familiar to us.

Baiga Tribe in India is known for their art of tattooing or ‘Godna’. (Wikimedia Commons)

While the regal aspires to greatness, the kungic is often satisfied with mere goodness or else mere personal value. Regality is meant to impress and overwhelm or even intimidate, to make one feel small and insignificant in comparison, such as an Egyptian pyramid or medieval cathedral that towers over the individual and reaches up to the sky. The difference is particularly seen at the other extreme endpoint of kungic societies. That tends toward the personal and idiosyncratic, often impermanent or even transitory with no aspiration of it lasting for millennia, much less imposed upon eternity. Consider a traditional Zen garden where the patterns in the sand are meant to represent the shifting nature of reality, a monument only to emptiness and the intangible. Or more commonly, there is the widespread indigenous practice of tattoos, meant to only last as long as the body they adorn. To go further into the kungic might push us entirely into different territory. The example I always return to is that of the Piraha. Among known cultures, they appear to be one of the least stressed, traumatized, and mentally ill; as well as the least authoritarian, hierarchical, and punitive. Maybe that relates to why they also lack any native tradition of storytelling, art, and decoration. They don’t memorialize or cling to anything, don’t attempt to maintain collective memory — almost more Buddhist than Buddhists.

The world we know is the end product of centuries and millennia of regality. The remnants of all things kungic are so scant in the modern West, particularly in the modern US, to be almost incomprehensible. We generally assume that regality is the purpose of society, the height of civilization. We’ve been indoctrinated to revere greatness. Involving this insight, Fog argues that, “The regal periods in human history have not only produced war, tyranny, imperialism, slavery, cruelty, and mayhem, but also formed the preconditions for the highly developed society that we live in today. Most of the basic principles of law that are necessary for a civilized society to function today were developed in regal periods. Classical music, as well as many of the magnificent pieces of art and architecture that we are impressed by today, was created under the regal regimes of the past. We admire old fairy tales without realizing that they were written to glorify sovereign kings and emperors and to make unambiguous distinctions between friend and foe, between good and evil. And we enjoy the fruits of past scientific, technological, and political progress without thinking of the incredible hardship that made it possible.” An example of that is how the Cold War provoked a race between the USSR and the US to ever greater technological achievement and prowess, which included a concerted effort to mass educate the public in the STEM fields.

When I first read Fog’s book, that larger point of civilizational greatness stood out the most to me. While I was reading the section on art, I happened to be sitting in the domed atrium of the West Baden Springs Hotel. It’s about as regal as you can get. Located in southern Indiana, it’s an old resort area that once attracted a lot of money. It was a favorite location to visit by well known figures from politics, Hollywood, and organized crime. It was designed as an expression of privilege and power, of excessive wealth, extravagant inequality, and conspicuous consumption. The design, murals, statues, etc imitated the traditional style of European architecture that once would’ve been a symbol of aristocracy and nobility. But with its vaunting dome, it simultaneously was a modern architectural feat to inspire awe by it’s sheer magnitude.

West Baden Springs Hotel Atrium, built 1901. (Wikimedia Commons)

It’s not only that hunter-gatherers have never built such things nor would be able to. More importantly, they’d have no motivation to do so and likely couldn’t even imagine attempting it. One intriguing detail came up in a book I was reading lately. Generally, indigenous foragers are content to do as little labor as possible for survival. They’re usually societies of not only low stress but also low need. In particular when still living on traditional hunting lands, they don’t lack food and other resources to meet all their daily requirements. To maintain this healthy state, they use birth control to limit their populations to the carrying capacity of the environment they’re in. They’re incentivized to live in balance with the ecosystem and its constraints, not to endlessly strive for ever greater achievements, not to push the furthest extreme of consumption and destruction (i.e., Wetiko). This lifestyle allows them to labor far less than either farmers or industrialized moderns (Marshall Sahlins, The Original Affluent Society). Most of their labor is casual and social, particularly emphasizing the latter. It’s often more about a community solidifying its ties through shared activity, such as group songs and chants.

This reminds me of an old conservative fear, as typically trotted out as a critique of the welfare state. Though I’ve dismissed it in the past, I now recognize there may be a kernel of truth to it. The right-wing has often fallen into moral panic over human laziness, the belief that people wouldn’t work unless forced to and extrinsically rewarded with money, prestige, authority, privilege, etc. And of course, unless there is punishment for those who refuse to work or refuse to do the work that’s available — go down into that dark mine where you’ll get black lung or else your family will be homeless and starve. A major purpose for privatizing and destroying the commons was to deny people access to natural resources and so deny them the ability to take care of their own needs naturally, as humans have done for time immemorial. It’s part of creating and enforcing artificial scarcity. The capitalist class rightly understands that no one would freely choose to work in a factory, a data center, a warehouse, a big box store, etc. It’s not the kind or degree of labor we humans evolved for.

That’s why capitalism requires coercion, and also why it’s long been understood a free society isn’t possible with high inequality. Related to that, without threats of desperation, without enslavement or wage slavery, few humans would willingly participate in building palaces for royalty, skyscrapers for plutocrats, battleships for empires, or whatever else. And without an unfree working class to do their bidding and take care of the needs of the privileged, there couldn’t be sustained a class of architects, masons, artisans, and other related professionals to dedicate their lives to such massive projects. Specifically, a caste- or class-based society creates a privileged elite that has the free time, resources, opportunities, and support to sit around thinking about ‘great’ things. Without the suffering masses, there wouldn’t be professional politicians, generals, CEOs, tycoons, bankers, judges, lawyers, celebrities, etc. It would even be hard to maintain an intelligentsia of journalists, authors, philosophers, scientists, public intellectuals, artists, etc.

SpaceX CRS-14 Falcon 9 rocket lifts off. (Wikimedia Commons)

Vanity and Narcissism or Progress and Public Good

This is partly what is meant about Make America Great Again. It’s a desire for a great empire that’s capable of taking great actions, of forcing their greatness on the world — all guided by great (cis-hetero, white) men, of course. As an example, public wealth and resources are used to build Elon Musk’s rockets and satellites, as a demonstration of Western power, capacity, and supremacy. It’s largely irrelevant why we’re spending so much money to feed the narcissism of the already wealthy. There is no evidence that such activities are a net benefit to humanity and the planet. Every time a rocket is launched, more of the atmosphere is literally burned up. The motivation of the aspiring technofeudalists seems to be simply the fantasy of building space resorts and havens for themselves to escape to, as the world is literally decimated. In some ways, these elites apparently define their own greatness according to how much destruction they can cause, as part of an accelerationist vision of supposed creative destruction. But they mainly focus on the destruction part with the assumption that the creativity, presumably useful and beneficial, will follow later.

The point is that something like a rocket ship proves the greatness of not only the elite but of all society that the elite get credit for. It’s not a matter of a good reason for doing it, just that it can be done. It’s a vanity project. All of regality is about collective vanity, the reason group narcissists like MAGA evangelicals are drawn to follow individual narcissists like Donald Trump. The laboring classes are supposed to be satisfied knowing they’re part of the greatness. Similar to the wages of whiteness for racists, these are the wages of imperialism offered to imperial subjects. It’s supposed to be a psychological and social compensation for their miserable lives, as if all their sacrifices go to a greater cause. Unlike the oppressed and brutalized that are the targeted victims in the permanent underclass and in foreign countries, at least the favored imperial subjects in the heart of the empire get to participate in a shared identity of greatness. They get to watch the martial parades and hear about the great wars and victories of the imperial military. Or they get to watch a rocket launch into space to prove and demonstrate they’re defeating the commies.

Yet there is also a genuine sense of human progress. Not all of this aspirational greatness is narrow-minded self-praise. American imperialism, during the Cold War, had an air of leading the world into a bright future. Many Americans and even non-Americans were persuaded and inspired by that vision of greatness, in many ways utopian. It wasn’t merely about getting the first human to the moon but what it meant to have developed science and technology to such a degree that it was possible at all. If that could be accomplished, then maybe there were no limits to what humanity could do. It’s similar to why Romans could feel proud of what their own empire accomplished with highly advanced structures (Coliseum), infrastructure (roads, aqueducts, etc), and trade networks (pony express-style system, largest fleet of boats, etc). The Romans really had achieved feats of the likes never before seen. To a degree, there was a validity to that pride, if it comes before the fall.

Roman Colosseum. (Wikimedia Commons)

Even amidst authoritarian evil, people can feel uplifted in striving toward improvement, betterment, and progress. The Nazis exhibited this. They did more than just persecute and kill millions of people. Until self-destructing in a blaze of their military greatness, the Nazi government had resurrected the economy (e.g., erased national debt), improved conditions for the working class (e.g., German Joy), rebuilt infrastructure (e.g., Autobahn), and so much else. It’s why so many older Germans persisted in feeling nostalgic about the Nazis, long after World War II ended. The Nazis also had been the leading researchers in the world in numerous fields, from organic farming to cancer treatment. It’s true their organic farms were operated with slave labor, but at least Nazi soldiers got to eat high quality organic food. On a more interesting note, the Nazi leadership protected Otto Warburg, a cancer researcher who was Jewish and openly gay (Sam Apple, Ravenous). One official explained that they did so not only for the good of Germany but for the good of the world. By the way, Warburg’s theory increasingly looks like it might be correct (Metabolic Theory of Cancer: Past and Present).

It’s not unlike how the United States only became the new world leader of scientific research when it too became an empire, in enforcing Pax Americana. No other social system other than goliaths, as Luke Kemp calls them in Goliath’s Curse, can rally such vast resources and direct them toward targeted ends. Or at least, I can’t think of a counterexample, other than some smaller-scale regal societies like the Renaissance city-states. Part of it is that, when regality rules, many brilliant and talented individuals are drawn to the center of Goliaths. That’s why, during the height of Hellenic culture in the Alexandrian Empire, so many of the greatest ‘Greek’ philosophers, physicians, and teachers weren’t even ethnically Greek. And it’s precisely in concentrating so much human potential in one place that forms the creative hubs that potentially ratchets up dynamic innovation (Richard Florida, The Rise of the Creative Class). But the losers in this equation experience brain drain (Richard Florida, The Flight of the Creative Class). Once again, it’s not exactly clear it’s a net gain for humanity overall.

This is where the liberal and egalitarian have a strong counter-argument. What is all this greatness for? What purpose does it serve and to what end or whose benefit? In response to MAGA authoritarian rule, it’s not only a critique of what kind of greatness this is and whether or not it’s really great at all. More important, why prize greatness of any sort over all else? Why not, instead, seek to Make America Good Again? My point would be simply to note that, for whatever reason, so often the public good is a response to dark times. If not for the 1929 stock market crash and Great Depression, there wouldn’t have been the public demand to have elected Franklin Delano Roosevelt nor the political will to have enacted his New Deal, along with Lyndon B. Johnson’s Great Society following it, nor Richard Nixon’s shockingly radical progressivism. The post-war liberal consensus was a product of mass failure and strife that demanded a collective effort of both greatness and goodness. The US became the shining city on the hill. But the point is that it was the goodness that justified the greatness.

Theodore Roosevelt visits Washington, D.C., 1914-05-26. (Wikimedia Commons)

Only a generation earlier, the same pattern had occurred. The first Roosevelt presidency, that of Teddy, was in response to the Gilded Age and the conflict it spawned during the Populist Era. That’s what jumpstarted Progressivism in the first place. Though very much a product of regal authoritarianism and plutocracy, TR as a right-wing Progressive carried forward some sense of noblesse oblige, the ideal of moral greatness that was demanded of the leadership, at a time of crisis when many worried the elite no longer were able to rule well (The Crisis of Identity). But he also understood that the public good transcended identitarianism, including racial supremacy (Brian Kilmeade, Teddy and Booker T.), and partisanship (Confession of Faith; Socialism, II — Where We Can Work with Socialists; & Theodore Roosevelt, an Autobiography; see Capitalists Learning From Socialists). He was willing to be a great leader and to accept sacrifices. Like LBJ understood later about desegregation (“I think we just delivered the South to the Republican Party for a long time to come.”), TR realized that forcing political and economic reforms would come at a cost, specifically that trust-busting would lose him re-election. But that didn’t stop him. Rather than promoting his own personal greatness, he sublimated his identity into the greatness of the American nation as an aspiring empire.

It wasn’t only imperialism, though. Having had a sickly childhood, TR personally identified with the public health crisis that had been crippling society, not to mention having caused so much harm and death. [Tellingly, his nephew FDR also dealt with major health issues. This might be what allowed these figures to act as counter-elites.] In that period, many Americans believed America could and should do better. It was akin to how the catastrophe of the American Civil War helped promote an emerging national identity that coincided with national projects: railroads, national museums, land grant colleges, etc. Heading into the 20th century, a new period of large-scale projects came on the scene, partly inspired by nation-wide protest movements and strikes. There was no singular identity of being American prior to the US having become an imperial goliath, and it was a new national citizenry that could imagine national greatness. But it also inspired major projects at all levels of government, such as the Milwaukee municipal socialists being the first to build a sewage system for the entire city population, not limited to the wealthy areas. All that we take for granted now was once a radical proposal.

Emil Seidel, first socialist mayor in US, running mate of Eugene V. Debs. (Wikimedia Commons)

Great Problems Require and Inspire Great Solutions

Only great civilizations can achieve such greatness. But then again, only great civilizations need to do so at all. That’s because they’ve often created the problems they needed to solve or overcome. If not for mass urbanization exacerbated by mass industrialization, there wouldn’t have been mass malnourishment and disease epidemics. Obviously, hunter-gatherers don’t need to develop and construct a complex sewage system. It’s a non-issue. But also, under normal conditions while maintaining traditional diets and lifestyles, most indigenous people maintain high levels of health and so aren’t immunocompromised. They don’t require grand solutions to problems that they simply prevent from ever occurring. Most of the worst harms indigenous people experience come from outsiders: settler colonialism, conflict, war, genocide, encroachment, poaching, resource exploitation, and introduction of infectious diseases. Indigenous Americans, for example, had no STDs until Europeans came along. And malaria, likely as one of the many deadly diseases that originated in farming communities, only later spread to wild mosquito populations.

To shift gears, let’s descend from the stratosphere of greatness. The same basic principle applies at all levels and, potentially, in all societies. During times of extreme duress and challenge, there sometimes can be an impulse to pursue entirely new courses of action, often what initiates the move toward regality and the formation of goliaths. It reminds me of something Daniel Everett said. Trained as a linguist, he came to study the Pirahas as a missionary, with the hope of translating the Bible into their language. While being trained at a Bible college, a professor told him that a people can only be saved after they’re made to feel lost. The problem with the Pirahas is that they don’t feel lost, they don’t have any major problems that need to be solved. They are comfortable and content. But if you introduced some diseases, eliminated their natural resources, and deforested their territory, you certainly could make them severely and despairingly lost and hence suddenly in need of salvation from the civilizing process (Norbert Elias). That’s why colonial projects have almost always involved destroying indigenous cultures, lifestyles, and food systems; while forcing onto them the dominator’s religion and diet (see note about Charles Darwin at the end of Ancient Dietary Ideology Persists).

Pirahas of Brazil. (Wikimedia Commons)

As the reader might sense, the author is somewhat of two minds. We modern Westerners live in the accrued gains and consequences of centuries-long imperial and national greatness, as part of ruling global superpowers, their alliances, and trade networks. So much that the liberal-minded love about creative hubs and big cities is all the cultural greatness — beautiful buildings, museums, art galleries, libraries, universities, theatres, concert halls, ornamental gardens, public parks, etc — that accretes to and concentrates in such places. But we typically don’t think about what was lost in gaining that greatness, what horrors preceded and impelled its being built. That can be seen in the treasure trove of nearly every major Western museum that is filled with the stolen loot from past pillaging. In one sense, regal goliaths can be centers of creativity and innovation, but more often than not they simply pilfer the creativity and innovation of other societies, such as with the brain drain phenomenon. The brilliance and talent that was supported, promoted, and honed in another country simply gets siphoned off. Many great empires end up becoming dependent on a constant influx of human capital and culture of trust from elsewhere, as they eat their own seed corn. As Agner Fog notes, regality requires constant expansion and exploitation or else it collapses in on itself. Goliaths are never sustainable long-term.

It’s not that there is never an early period of genuine greatness when collective ambition dynamically transforms a society and propels it into becoming a goliath. But that eventually results in a lazy ruling elite that, in being used to feeding at the public trough, takes their wealth and power as a privilege that doesn’t need to be earned or justified. Contrast the Roman Republic to the Roman Empire. The Roosevelt administrations represented the equivalent as an American Republic, whereas Donald Trump’s MAGA is clearly in the stage of imperial decline. That was evoked so blatantly in the words of Jeffrey Epstein, a native-born product of the American Empire. In a 2009 email to psychologist Roger Schank, “This is the way the jew make money.. and made a fortune in the past ten years„ selling short the shippping futures„ let the goyim deal in the real world” (one might think the elite would know how to write and spell). And talking to Bill Gates two years later in 2011, Epstein asked “how do we get rid of poor people as a whole?” Once they’ve used up the peasants and drained them dry, once they’ve stolen all the public wealth and resources, once they’ve parasitized and enshittified (Corey Robin) the entire economy, what do they do with all the useless eaters that get in the way and will cause problems. This is the likely reason Epstein was obsessed with organizing and funding AI projects.

Donald Trump supporters storming the U.S. Capitol Building on January 6, 2021. (Wikimedia Commons)

That’s the strongest critique toward the idealization of and nostalgia about greatness. In the end, if a regal goliath lasts long enough, it will eventually collapse under the weight of its own greatness turned decadent, corrupt, and malignant. On a rare occasion, a goliath can persist for many centuries. But typically, they’re already facing the signs of their own mortality in a century or two; according to the data analysis Kemp discusses. So, in the case of the United States, we are already past our prime. American imperial aspirations began with the post-revolution Indian Wars (one of my ancestors, as a soldier, was already helping to militarily genocide the natives in Kentucky as early as 1790), the Federalist’s Constitution (Federalist’s “Vigorous Executive” and Project 2025’s Imperial Presidency), and President Thomas Jefferson’s Louisiana Purchase (stolen land of imperial territory transferred to the young nation-state).

We on the broad left have good reason to wonder if something else is possible. But it’s not necessarily an all-out attack on the concept of greatness as inspirational and aspirational excellence, collective or personal. In the argument being made here, there really is something about a certain level of stress that, under certain circumstances, can induce an increased development and expansive (or at least divergent) manifestation of human potential. That’s seen as well in the most small-scale of societies. Indigenous people are often initiated into the shamanic path after sickness, a near death experience, or some kind of trauma. One factor or another intervened to shift their psychological development in an atypical direction to bring forth otherwise buried abilities and aptitudes. When one capacity is harmed or lost, other capacities can be developed to a greater degree as compensatory mechanism (e.g., a blind person who can echolocate objects and/or feel the gravity of the moon).

One might note, by the way, the Piraha don’t even have shamans — that might indicate how healthy, low stress they are. It reminds me of something I read about shamanism. Belief in spirits, demons, etc usually coincides with higher disease rate. On a related note, the nutritionist Mary Ruddick, in following in the footsteps of Weston A. Price, has visited healthy traditional populations around the world. Like Price, her focus is on diet and nutrition. And like Price, she hasn’t only observed overall better physical health and immunity but also better mental health and prosocial behavior. She made one additional observation. While traveling somewhere in rural Africa, likely during one of her visits with the Hadza, she talked to teachers in rural schools. One thing she inquired about was autism, specifically how common it was in their students. The teachers told her they had never observed it. These were professionally-trained teachers who knew about autism, but just had never personally seen it in that area of rural Africa.

The pivotal paraphernalia of a shaman is the headgear called wasang in the Limbu language. It manifests the notion of soul flight. The picture was taken in Mangshila during a ritual. (Wikimedia Commons)

Genetic Potential and Neurodiversity

We are overflowing with immense potential, but all of that evolved as contingent responses to diverse environmental conditions that have shaped the physiology, neurocognition, psychology, and behavior of homo sapiens. It requires some causal or contributive factor to epigenetically tap a specific potential. Otherwise, it continues to lie fallow and unseen, as if it doesn’t exist. That fits in with my argument about neurodivergence. As a potential, of course there is all kinds of diverse cognitive capacity in every human, the possible ways our minds could operate. But there is a reason why modern forms of neurodivergence correlate, both positively and bidirectionally, with higher rates of toxic stress (chronic and/or severe), adverse childhood experiences (ACEs), trauma, chemical toxic exposures, unhealthy diet, gut issues, microbiome imbalances, metabolic syndrome, autoimmune disorders, cancer, dementia, mitochondrial dysfunction, brain inflammation, psychosis, mood disorders, etc (Chris Palmer, Brain Energy; Nadine Burke Harris, The Deepest Well; Lawson R, Wulsin, Toxic Stress; & Aimie Apigian, The Biology of Trauma). We should be unsurprised that every major type and category of physical disease, neurocognitive condition, and psychiatric disorder, along with numerous health issues, are all simultaneously increasing.

My own original theory is that, when times are most uncertain, human biology will increase the varieties of genetic expression in the population; and maybe increase mutations as well (e.g., autistics have more de novo mutations). Normally suppressed and invisible traits will appear and proliferate. It’s a defense mechanism, especially at the collective level. Most of those traits won’t be beneficial and will simply cause the individual problems, neither being helpful to anyone around them. But even if only a small percentage offer some immense and unique advantage in the face of a threat or rival, it could mean the difference of a population surviving the crisis or not. During the worst of times, out-of-the-box thinking and behavior could suddenly become supreme or, at least, given some tolerance, leeway, and priority. This might, to a degree, explain why technological progress skyrockets during wartime. It’s not only that the neurodiverse might become more common but also such people can become highly prized because they can, when the right individual is paired with the right problem, get amazingly effective, successful, and unexpected results. One imagines the scientific teams developing the atomic bomb were packed full of neurodivergents with highly specialized minds.

The “Baker” Explosion, part of Operation Crossroads, a US Army nuclear test at Bikini Atoll, Micronesia, on July 25, 1946. (Wikimedia Commons)

This is one of those personal lines of inquiry, as I’m a neurodivergent of some sort; possibly on the autism spectrum but almost certainly ADHD, if undiagnosed beyond learning disability, borderline thought disorder, and major depressive disorder. My thinking, in any case, is highly atypical. And as is often the case, many of my family and friends are neurodiverse in their own unique ways — we freaks tend to flock together. One of my neurodiverse friends also has struggled with many difficulties and challenges from childhood onward, in many ways far worse than I have. But in both of our cases, it was having been overwhelmed by problems at points in our lives that drove us to develop extreme levels of neurodivergent abilities. The thing is that, as a radical left-winger, I don’t have any desire to turn my neurodivergence into an inherent identity that is politicized as genetically-determined. That’s not my style, nor does it fit the evidence.

It was precisely having such severe problems that forced my friend and I to develop skills of problem-solving, although in entirely different ways. While strongly ADHD, she has some more common features of autism such as underdeveloped cognitive empathy, which is to say she has a hard time with accurately reading people’s state of mind and behavioral motivations. She makes up for that with highly developed pattern recognition and situational awareness where she models people more from an external approach. Instead of building models of individuals in and of themselves, she builds models of the worlds in which humans inhabit. These world models are visually real to her, in that she can see them in her minds eye where she can investigate and interact with them, can shift and alter them. It’s like Doctor Manhattan’s skill of mechanistically pulling apart matter and putting it together again, sometimes in new form.

The main cast of the 2009 film adaptation of Watchmen. (Wikimedia Commons)

My own neurodivergence went in an entirely other direction. Whereas my friend tended toward anxiety-driven manic phases, I’ve spent most of my life as a monopolar depressive combined with and exacerbated by introversion. I see the whole world as if from inside it, even to the point of imaginatively crawling into people’s heads and looking out through their eyes. It’s not that this was a talent I was born with, since I was actually rather obtuse when younger. I didn’t grasp people at all and the social world was beyond me. But I overcompensated to the degree I now have far more cognitive empathy than anyone I’ve personally known. Combined with social science study, this comes from decades of depressive rumination, to the point of obsessive-compulsion. I can expend amazing amounts of time and effort contemplating what someone else would consider a minor incident or interaction. My mind never stops. I worry over little details a thousand times until I know every facet of it, captured the essence of it, and internalized it within my cognitive repertoire and mapping.

This is what trained me to be a great researcher. I’m intensively and thoroughly focused, in ADHD style, when I’m on the trail of some topic or issue that my curiosity catches scent of. But like my friend, I’m additionally a master of pattern recognition. I’ve gathered a million facts, ideas, observations, insights, speculations, theories, etc. Then I’ve worked them over until I’ve linked them into a immense web of thought, usually with various overlapping hypotheses I’m working on to explain it all. It’s not uncommon for me, while thinking about a book I’m in the middle of, to dredge up a thought I had decades earlier in my life. I never drop anything, constantly gathering it all together and reinforcing the links. Talk to me about almost anything and I’ll instantly throw out numerous related pieces of info, references, and such. An article like this one here is a product of this never-ending process.

The point is what my friend and I are capable of is the product of specific environmental conditions that compelled us in our respective directions. And it came at an extreme cost for each of us, both mentally and physically. During my lowest periods, I barely survived my depression, as I had near daily suicidal ideation for years, including serious suicidal attempts. I came to obsessive overthinking because I was desperately trying to find my way out of a dark place. One of the intriguing aspects of depression is that it perfectly matches sickness behavior. I’ve come to realize that depression isn’t anything by itself but simply the mind and body’s way of trying to contain and solve a problem. But in my case, it took me decades to even begin to grasp some of the exact underlying factors that were involved (e.g., malnourishment from deficiencies (animal fats, fat-soluble vitamins) & excesses (carbs, seed oils)). In the process of escaping the clutches of depression, I developed an impressive toolkit of cognitive abilities, none of which I’d now possess if my life had been as pleasant and comfortable as the Piraha. Is that a price worth paying for greatness of a sorts? I don’t know, but I have my doubts.

The round barn at Hancock Shaker Village. (Wikimedia Commons)

Conclusion: Eustress and Alternatives

Let’s return to the collective level. I recently watched the biopic musical, The Testament of Ann Lee, about the early leader of the Shakers. As my great grandfather was an orphan raised in a Shaker community, I’ve long been fascinated by them and other kinds of communes, religious (Pietists, Hutterites, etc) and secular (Owenites, East Wind Community, etc). Mainly from the period preceding the American Revolution to the period following the American Civil War, the Shakers were a religious group that grew and flourished during times of strife, conflict, and uncertainty. But in the 19th century, though renown for their strictness, they became famous as the leading inventors and innovators of agricultural methods, seed cultivation, farming technology, and architectural design. They also had one of the largest creative production of music of any religion in history. One might also note they often took in society’s outcasts, and so it’s likely they ended up with a disproportionate number of neurodivergents.

Living in harsh times again, maybe we on the broad left can take some lessons from all of this. It’s sometimes when the world seems at its most dire that there can also be the strongest hope for something different to emerge. As proven by scholarship (history, archaeology, anthropology, ethnography, etc), humans are one of the most adaptable species on the planet and so, if not always thriving, we do have a knack for surviving in amazing ways. In a moment like this as the old order feels like it’s collapsing all around us, it’s the scenario of risk being opportunity. For inspiration, check out Rojava or Democratic Autonomous Administration of North and East Syria (DAANES) in autonomous northeastern Syria. It’s the application of social ecology (Murray Bookchin) as part of democratic confederalism that joins together multicultural communities. There is also Zomia, the region of Southeast Asia that has resisted rule by states and empires for millennia.

The autonomous administration is supporting efforts for workers to form cooperatives, such as this sewing cooperative in Derik. (Wikimedia Commons)

It’s good to be reminded that, while regality is treated as the norm and goliaths act like they rule the whole world, there remains numerous independently self-governed people. Rather than mere remnants of the past, those living counter-examples might point us to a different future. Then I’d put that into the context of the rest. We neurodivergents who have often felt out of place and unappreciated in the world as it has been might find that our thinking styles — if perceived as crazy, dysfunctional, and antisocial — might, in fact, have much to contribute. For those of us who have already paid the price, it would be nice to make better use of our hard-earned skills. But at the same time, it would be even nicer to move toward a less deranged society that didn’t push people into a victimized survival mode of neurocognitive extremes. If maybe it’s my crazy liberal-minded ‘openness’, I’d like to imagine we could find a balance point of eustress and so find a way to release more of our potential without so many casualties. While surely not fitting right-wing forced work of elite rule, I suspect more people would be willing to collectively labor toward a worthy society, if ever given the opportunity.