Politics
A Demoralized Society
I think I know how Hannah Arendt must have felt. It’s painful to watch society crumble, have a pretty good idea why, and have almost no one listen to or believe you. I’ve been afraid of creeping totalitarianism since I was an adolescent and first started paying attention, and there have been numerous trends over the last several decades that point the way to an absolutely terrible, nightmare future for humanity. At least, as I see it.
I’ve been subjected to relentless “us vs. them” rhetoric my ENTIRE life, but in the past there used to be a recognition that political opponents could only do so much to each other and their “side”, because we understood that ours was not an unlimited democracy, but a republic, with specifically enumerated powers that would require a momentous effort to add to. That is, until the late 19th century. After Lincoln changed the nature of the federal government from one that facilitates and smooths out disagreements between states and regions to one that holds dominion over them, constitutional limits began to be more, shall we say, malleable?
Where I think the Progressive Era went askew was using the movement to add to government power. Instead of just removing bad laws from the books, they took a positivist approach and added new laws that would “add protections” for specific classes of people. One of the major deleterious effects of this was to industrialize grievance. Think about it; if you can get the government involved with your cause, and the government has enough power, it can create a department to address the problem. This, in turn, gives rise to activist groups, NGOs, and all of the state and local branches of what becomes a bloated bureaucracy that ends up spending more time fighting for budgets and handouts than in solving problems. In fact, that’s the LAST thing they want! If you actually solve a problem the money goes away so there is a negative incentive to do so. And they never do. This suggests to me that social ills are better cured through society, not through the ballot box.
But this system has the effect of disconnecting the givers from the receivers of assistance; if you count on the government to fix it because you’ve paid taxes and they promised to fix it, you can put out of your mind any personal responsibility you may have felt for your neighbors’ suffering. You don’t need to see it, you don’t need to talk about it, and you don’t have to think about solutions because the “experts” are gonna handle it. Now, after long enough, no one who isn’t an “expert” can even discuss the problem, and any suggestion that there’s a better way to do it is met with the assumption that any talk of change ACTUALLY means that you hate the person that needs help and you want to destroy them. That’s the erosion of public discourse and judgement; you can’t even discuss ideas without misinterpretation so you certainly can’t trust each other to work independently; an authority must be in charge!!
The moronic obsession with making everything political is always going to have this effect, and it leads to a world where we no longer can trust in the good faith of anyone. We fear and hate our political rivals because they can exercise power over us, we dehumanize them because it’s easier to make people your enemies if they aren’t “the same” as you, and no one cares about the truth if it makes them look bad. And the only thing that’s consistent is that the government gets bigger and more powerful no matter who is in charge. (If any Trump fans are reading, I’ll believe “drain the swamp” when I see it.) The totalitarian mindset can only see limits to government power when it affects them personally, but their solution is always MORE LAWS, not less.
We need to break away from the idea that the government will solve our problems; that’s utopian, religious thinking. And it makes it easier for the creeps and motherfuckers to divide us and destroy what could have been history’s greatest society. The great thing about the US of the past had NOTHING to do with the government; in fact, our greatness was inversely proportional to the government’s involvement in daily life, and not enough people acknowledge that. We need to return to a moral foundation that agrees that coercion is wrong, only individuals can and should be responsible for their actions, and that truth and continuity are important. Because what we have now is a society that can no longer differentiate between right and wrong. We celebrate thieves, liars, crooks and killers and shame people that earnestly want to make a better world without forcing anyone else to go along with them. And I’m not talking about corporations vs. the people, or republicans vs. democrats; that’s all surface level. I’m talking about those who would coerce you or otherwise force your submission, be it outright and violent, or insidious and shady, like a business who gets the government to write a law that forces you to do business with them. Wrong is wrong, we need to stop making excuses for it.