Article in the NYT looking at liberal vs conservative polarization
March 11, 2018 at 9:53 am
(This post was last modified: March 11, 2018 at 10:05 am by Whateverist.)
Nothing really new here but it is the problem that has turned American politics into a dysfunctional shit-fest.
Regarding when did it start:
Starts at about 43 seconds.
Regarding what is at the bottom of it:
I especially liked the turn of phrase I bolded.
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/03/09/opini...rolls.html
Quote:When the loudest voices on the left talk about people on the right as either beyond the pale or dupes of their betters, it is with an air of barely concealed smugness. Right-wingers, for their part, increasingly respond with a churlish “Oh, yeah? Hold my beer,” and then double down on whatever politically incorrect sentiment brought on the disdain in the first place.
Regarding when did it start:
Quote:The explosion of the smugs-versus-trolls phase of our political discourse is traceable to a 2004 confrontation between Jon Stewart and the political commentator Tucker Carlson in the waning days of “Crossfire,” ..
Starts at about 43 seconds.
Regarding what is at the bottom of it:
Quote:Around the same time, a New York University psychologist, Jonathan Haidt, was formulating a theory about why liberals and conservatives have such a hard time productively conversing.
After mucking around in a lot of survey data, he came up with this basic idea: Liberals and people of the left underpin their politics with moral concerns about harm and fairness; they are driven by the imperative to help the vulnerable and see justice done. Conservatives and people of the right value these things as well but have several additional moral touchstones — loyalty, respect and sanctity. They value in-group solidarity, deference to authority, and the protection of purity in mind and body. To liberals, those sincerely held values can look a lot like, in Dr. Haidt’s words, “xenophobia, authoritarianism and Puritanism.” This asymmetry is the fountainhead of mutual incomprehension and disdain.
I especially liked the turn of phrase I bolded.
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/03/09/opini...rolls.html