George Monbiot
Self-deprecating, too liberal for their own good, today’s progressives
stand back and watch, hands over their mouths, as the social
vivisectionists of the right slice up a living society to see if its
component parts can survive in isolation. Tied up in knots of reticence
and self-doubt, they will not shout stop. Doing so requires an act of
interruption, of presumption, for which they no longer possess a
vocabulary.
Perhaps it is in the same spirit of liberal constipation that, with the
exception of Charlie Brooker(1), we have been too polite to mention the
study published last month in the journal Psychological Science, which revealed that people with conservative beliefs are likely to be of low intelligence(2). Paradoxically it was the Daily Mail
which brought it to the attention of British readers last week(3). It
feels crude, illiberal to point out that the other side is, on average,
more stupid than our own. But this, the study suggests, is not
unfounded generalisation but empirical fact.
It is by no means the first such paper. There is plenty of research
showing that low general intelligence in childhood predicts greater
prejudice towards people of different ethnicity or sexuality in
adulthood(4). Open-mindedness, flexibility, trust in other people: all
these require certain cognitive abilities. Understanding and accepting
others—particularly “different” others—requires an enhanced capacity
for abstract thinking.
But, drawing on a sample size of several thousand, correcting for both
education and socioeconomic status, the new study looks embarrassingly
robust. Importantly, it shows that prejudice tends not to arise
directly from low intelligence, but from the conservative ideologies to
which people of low intelligence are drawn. Conservative ideology is
the “critical pathway” from low intelligence to racism. Those with low
cognitive abilities are attracted to “right-wing ideologies that
promote coherence and order” and “emphasize the maintenance of the
status quo”(5). Even for someone not yet renowned for liberal
reticence, this feels hard to write.
This is not to suggest that all conservatives are stupid. There are some
very clever people in government, advising politicians, running
thinktanks, writing for newspapers, who have acquired power and
influence by promoting rightwing ideologies.
But what we now see among their parties—however intelligent their
guiding spirits may be—is the abandonment of any pretence of
high-minded conservatism. On both sides of the Atlantic, conservative
strategists have discovered that there is no pool so shallow that
several million people won’t drown in it. Whether they are promoting
the idea that Barack Obama was not born in the US, that manmade climate
change is an eco-fascist-communist-anarchist conspiracy or that the
deficit results from the greed of the poor, they now appeal to the
basest, stupidest impulses, and find that it does them no harm in the
polls.
Don’t take my word for it. Listen to what two former Republican
ideologues, David Frum and Mike Lofgren, have been saying. Frum warns
that “conservatives have built a whole alternative knowledge system,
with its own facts, its own history, its own laws of economics.”(6) The
result is a “shift to ever more extreme, ever more fantasy-based
ideology” which has “ominous real-world consequences for American
society.”
Lofgren complains that “the crackpot outliers of two decades ago have
become the vital center today”(7). The Republican party, with its
“prevailing anti-intellectualism and hostility to science” is appealing
to what he calls the “low-information voter” or the “misinformation
voter.” While most office holders probably don’t believe the
“reactionary and paranoid claptrap” they peddle, “they cynically feed
the worst instincts of their fearful and angry low-information
political base”.
The madness hasn’t gone as far in the UK, but the effects of the
Conservative appeal to stupidity are already making themselves felt.
Yesterday the Guardian reported that recipients of disability benefits,
scapegoated by the government as scroungers, blamed for the deficit,
now find themselves subject to a new level of hostility and threats
from other people(8).
These are the perfect conditions for a billionaires’ feeding frenzy. Any
party elected by misinformed, suggestible voters becomes a vehicle for
undisclosed interests. A tax break for the 1% is dressed up as freedom
for the 99%. The regulation that prevents big banks and corporations
from exploiting us becomes an assault on the working man and woman.
Those of us who discuss manmade climate change are cast as elitists by
people who happily embrace the claims of Lord Monckton, Lord Lawson or
thinktanks funded by ExxonMobil or the Koch brothers: now the authentic
voices of the working class.
But when I survey this wreckage I wonder who the real idiots are.
Confronted with mass discontent, the once-progressive major parties, as
Thomas Frank laments in his latest book Pity the Billionaire,
triangulate and accommodate, hesitate and prevaricate, muzzled by what
he calls “terminal niceness”(9). They fail to produce a coherent
analysis of what has gone wrong and why, or to make an uncluttered case
for social justice, redistribution and regulation. The conceptual
stupidities of conservatism are matched by the strategic stupidities of
liberalism.
Yes, conservatism thrives on low intelligence and poor information. But
the liberals in politics on both sides of the Atlantic continue to back
off, yielding to the supremacy of the stupid. It’s turkeys all the way
down.
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