The moral depravity of the ideological mind
Fellow blogger Rade commented on this item, reporting that a mural to Zarutska in his area (Providence RI) aroused opposition because Elon Musk was paying for it and because it was mostly local Republicans who defended painting it. That is, the objection was less to the mural itself than to who was supporting it. This sadly all-too-plausible explanation reminded me of an item which I'd included in the "truths and inspirations" post three weeks ago:
The mural vandalizations are a perfect example of this. The vandals clearly share the ideological mentality. The ideological mind judges an action or thing (such as a mural) not by the moral character of the action or thing itself, but by whether those who support it are perceived as being on "my team" or "the opposing team". In this case, "bad" people were in favor of the mural, therefore it was bad. This kind of mind-set is common among politics-fixated types -- gerrymandering is bad when Republicans do it, but good when Democrats do it, and anti-Semitism is bad when it comes from the right wing but should be ignored or explained away when it comes from the left wing (or the other way around, to a right-wing ideologist), to cite a couple of obvious examples.
Aside from Musk paying for the mural in this case, there are other reasons why the ideological mind would view commemorating Zarutska as "right-wing-coded". Her murderer had fourteen previous arrests for violent crimes and his own mother had tried to have him involuntarily committed because he was so clearly dangerous, yet he was still running around loose, an egregious example of endangering the public by coddling violent criminals -- a charge commonly leveled against liberals by conservatives. To the ideological mind, the fact that in this case the charge was obviously justified makes no difference. All that matters is that it means they perceive the murals as invoking something that they consider right-wing.
(They also clearly care nothing for how news of the vandalism would affect Zarutska's family. The ideological mind brushes aside such considerations as irrelevant, if it notices them at all. It is dead to normal human empathy.)
To normal non-ideological people, this mentality is disturbing and incomprehensible. Actions are good if they are good and bad if they are bad, regardless of which "team" the people doing them are on. It is people that are judged good or bad based on their actions, not vice-versa. I no longer have a political "team" that I identify with, but even when I did, I don't believe I ever engaged in that kind of ideological "team" thinking. Today, I do certainly see that some individuals are morally depraved based on the preponderance of their actions and views, such as Musk and Mamdani and Trump and Newsom -- but if one of those people occasionally does something good, I accept that this is a good thing that has been done regardless of the source. I don't twist morality into a pretzel trying to make a good thing bad just because it was a bad person who did it.
It is almost as if the ideologists of either "side" are a separate and defective species from mainstream humanity -- weirdly deficient in the kind of basic morality and empathy that makes us human.



8 Comments:
Not your main point, but you mentioned gerrymandering. AFAIK you can’t really do that here. There is an arms-length agency, Elections Canada, that oversees such things.
It’s all so depressing. I thought the rightwing nuts were against the murals (because they don’t support Ukraine and hate Zelenskyy), so I learned something new about this. Not that it’s anything good 🙁
Anvil: We could use something like that here.
Paula: It wouldn't surprise me if there are some right-wingnuts who feel that way too. Right-wing ideological minds are just as bad.
"It is almost as if the ideologists of either "side" are a separate and defective species from mainstream humanity -- weirdly deficient in the kind of basic morality and empathy that makes us human."
I wholly agree. And what really saddens me is when someone, some community, some segment of our population DOES exhibit some sense of empathy or morality, they are chastised; attacked for showing "weakness"; to be treated as a lesser. But... predominantly attacked by cowards hiding behind anonymity or from inside a self-serving bubble. And the second part of the matter is that we, as a species, have mostly lost our ability of critical thinking; that we have to knee-jerk react with an opinion to everything that pops into a social media thread. Bill Mahr had that great "New Rules" on that a week ago (I believe you posted it!).
It still is not addressing the vandalism of the murals; but I don't expect that whom ever is creating the damage is doing it without something driving them to the destruction.
Rade
You're right about the moral depravity of ideologists. I think it's especially pronounced on the left, where some valid opinion is instantly condemned because it's supposedly right wing or as you say associated with someone "undesirable" (Elon Musk, J K Rowling, Nigel Farage etc) or published in the "wrong" outlet (Daily Mail, GB News, The Spectator etc). Rational debate is pushed aside by tribal loyalties.
Rade: It's disturbing how ideology can blind people to humanity. It's not a new thing, either -- Robert Anton Wilson discussed it decades ago.
I have seen enough people make idiots of themselves by pontificating about matters they clearly don't understand, to have become rather allergic myself to talking about things I don't know about. That's why there are some topics I hardly ever discuss, no matter how important they are.
Nick: Bizarrely enough, I think the ideological right wing is actually more tolerant of a diversity of viewpoints because so much of their thinking is based on conspiracy theories, and the conclusions of conspiracy theories are pretty much random, so they simply can't achieve the same degree of homogeneity of beliefs as the left has.
The irony about JK Rowling is that she's actually fairly left-wing on almost everything. Deviating from lockstep on even one issue was enough to get her demonized.
I'm not as eloquent as you. I've noticed this thinking in several different segments of life.
Religion, for example. The series of churches I was forced to attend as I grew up, anyone who wasn't like everyone else was looked down on, ostracized, demonized. Even something as normal as a guy with an earring was scary. Why, that might be Satan's right hand man!
Sports, too. Yeah, sure, he's been busted for ______ (fill in the blank with whatever) but he's a great sportser!!!
Politically, I have several family members who won't speak to me now. I'm guessing my Christmas card list is going to be pretty short this year.
Someone I love uses liberal as an epithet. Anything she sees as wrong, it's 'the goddamn liberals'.
My father was like that, too. Lots more profanity, but same amount of hate. "Those liberals."
I fear we've lost sight of who we are as a species and we're so busy tearing each other apart that we're 100% vulnerable to the whole tribalism thing.
Is there a solution?
Ami: Good point about the similarity with religion. I've known people who would tie themselves in knots to minimize wrongdoing by the clergy of their own religion (Catholics in denial about the extent of child molestation by priests, for example). It may be that as politics has become more polarized and fanatical, it's starting to work more like religion, for some people.
As for whether there's a solution, I'm encouraged by the emergence of the "exhausted majority" which opposes polarization. This group does not consist only of political centrists -- it includes people from all across the spectrum. What they have in common is being fed up with the hysterics and hatred and the demonization of each side by the ideological hard-liners on the other. They -- we -- don't make as much noise as the crazies, but we exist and we are the majority.
I also think the ideologists are going to turn more and more people off as they become more extreme. Trying to defend vandalism of the Zarutska murals is an example. Trying to justify and explain away every infantile and demented and unconstitutional thing Trump says and does is another. The more these nutcases tie themselves in logical knots like that, the more everyone else can see that they're being intellectually dishonest and can't be taken seriously.
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