[Note: I originally wrote this essay three weeks ago as an op-ed for potential use by newspapers. We approached several to see if we could raise interest in the issue. No one responded, so I am publishing it here.]
There’s a reason Donald Trump bandies the term “fake news”
about so readily and gleefully. It’s more than just a tic or a theme. It’s
actually a tool he uses to drive a wedge between his followers and reality.
This week he even seemed to lay ownership to the phrase. “The
media is really, the word, one of the greatest of all terms I've come up with,
is ‘fake’,” Trump told Mike Huckabee in an interview. “I guess other people
have used it perhaps over the years but I've never noticed it. And it's a
shame. And they really hurt the country. Because they take away the spirit of
the country.”
Fact-checkers such as PolitiFact
have observed that, beyond the extremely dubious notion he actually “came up
with” the phrase, Trump’s use of it actually turns its original meaning on its
head in a peculiarly self-serving way. Instead of describing fabricated content
with no basis in fact, he uses it to mean any news that criticizes him – that
is, any news he chooses not to believe because he does not like it.
Any person using normative rules of factuality, evidence,
and reason would defer to the original meaning of “fake news.” However, Donald
Trump’s most ardent supporters, and many more similarly inclined, instead agree
with him. Their version of reality, as such, becomes very different from the
rest of us.
It works, too: Recent
polling found that 46 percent of all voters believe the media make up
stories about Trump. Even 20 percent of Democrats believed this.
This is what authoritarians throughout history have done:
Set themselves up not only as the arbiters of right and wrong and other
mainstream values, but of reality itself. They keep their followers close under
their banner by creating a separate lived universe for them, an epistemological
bubble that inevitably becomes a cult of personality and fanaticism. In the
Trump era, I have dubbed this alternative universe “Alt-America.”
Most Americans have a healthy skepticism about American news
outlets, as our mainstream media landscape becomes increasingly littered with
charlatans and corporate interests out to make a buck. But some Americans have
elevated that skepticism to another and frankly unhealthy level, leading them
to view anything produced by the mainstream media or official government or
academic sources with an extreme form of “selective skepticism” – that is, they
refuse to believe any kind of “official” explanation for events, actions, or
policies, but instead go seeking any kind of alternative explanation for these.
When this happens, their extreme skepticism is reversed into
an extreme gullibility, so that they become vulnerable suckers for just about
any kind of conspiracy theory or fantastic fabrication, so long as it confirms
the narrative they want to believe. In this environment, conspiracists like
Alex Jones of Infowars and a coalition of like minds calling themselves the
alt-right have thrived, both politically and financially, peddling their own
set of “alternative facts.”
This gullibility shapes – or rather, distorts – people’s
relationship to authority. Any kind of authority that exists outside of that
person’s universe -- in the current Trump era particularly, anything with the
taint of liberalism -- is innately viewed as illegitimate and untrustworthy and
is to be vehemently rejected and ardently opposed. In the meanwhile, any
authority within the “Alt-America” universe, especially political figures,
conspiracist pundits, and Patriot movement leaders, are revered as absolute, and
become objects of abject devotion. There is a reason that some of Donald
Trump’s followers refer to him as “Glorious Leader,” or “G.L.”
Translated from individual psychology to mass politics,
these traits, and in particular the conspiracism, become the manifestation of
right-wing authoritarianism. It becomes manifest in polls that reveal
profoundly disturbing attitudes rampant among Trump’s supporters.
One poll found that half of Republican voters were OK with Trump postponing the 2020 election if he decided that “voter fraud” was too massive a problem. Another poll found that 61 percent of his current supporters say they can think of no circumstances under which they would ever stop approving of what he does, regardless.
One poll found that half of Republican voters were OK with Trump postponing the 2020 election if he decided that “voter fraud” was too massive a problem. Another poll found that 61 percent of his current supporters say they can think of no circumstances under which they would ever stop approving of what he does, regardless.
When most people think of authoritarianism, they think of
the strongman dictators who have led such rule in various nations around the
world throughout history, and they commonly view it as a political phenomenon
in which whole nations are subsumed by dictatorial rule imposed from above. The
reality, however, is that authoritarians usually are swept to power and
maintained in it by an army of followers, people who desire precisely that kind
of governance, by a singular figure whose charisma and instincts can chart a
nation’s course.
It’s also a phenomenon studied in depth by psychologists,
whose focus is less on those figures atop the pack, and more on the hordes they
control – the ordinary people who willingly sacrifice their personal freedoms
in the name of an orderly society shaped that imposes their personal beliefs
and prejudices.
How could supposedly freedom-loving Americans (or Germans,
or anyone else, for that matter) subscribe to an authoritarian worldview? As
psychologists have explored, most people have some level of authoritarian tendencies,
but these are often leveled out by such factors as personal empathy and
critical thinking skills. In some personalities, however, a combination of
factors ranging from strict upbringing, personal traumas, harsh rearing
environments, or any number of other similar issues, can produce people who are
inclined to insist on a world in which strong authorities produce order and
peace, often through iron imposition of “law and order.”
As a psychological phenomenon, authoritarianism arises
around three clusters of behavior and attitudes:
n
Authoritarian submission: The eager submission
to edicts, rulings, and opinions of the authorities and leaders who are deemed
legitimate.
n
Authoritarian aggression: The physical, verbal,
and social aggression displayed toward anyone or any trend that runs counter to
those authorities, or in the case of leadership, is deemed illegitimate.
n
Conventionalism: The adamant embrace of what is
perceived as the social norm and the “real” national identity, and the belief
that oneself reflects that “real” identity.
Psychologist Robert Altemeyer of the University of Manitoba,
one of the world’s leading experts in this research, describes how this
authoritarianism is manifest in Donald Trump supporters. They are highly
ethnocentric, inclined to see the world as their in-group versus everyone else.
They are highly fearful of a dangerous world. They are highly self-righteous. They
are aggressive. They are highly prejudiced against racial and ethnic
majorities, non-heterosexuals, and women in general. Their beliefs are a mass
of contradictions. They reason poorly. They are highly dogmatic. They are very
dependent on social reinforcement of their beliefs. Because they severely limit
their exposure to different people and ideas, they vastly overestimate the
extent to which other people agree with them.
Most of all, Altemeyer says, they are easily duped by
manipulators who pretend to espouse their causes when all the con-artists
really want is personal gain. And they are largely blind to themselves, and
almost inevitably will blame others when their own gullibility as marks for con
men is exposed.
Their demand for leadership by powerful authority figures
also helps explain their vehement rejection of the presidencies of such liberal
politicians as Barack Obama and Bill and Hillary Clinton in every jot and
tittle. An authoritarian by nature wishes to follow the orders of the
president, but can never do so when an illegitimate usurper holds the position.
Proving the fundamental illegitimacy of these presidencies – as the regimes of
a sexual pervert, a Muslim foreigner, and a lying crook, respectively – has
thus formed the overwhelming preoccupations of their various campaigns to
attack them politically.
Authoritarianism as a worldview always creates a certain
kind of cognitive dissonance, a feeling of unreality, because it runs smack
into the complex nature of the modern world and attempts to impose its
simplified, black-and-white explanation of reality onto a factual reality that
contradicts and undermines it every turn. People with authoritarian
personalities willingly slip into the alternative universe of Alt-America
because it helps soothe this dissonance, allowing its occupants to glide over
inconvenient facts because they participate in a larger “truth.”
So conspiracism is especially appealing to people with these
personality traits – the people who tell pollsters they “don’t recognize their
country anymore” and are discomfited and bewildered by the brown faces and
strange languages that have been filling up their cultural landscapes in places
where they never used to be. One study found that conspiracy theories seem to
be more compelling to “those with low self-worth, especially with regard to
their sense of agency in the world at large.” They often long for a 1950s-style
America with lawns and cul-de-sacs, and are angry that the world no longer
works that way.
While the mainstream media simply present the world as it
is, conspiracy theories offer narratives that explain to them why the country
is no longer what they wish it to be, why it has that alien shape. And so in
their minds it comes to represent a deeper truth about their world, while
repeatedly reinforcing their long-held prejudices, and enables them to ignore
the real, factual (and often uncomfortable) nature of the changes the nation is
undergoing. Simply put, it provides a clear, self-reinforcing answer to the
source of their personal disempowerment.
The deep irony in all this is that the larger psychological
and even political effect of conspiracy theories is that they are profoundly
disempowering in and of themselves. They create a toxic mindset, a worldview in
which the world is actually being run by secretive, powerful schemers intent on
suppressing them, against whose immense power an ordinary individual is almost
entirely powerless.
People who are “red-pilled,” as the conspiracy-loving
alt-righters have dubbed themselves, see themselves as utterly disattached from
their communities, fighting a desperate battle with only the help of their
fellow conspiracists against truly dark and evil forces. Alex Jones constantly
refers to his targets as “demonic.” It’s not just a bleak world, it’s one in
which people can become overwhelmed with feelings of helplessness and anger.
That’s one of the primary reasons conspiracist beliefs are so often associated with horrific acts of terrorist violence. Think of Anders Breivik’s massacre of 69 schoolchildren in Norway in 2011, or Tim McVeigh’s destruction of the Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City in 1995 that killed 168, or Jared Loughner’s horrifying rampage in Tucson in 2011, or Dylann Roof’s rampage at the Charleston church in 2015. All of these people, and their many other domestic-terrorist cohorts, acted out of a desperation fueled by anger over their sense of deep disempowerment – all of it a product of a belief in conspiracy theories.
That’s one of the primary reasons conspiracist beliefs are so often associated with horrific acts of terrorist violence. Think of Anders Breivik’s massacre of 69 schoolchildren in Norway in 2011, or Tim McVeigh’s destruction of the Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City in 1995 that killed 168, or Jared Loughner’s horrifying rampage in Tucson in 2011, or Dylann Roof’s rampage at the Charleston church in 2015. All of these people, and their many other domestic-terrorist cohorts, acted out of a desperation fueled by anger over their sense of deep disempowerment – all of it a product of a belief in conspiracy theories.
Beyond individuals, however, authoritarianism
is also toxic for any kind of democratic society – which is unsurprising,
given the alt-right’s express hostility to democracy and its institutions. And
it is rising as a political phenomenon not just in the United States, but
around the world, especially in Europe.
This is why a number of political
scientists have recently begun speaking up about the trend. “If current
trends continue for another 20 or 30 years, democracy will be toast,” recently
warned Yascha Mounk, a lecturer at Harvard.
They warn that democracies die all the time, and there is no
reason the United States would be immune, despite its longevity and comparative
stability – until recently, at least. And the reasons have to do with people –
both the leaders and the citizenry – taking its institutions for granted and
permitting them to fall into decay.
These include the values of community and generosity that
have previously guided the American spirit at crucial junctures, as well as the
basic value of empathy as a personal characteristic. Defending them vigorously,
and reviving them to full life, will be the key to defeating the authoritarian
spirit unleashed in recent years.
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