“I went to Congress as a collaborator, and now I'm in an environment where the Republicans want to rule or ruin-- that's the mindset,” Congressman Eric Swalwell (D-CA) told me in January. “There's no room for collaboration…Do you believe in rule of law or do you believe in violence? That's the battle in Washington right now.”
Rep. Swalwell’s comment, which reflects a political class that is deeply divided, prompts thoughts on polarization. We often hear about polarization as a fixed state of affairs, rather than as a process that can deepen if there is a political will driving it, as there is in the US today.
Disaffection with liberal democracy, rising economic inequality, and social media’s exposure of billions to disinformation are among the factors that have contributed to the spread of polarization around the world, as studies show. Polarization is likely here to stay, and democracies need to find ways to contain and reverse it. That will be the subject of a future essay.
History is clear on who benefits from polarization: It’s never democracies. For a century, anti-democratic movements and parties have encouraged it. When it is joined to an illiberal political design, polarization can become “energized,” shading into survivalist states of mind.
In the hands of authoritarians, the low-level rancor of me vs. you can become me or you –the idea that only one of us can survive the encounter – leading to violence and other lawless behaviors. It is deeply worrying that in the US, Republicans are not just accelerating polarization, but shifting into survivalist mode.
Polarization, like propaganda, feeds on existing biases and tribalist impulses that are continually refreshed as we do research on line or scroll through the news, absorbing algorithmically-selected ads and friend/follow suggestions. Safiya Umoja Noble’s powerful book on how search engines reinforce racism demonstrates this dynamic.
Illiberal politicians and their media allies build on this, feeding us images and rhetoric designed to encourage anti-democratic behaviors and outcomes. Media disinformation and conspiracy theories that undermine shared assumptions and truths act in harmony with political polarization, creating enemies and scapegoats that further foment division, suspicion and hostility.
The global right’s exploitation of the pandemic to destroy accepted scientific and public health practices is one example. Schools, town councils, hospitals and clinics become sites of conflict. Anti-science aggression (to use Peter Hotez’s term) and hostility to education have turned previously respected community members, like teachers, health officials, and nurses, into enemies.
In Turkey, where Recep Tayyip Erdogan has demonized hundreds of thousands of Turks as state enemies, a 2019 study found that almost eight of ten Turks would not want their daughter to marry someone who votes for the political party they most dislike, and three-quarters of Turks would not want to do business with such a person. This is polarization working as intended to destroy community ties.
Authoritarian leaders like Erdogan are another main driver of polarization. They decree that entire groups of people should be considered dangerous to society, and create political and civic cultures that eliminate opportunities for free discussion by imprisoning, threatening into silence, or forcing into exile anyone who disagrees with their views.
Over time, authoritarians may guide their countries to the survivalist phase of polarization, when those who challenge them are depicted as threats to be treated with violence.
This is what we are now living through in the US, where four years of propaganda by Donald Trump and the radicalization of the GOP prepared the ground for survivalist ideologies to take hold. A January 2021 survey found that 36% of Americans --almost 100 million adults--agreed "the traditional American way of life is disappearing so fast that we may have to use force to save it."
Many Republican messaging campaigns are inculcating survivalism. The Great Replacement conspiracy theory, which explicitly fosters an us or them mindset (leading to tragedies like the Buffalo shooting by an extremist who wanted to kill as many of “them” as possible), is one example. Trump’s speech at the Jan. 6 rally (“We fight like hell. And if you don’t fight like hell, you’re not going to have a country anymore”) is another.
Polarization is just the start of a process that aims to get people into a state of fear about losing everything, preparing them to accept authoritarian solutions to democratic issues of free speech and coexistence with diversity.
The neutral language the US media uses when it delivers the latest news about how polarized we are covers up the authoritarian political design behind this process. “70% agree with the statement that America is so polarized that it can no longer solve major issues facing the country,” says an NBC News poll.
Yet the breakdowns of communication and democratic methods of managing differences are not neutral and natural occurrences. They are encouraged by Fox News disinformation and enemy formation, and by the actions of GOP politicians who have abandoned collaborative and democratic norms.
“Do you believe in the rule of law or do you believe in violence?” Every citizen and media professional should be asking Republicans Rep. Swalwell’s question. We may already know the answer to this question, and we may have little hope of accountability. Yet we must call out the GOP’s turn to authoritarianism while we still can.
Biden's ratings are low. He says he is going to call out Republicans as "extremists." That's not enough. He needs to articulate very clearly what Ruth lays out. How Republicans want to obstruct beneficial actions, so as to be able to brand his presidency a failure. His ratings show they have succeeded. MSNBC reported today he asked his staff for a new message. Dear Joe, ask Ruth.
Cynicon Implant…
I went to grade school at St. Scholastica in Detroit with a Cynicon Implant. Is that you Cynicon ???
Cynicon… you ask some very interesting questions. Speaking only for me, let me share with you what I see as indicia of authoritarianism in today’s America.
* "Fake News.” Sound familiar ??? Fake news... means don't trust the media. Trust only the authoritarian messenger... classic authoritarianism which is one step away from control of the content of the media by authoritarian figures like Putin.
* "Truth and Reality”... are what authoritarian figures tell you to believe (nothing more, nothing less), and you better not voice disagreement or you end up in the Gulag. Think Putin and the head of the Christian Orthodox Church in Russia... both telling the Russian People that God wants Russia to invade the Ukraine. If the Russian people voice disagreement, they have no 1st Amendment to protect them like we Americas, hopefully, still have.
Authoritarians tell you what “truth and reality” you should believe (even if totally lacking in truth and reality). An example… the recent, authoritarian move by Donald Trump and other elected Republicans to cancel out the will of the American voters in the last Presidential election (2020)… with many Republicans claiming (and still claiming) the election was stolen from Donald Trump. The reality (as far as the facts and the evidence) shows a completely different story…
(1) every lawsuit filed (50 or so) found "no evidence" of any wide spread fraud that cost Trump the election (even by Judges appointed by Trump).
(2) Trump in an authoritarian overreach called the Georgia’s, Republican Secretary of State, Raffensperger, and asked him to find Trump the 11,000 votes Trump needed to win Georgia's electoral votes. Thank heaven, Raffensperger stood up to Trumps overwhelming pressure to find votes that didn't exist.
(3) On January 6, 2020, Trump and other Republican authoritarian politicians urged Trump's followers to march on the Capital, and fight like hell to save the Country by forcing the Congress to take away the election victory of Joe Biden, and put the defeated Trump back in office for a second term,
(4) Trump importuned his own Vice President, Michael Pence, to throw out the election results of "We the People" and have the Republican controlled Senate replace the duly elected President (Joe Biden) with Donald Trump... the loser of the election. When Pence refused to cave into this classic authoritarian move, Trump tried to break Pence spiritually and politically.
(5) Trump's self appointed Attorney General, William Barr, told Trump the election wasn't stolen... and then Barr resigned in the last weeks of office rather than listen to the false, authoritarian statement that the election was stolen from Trump.
(6) The Michigan Legislature (controlled by Republicans) investigated the Michigan election results, held hearings, invited Rudy Giuliani to bring in witnesses to show the election was stolen, and (after a full hearing) wrote a written report clearly outlining the end result of the election... "It wasn't stolen.”
(7) all recounts and all audits of the election showed that Biden legitimately won and Trump lost.
(8) Yet, despite all this “no evidence of a stolen election”... Trump and his authoritarian Republican supporters still continued to use the Authoritarian Playbook, and insist upon a false “Truth and Reality” i.e. the election was stolen.
Cynicon, I submit that the above actions, undermining the confidence of the voters in an election are as “authoritarian,” and far reaching as you will ever find. How many generations will it take to return America’s confidence the hallmark of Democracy, i.e. the vote ???
* Authoritarians often hide behind the Bible… a sure way to win over many voters who stand in the middle, like you do Cynicon.
During the George Floyd protests in Washington D.C. Trump decided to go for a Bible walkabout, arriving at a Christian Church, and holding up a Christian Bible for all America to see which side he is on, the Christian side. Forgetting for the moment that Trump has no history of living a “Do unto Others” Christian life, Tumps actions were not only authoritarian, but his actions also violated the 1st Amendment of the Constitution that says Government cannot "establish" (or prefer or promote) a specific religion. The 1st Amendment’s “non establishment” clause is so basic to our cherished American freedoms, that the Founders put it in the very first Amendment to the Constitution. Yet Trump and his Republican followers (who accompanied him on his Bible walkabout) threw the 1st Amendment out the window (in Authoritarian fashion) just to score some political points. I submit Cynicon, only Authoritarians do that.
I have much more to say, but I have probably worn out my welcome in an attempt to answer you question. But, thank you Cynicon … for asking such an excellent question and keeping us anti-authoritarians on our toes.
P.S. Teachers are trained to teach... not parents. Parents send their children to school, because they are not qualified (by and large) to teach their own children. If parents think otherwise, they are free to "home school" their kids.
Fred Lauck