The Psychopathology of the Liberal Mind
By Damon Isherwood
The
ever-increasing culture of entitlement was correctly identified by Mitt
Romney as a leading factor in the Democrats' victory. However, running
in parallel is another culture on the rise -- one far less
well-identified, which bodes ominously not only for the GOP's future
prospects, but, more importantly, for the democratic process itself.
If
the culture of entitlement is illustrated by 47% of the population
believing they have a right to live off the country's teat, then what
could be termed a "culture of pseudo-idealism" is the mindset that gets
its self-worth from assisting them to do that.
Pseudo-idealism is a term coined by the Australian biologist Jeremy Griffith to describe apparently
charitable behavior that on scrutiny is revealed as selfish, because
the giver is engaging in it only so that he or she can feel good about
him- or herself. It is a characteristic commonly found among the left, and it constitutes what the author Geoffrey Wheatcroft recognized as the left's inherent dishonesty.
The
problem for Republicans is that pseudo-idealism becomes a more and more
attractive option the more dysfunctional a society becomes. By
contrast, a healthy, pioneering country, where the family unit still
instils strong values, will far more readily produce sound, self-reliant
adults with little or no need to escape
themselves by taking up feel-good causes. However, as these values are
eroded and society and the family unit begin to break down, it is
inevitable that new generations will carry greater emotional scars than
previous generations. What this means is that recent generations will
have an increased motivation to find escape from their condition through deluding themselves that they are genuinely compassionate by taking up some moral high ground-simulating cause.
The clear and present danger is that this sort of dysfunction is skyrocketing. The psychologist Michael Carr-Gregg
was reported as saying that "Generation Y is being ravaged by
depression, anxiety disorders and stress disorders." Statistics are
readily available that show that all of the attributes identified by
Carr-Gregg have gone off the graph over the last 20-30 years.
In one of the few analyses of its kind, Lyle H. Rossiter, Jr., M.D. identifies this dysfunctional psychology that lies behind liberalism. He writes in The Liberal Mind: The Psychological Causes of Political Madness that liberalism is "rooted in fears of separation, abandonment loss or abuse -- the residual effects of early attachment gone wrong."
Those
suffering from this particular psychosis, then, naturally enough,
become preoccupied with seeking relief, in particular through
pseudo-idealism or "celebrating" victimhood. Rossiter says,
"What the liberal mind is passionate about is a world filled with pity,
sorrow, neediness, misfortune, poverty, suspicion, mistrust, anger,
exploitation, discrimination, victimization, alienation and injustice."
Griffith, while presenting an explanation for the human condition
which he claims reconciles the differences between left- and right-wing
politics at a fundamental biological level, is even more explicit in
drawing the connection between dysfunction (what he terms "upset") and
this culture of pseudo-idealism. He says, "With the levels of upset in
the world becoming extreme, relief-hunting became a huge industry, to
the extent that we became, as sociologist Frank Furedi recognized, 'a
society that celebrates victimhood rather than heroism.'"
Answering the idea that pseudo-idealists are just trying to make a better world, Griffith says bluntly, "What rubbish -- it's a selfish attempt to gain relief from the agony of the human condition!"
As
signaled at the beginning of this article, should this trend toward
pseudo-idealism continue, there is a real danger that there will be a
corruption of the democratic process as a viable mechanism for making
sound decisions about what is best for society. Griffith points out:
"The whole democratic process that our society depended on for there to
be effective progress was being destroyed by mad desperados, by a group
of people who were misusing democracy for their own selfish need to make
themselves feel good, rather than for what democracy was designed for
-- a tool to decide what was right or wrong in any particular course of
action."
The
predictable response by liberals to this charge is that without their
social agenda, there would be no compassion at all for the marginalized.
To be fair, there is a point where most of us will agree that
conservative attitudes can go too far "right." Wheatcroft identified
this potential when he said, "The great twin political problems of the
age are the brutality of the right, and the dishonesty of the left."
However, it is part of the dishonesty of the left that it exaggerates
this potential for brutality.
Altruism, when it is required, is a mark of a healthy, responsible society, and it is not alien to the conservative mindset -- but real compassion has none of the degenerate morbidity that characterizes the liberal's. As Rossiter attests, the compassionate instinct is a natural one: "When not lost in the torment and dysfunction of mental disorder or discouraged by the oppressive hand of government,
charitable service to others feels inherently gratifying and even
fulfilling, not burden-some, to the mature adult. This altruistic pole
of human nature, a rational expression of a biologically determined
nurturing instinct, is one of the pillars of social order."
It
is critically important to understand this profound difference between
genuine and pseudo-idealism, and it is critically important to
understand that more and more people will flock to pseudo-idealistic
causes simply because they cannot withstand the temptation of the relief
that it brings them. The challenge is to understand this impulse well
enough to resist it; otherwise, its carriers will lead us down a path
from which we won't recover -- all the while, in sickly sweet tones,
claiming the moral high ground.
Read more: http://www.americanthinker.com/2012/12/the_psychopathology_of_the_liberal_mind.html#ixzz2DwhBzkiO
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