In the last decade or so, social science has focused attention on the
question of how terrorism arises and sustains itself. Although research
ongoing, an answer is beginning to come into focus. Current
understanding points to a way out. However, the road to peace is going
to take time, persistence and real moral courage to face reality. That’s
probably no surprise to most people.
The good news is that with
persistent focus and the courage to do so, any nation including all
Western countries, can remove one of the two fuels that is necessary to
sustain terrorism. The two fuels that ignite and sustain terrorism are
(1) primed and ready new terrorist recruits and (2) how the terrorist
group’s enemies respond to the terrorist group’s threats and/or actual
violence. Both fuels are necessary to light the fire and to keep it
burning with fresh manpower.
Most Islamic terrorists, more than
99%, are psychologically normal and not psychopaths or sadists.
Conversion to terrorism is based not on the person’s initial ideology or
religion. It is based on the person’s social identity and the dynamics
of the person’s social group or country. A progression from normalcy to
extremism appears to result from four things. Once they have converted,
the converts aren’t mindless killers. They are marked by an unstoppable
willingness to enthusiastically and creatively murder innocents.
Does this sound familiar?: If reference to social identity sounds vaguely familiar to some readers, it should. The research into the fundamental basis of democracy
I described also found that the dominant factor driving
voter’s beliefs and behavior was their social or group identity, not
their ideology or objectively rational thinking. Social identity and
what happens to it is critical to understand the process.
How to make a homegrown terrorist:
For the US and Western countries, the pre-terrorist identifies with and
supports his home country and its authorities. The next step occurs
when, on a number of occasions, society and/or the country’s authorities
treat this person differently, e.g., constantly imposing extra scrutiny
at airports, monitoring Islamic religious activities or being removed
from an airplane for simply speaking in Arabic on a cell phone before
the flight. The latter incident occurred a couple of days ago in California.
Although third step in the process doesn’t happen with everyone, some
people who have experienced treatment they believe is inexplicable,
humiliating and/or unwarranted respond by beginning to disengage from
their identification with their home country. Their social identity
begins to loosen.
At this point, the typical pre-terrorist becomes
susceptible to the minority of voices who promise a new and better
thing to identify with such as the utopian Caliphate that ISIS promises
its recruits. In this “alienated” state of mind, the pre-terrorist can
easily identify with the new message and rationalize the horrors and
slaughter it will take to get to a better society. The final step in the
transition from pre-terrorist to terrorist willing to murder is full
loss of identification with the home country. At that point, the
person’s transition to a terrorist is essentially complete. Terrorist
recruiters now essentially own the new recruit if they can get to him or
her.
In America with its powerful freedom of speech
constitutional law, there is no significant barrier to block the
recruiter. The path is clear.
The first fuel:
The first fuel needed to start the fire in a new recruit is clear. In
the process from normal to murderer, how the pre-terrorist’s home
country treats him and his religion determines if the second step is
present or absent. Everything from vilifying Islam or Islamic
immigration in public to surveillance of Mosques to kicking someone off
an airplane for simply speaking in Arabic can be enough to move the
progression to steps 3 and 4. Two group dynamics are needed for this
Tango - the first group is the home country acting badly. The second
dynamic is the terrorist recruiter offering a new social identity and
dynamic. If the home country doesn’t act badly, the fire never starts.
Of
course, that exact scenario my not apply in all situations. Research is
ongoing. Despite some uncertainty, this is what modern science, not
closed-minded political ideologues and arrogant blowhards, believes
constitutes the path to terrorism for nearly all new recruits. This
scenario plays out in Islamic countries too. In those countries, the
first fuel is the corrupt local dictator acting badly toward its own
people and as we all know, there’s way more than plenty of that to go
around.
And, of course, there’s The Donald: On
the campaign trail, The Donald publicly suggested that all Muslim
immigrants are potential enemies who need to be kept out of the US. That
was a victory for ISIS. They immediately turned it into a recruiting
tool and used it to smear all Americans. Talk like that fosters
completing the second step in the progression -- it's the first fuel.
What we need to do as a country is obvious. The question is whether we
have the intelligence and courage to do it. Do we? Or, is it best to
simply ignore the science and trust the politicians?
This discussion is based on an article in my favorite unbiased source for understanding the science of politics, Scientific American.
This article, “Fueling Extremes” is in the May-June 2016 issue at pages
34-39. An online version, “Fueling Terror: How Extremists Are Made”, is
available for $5.99 at: http://www.scientificamerican....
Pragmatic politics focused on the public interest for those uncomfortable with America's two-party system and its way of doing politics. Considering the interface of politics with psychology, cognitive science, social behavior, morality and history.
Etiquette
DP Etiquette
First rule: Don't be a jackass.
Other rules: Do not attack or insult people you disagree with. Engage with facts, logic and beliefs. Out of respect for others, please provide some sources for the facts and truths you rely on if you are asked for that. If emotion is getting out of hand, get it back in hand. To limit dehumanizing people, don't call people or whole groups of people disrespectful names, e.g., stupid, dumb or liar. Insulting people is counterproductive to rational discussion. Insult makes people angry and defensive. All points of view are welcome, right, center, left and elsewhere. Just disagree, but don't be belligerent or reject inconvenient facts, truths or defensible reasoning.
Tuesday, April 26, 2016
Sunday, April 24, 2016
Book review: Democracy for Realists
A recently published book, Democracy For Realists: Why Elections Do not Produce Responsive
Governments (Christopher H. Achen and Larry M. Bartels (“A&B”),
Princeton University Press, Princeton NJ, April 2016) analyzes data on the
nature of voting and democracy in America and other countries from the early
1900’s through 2012. Much of they find isn’t anywhere close to what people believe
about the elements of democracy under the folk theory, e.g., where sovereignty
resides, “the will of the people”, or the true nature of voters’ role in democracy.
A&B, both social scientists, have found that most American's vision of what democracy is has little to do with the reality of democracy. Instead of ideology and logic defining voter's political beliefs, party affiliation and voting preferences, the evidence points instead to people's social identities. Due to their misunderstanding, frustrated voters try to “fix” certain aspects of democracy by, e.g., imposing term limits or resorting to state level ballot measures. Analysis of the data suggests that those measures mostly backfire and tend to shift power from voters to special interests. The key lesson this book has to teach is that fixing democracy requires understanding it first.
The folk theory of democracy
The common perception holds that the people elect their
leaders at the polls and then hold them accountable for representing their
will. The folk theory is appealing because it puts the will of the people and
their interests at the heart of government. Sovereignty resides with the people
who control the agenda. Voters act as government watchdogs to enforce shared
values and curb abuses. Voters correct their mistakes or punish failure at the
polls by changing governments, while rewarding competence with continued time
in power.
My guess is that many readers would at least suspect that
the there’s something not quite right with the folk theory. For example, many people
believe that one or both parties and the will of the people are often or
usually co-opted by special interests backed by money in politics. That’s out
of synch with the common perception of democracy. Those people would be correct
in their suspicions.
If the current election season is any indication, most
Americans are pretty unhappy with the state of affairs in their democracy. They
see something wrong. So do A&B:
“One consequence of our reliance on old definitions is that
the modern American does not look at democracy before he defines it; he defines
it first and then is confused by what he sees. We become cynical about
democracy because the public does not act the way the simplistic definition of
democracy says it should act, or we try to whip the public into doing things it
does not want to do, is unable to do, and has too much sense to do. The crisis
here is not a crisis in democracy but a crisis in theory.”
Give that observation a moment to sink in. Don’t overlook
the phrase “is unable to do.” That reflects the reality that most people (>
90% ?) don’t pay attention to politics, often can’t pay attention and are
biologically too limited to understand what’s going on even if they tried:
“. . . . the typical citizen drops down to a lower level of
mental performance as soon as he enters the political field. He argues and
analyzes in a way which he would readily recognize as infantile within the
sphere of his real interests. . . . cherished ideas and judgments we bring to
politics are stereotypes and simplifications with little room for adjustment as
the facts change. . . . . the real environment is altogether too big, too
complex, and too fleeting for direct acquaintance. We are not equipped to deal
with so much subtlety, so much variety, so many permutations and combinations.
Although we have to act in that environment, we have to reconstruct it on a
simpler model before we can manage it.”
From the biological point of view, that’s reality, not a
criticism of people or their limitations. Almost everything in politics, if not
everything, is more complex than people give it credit for. And, most if it is
either at least partially hidden from the public, distorted in the name of “free
speech”, or both.
It is hard to understate the role of cognitive biology and
associated human behavior in politics. A&B point out that “a democratic
theory worthy of serious social influence must
engage with the findings of modern social science.” Although A&B’s book
dissects democratic theory and analyzes mountains of science and history data
from the last hundred years or so, the exercise is really about analyzing the
role of human cognitive biology as it pertains to how democracy works. Our
beliefs about democracy are shaped much more by human biology than political
theory.
In Democracy for
Realists, A&B assert that democratic theory has to adapt to the reality
of what democracy is. That directly reflects the necessity of understanding
human biology by analyzing the data.
Two points exemplify the case that this is about human
biology first and what political theory needs to do to be helpful. The first
point is that the “will of the people” that’s so central to the folk theory is
a myth. There is no such thing as the will of the people. The people are divided
on most everything and they usually don’t know what they want.
For example, voter opinions can be very sensitive to
variation how questions are worded. This reflects a powerful cognitive bias
called framing effects. Marketers and politicians are acutely aware of
unconscious biases and they
use them with a vengeance to get what they want.
For example in one 1980’s survey, about 64% said there was
too little federal spending on “assistance to the poor” but only about 23% said that there was too little
spending on “welfare.” The 1980s was the decade when vilification of “welfare”
was common from the political right. Before the 1991 Gulf War, about 63% said
they were willing to “use military force”, but less than 50% were willing to
“engage in combat”, while less than 30% were willing to “go to war.” Again, the
overwhelmingly subjective nature of political concepts is obvious, i.e.,
assistance vs. welfare and military force vs. combat vs. war. Where is the will
of the people in any of this? If it is there, what is it?
Serving the will of the people under the folk theory of
democracy is often hard or impossible because there’s often no way to know what
it is.
The second point is that voters usually don’t rationally
hold politicians accountable for failure or reward them for success. People don’t
logically distinguish success from failure. A&B point out that politicians
are routinely voted out of office for things they cannot logically be held
accountable for. For example, droughts, floods and an increase in shark attacks
(yes, shark attacks) routinely cost incumbent presidents significant numbers of
votes.
On economic issues, voters only consider a few months
leading up to an election to decide if a president or party has done well. Data
analysis suggests that if the 1938 recession had occurred two years earlier,
FDR would not have been reelected and the New Deal would have ended. Similar
“myopic” voting in the 1930s occurred in other countries and ideology had
nothing to do with it. Perceptions of success and failure dominated voting in
response to the Great Depression, not anything else.
That voting behavior contradicts the notion that voters rationally
reward success and punish failure. In other words, politicians have little
incentive to adhere to the folk theory. They know that their own success and
failure can easily depend on things outside their control. That’s another key
aspect of the folk theory that the data blows to smithereens.
If democracy is so strange, then what’s the point of doing
more research? A&B give compelling reasons. They argue that “the mental
frameworks” that both liberals and conservatives employ can be defended “only
by willful denial of a great deal of credible evidence . . . . intellectual
honesty requires all of us to grapple with the corrosive implications of that
evidence for our understanding of democracy.”
Social identity & flawed fixes
Collectively, A&B see the data as showing that most
voters vote less on policy preferences or ideology, and more on who they are or
their social identities. For most voters, social identity shapes most thinking
and voting behavior. That largely “reflects and reinforces social loyalties.”
A&B observe that our flawed perception of democracy led to failed remedies to reform it. Such fixes, including term limits and state level ballot initiatives, often undercut what people want from their democracy. Instead of acting to make democracy fit the theory, “more democracy” fixes that voters keep trying usually shift power to organized special interests. That outcome is precisely what voters did not want.
Why understanding democracy is critical
The point is clear. If you don’t understand how and why
democracy works, you can’t change what you don’t like about it. Therefore, go
figure out what democracy really is, not what one thinks it is or should be.
A&B have gone a long way toward pointing out how and why it works. However,
solutions to democracy issues are not clear. It may require years of empirical
trial and error. Despite the surprising nature of democracy, A&B point to a
more rational understanding of how things work. That is encouraging. The
disappointment is that solutions are not obvious.
DP repost: 4/1/20
DP repost: 4/1/20
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)