Sunday, January 29, 2006

Wingnut motivators




From Mahablog


Automaton conformity: Fearful people can gain a sense of power by acting like everyone else, holding the same beliefs and values, purchasing the same products, and believing in the same morals. They give up much of their individuality, but they feel more secure.

Along these lines, have you ever noticed how righties believe with an absolute, pure faith that their beliefs and values are the beliefs and values of the majority, even when polls say otherwise? I noticed a long time ago that being one of the herd is terribly important to righties. If you argue them into a corner, they nearly always fall back on "most people agree with me, not you looney lefties."

Authoritarianism contains a paradox - by giving up power to the powerful, the powerless feel more powerful. Put another way, we submit to a leader by submerging our individual identity with the identity of the leader, and thus become powerful like the leader. The more slavishly devoted to the leader we are, the more powerful we think we become. Or at least that's what it feels like.

Destructiveness refers to destroying people we think keep power away from us. Thus the Right's obsession with a powerful "liberal elite" that controls society in spite of the fact that it doesn't exist.

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