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They Blinded Me with Science
NRO ^ | 7/24/2003 | Jonah Goldberg

Posted on 07/24/2003 3:49:47 PM PDT by sjersey

Cow farts!

I'm sorry. I really wanted to say something incredibly clever about how dumb I think a new study from Berkeley is. I've been sitting here staring at my computer for over an hour trying to come up with some Simpsons quote or fresh joke that captures the gravity warping, oxygen-depriving, heart-palpitating idiocy of this thing. Instead, I feel like a three-year old on his first trip to FAO Schwarz — I keep dashing from one shiny plaything to another, incapable of concentrating on a single object for more than a moment. I feel like I could spend a lifetime peeling this thing like an onion — finding new layers of stupidity, fresh eye-watering spouts of acidic absurdity, all the while keeping in mind that each seemingly intelligent layer is actually paper thin, insubstantial, translucent.

But dangnabit all I can come up with is: Cow Farts!

That's what I kept thinking as I read this summary of a report (Full PDF version here) from a team of Berkeley scientists who've been cloistered away studying the psychological state of homo insipiens, or unthinking man. After scouring the academic literature — and no doubt laying their calipers to the craniums of whatever conservatives they could manage to tranquilize and tag (picture a squirrelly YAFer trying to break out of his restraints on a metal slab somewhere in the psych annex at Berkeley) — these scientists have concluded that the psychological factors which contribute to political conservatism are: Fear and aggression Dogmatism and intolerance of ambiguity Uncertainty avoidance Need for cognitive closure Terror management

But first, what is it about this that makes me think of bovine flatulence? Well, everything. Scientists spend millions of taxpayer dollars studying the methane which comes out of the academic end of heifers, reportedly because such gaseous discharge contributes to global warming. Whatever their reasons, they think it's important work. They either don't mind that their research stinks — literally — or they think all of their efforts are worth the money poured into them. And while words like gassy, insubstantial, and malodorous certainly apply to the Berkeley study, there are two chief differences between the study of cow flatulence and this study of conservative psychology. First, the cow-scientists can claim that there's a legitimate purpose to their pursuits. Overblown or not, global warming is something scientists should study. Secondly, while the earth-sciences folks are primarily concerned with what rises up and away from the back end of a bull, these bozos at Berkeley are 100 percent committed to studying and disseminating what plunks to the ground when it leaves the same anatomical disembarkation area.

ME KONSERVATIVE, YOU MUCH SMART I know, I know, some who look positively on this study might say I'm just proving the researchers' conclusions. After all, the scientists in question performed "ten meta-analytic calculations" to come to their conclusions while conservatives like me spend most of the day opening and closing the refrigerator door applauding when the happy-fun light magically turns on. Moreover, we conservatives need "cognitive closure" and we are "intolerant of ambiguity." When something complicated or unexpected happens we leap about the room shrieking like a chimp who didn't know the jack in the box would pop out or Alec Baldwin after learning that you shouldn't put your car keys in an electrical socket.

I'm sorry, but not since Professor Peter Singer explained that we should give as good as we get from dogs who hump our legs, have I been so exasperated with the way some academics think they can use their head for a colonoscopy and then crab-walk around expecting all the world to think their new hats make them look smart. And, as with Singer's efforts to get pet stores to carry Viagra, I have a very hard time taking this seriously and I'm not sure taking it seriously helps anybody. But I just know that if I don't address the "substance" of this study, I will hear from numerous silly liberals who think I'm afraid to deal with the ambiguity and that my scorn is just another attempt at "terror management." So, let me splash some cold water on my face and shake off the giggles.

LOOKING FOR THE CAR KEYS Okay. Okay. I can do this.

Okay, first of all, the actual study is fractionally less outright stoopid than the summary released to the media. Still, the summary is what 99 percent of the media will read and it contains what the authors presumably want the public to know about their work. Here's the first problem: When asked that this might be seen as a "partisan exercise," Dr. Jack Glaser explained that they studied conservatism simply because there have been a great deal of studies on conservatives but not on liberals. Now, putting aside the fact that the authors included in their research numerous speeches by conservatives and judicial opinions by conservatives and the last time I checked there was no shortage of liberal speeches and liberal judicial opinions, I take them at their word that there have been few psychological studies of liberalism and many of conservatism.

But perhaps, just perhaps, this fact illuminates a certain bias in the profession. Look at it this way. I have no doubt there is no shortage of psychological studies of murderers, rapists, people who think they're Napoleon, and people who think Carrot Top is funny. But I suspect there's very little data on people who like to have cereal and orange juice in the morning. Why? Because the former category of people are considered abnormal. People who eat cereal and juice in the morning aren't particularly interesting because they aren't seen as particularly different. So it is with conservatives and liberals. Conservatives are strange creatures. They have strange views. They defend cruelty and inequality while liberals, well, they're baseline. They're like, well, me. How else to explain the vast stockpile of research on conservatives and the comparative dearth of data on liberals? And if that is part of the equation, then maybe the data is skewed because researchers found what they wanted to find. They were only looking for their car keys where the light is good.

The idea that the psychiatric-therapeutic establishment is politically biased is hardly new. In 1964, 1,189 psychiatrists asserted that even though they'd never met Barry Goldwater, never mind diagnosed him, he was still so mentally unstable and paranoid that in their scientific opinion he could not be trusted with the power of the presidency. So outrageous was this "petition" of psychiatrists launched by Fact magazine, that Goldwater actually won a libel suit, which is almost impossible for a politician.

In more recent times, we've seen a sharp rise in what I would call the left's medicalization of dissent. Today, on college campuses, liberal and left-wing students who burn newspapers, shout down opponents, accuse conservatives of racism, rape, whatever, are generally treated with dignity. Conservative students whose behavior falls far short of this sort of thing are often sent to counseling or therapy. My guess is that drugging conservatives will come next.

A couple quick examples: When a University of New Hampshire professor compared writing to sex — "You and the subject become one," he said — he was forced to apologize and seek counseling. When a law lecturer at the University of Pennsylvania said, "We have ex-slaves here who should know about the Thirteenth Amendment" and was also forced to get his brain checked out by an approved therapist.

The justification for this sort of thing is not merely that the "conservatives" — broadly defined to include anyone not up-to-speed on what constitutes insensitive language — need to get right in the head but that the liberal young men and women who feel "oppressed" by contrary views, nasty-sounding words, nude pictures in the classroom, "hate" words, etc. are right in the head. In other words, it's "normal" according to the reigning authorities of academia to have the self-esteem of a delicate soufflé, prone to imploding at the slightest discordant vibration, but it is abnormal to disagree with the prevailing worldview.

And that gets us to the heart of why this study is more bogus than a $6 dollar Rolex. Virtually all of the characteristics the authors attribute to the right can be equally laid at the feet of the left. If you think left-wingers have a high tolerance for ambiguity, tell one it's not clear that Head Start does any good at all. Talk to them about racial differences. Say: "Even if gay marriage were worth doing, there would be many devastating negative consequences." Mention that a factory closing can be a good thing. Tell them it's okay for economists to put a specific monetary value on a human life. Tell them intelligence tests measure intelligence. Tell them something can be simultaneously bad and constitutional. Indeed, don't get me started on the myopia of the left on constitutional questions; tell a campus liberal that Brown v. Board of Education had a good effect but was a terribly reasoned decision and they will look at you as if you'd said grobn gleebin grobbin grobin while standing on one foot. I've just watched my wife spend a year debating Title IX please don't tell me that feminists have a rich love of exchange and a gift for understanding nuance.

How anybody could look at the anti-globalization movement or anti-genetically engineered food crowd and say that the left isn't dependent on "fear and aggression" is beyond me. The Naderites have mastered the art of scaring the bejesus out of people on a wide spectrum of issues. Your cars are killing you and the planet, multinational corporations want to install pain collars on all carbon-based life, genetically modifying crops will result in 50-foot-tall ears of corn which will crush cities and enslave mankind. Children are taught that if their parents don't recycle, they must be turned in to the appropriate authorities. Not too long ago feminists insisted it was unsafe for a woman to be alone in the room with a guy if the Super Bowl was on. We spent much of the 1990s listening to one liberal after another insist that if we didn't do X, Y or Z, the children would be "left behind," presumably in a scary place without recycling.

I have a file clogging my hard drive containing quotes from mainstream liberals who insisted that if conservatives had their way America would become a Fourth Reich. During the debates over the Contract with America, Rep. Major Owens of New York said of the Republicans, "These are people who are practicing genocide with a smile; they're worse than Hitler. Gingrich smiles . . . [and] says they're going to be our friend. We're going to have cocktail-party genocide." Charles Rangel concurred, saying of Republicans who favor small government, "It's not 'spic' or 'nigger' anymore. They say, 'Let's cut taxes'."

According to the summary, "This [conservative] intolerance of ambiguity can lead people to cling to the familiar, to arrive at premature conclusions, and to impose simplistic clichés and stereotypes, the researchers advise." Good lord. Even to hint that the right has a monopoly on such tendencies is to lay the torch to the bonfire of absurdity. Liberalism in America is almost entirely reactionary. During the last presidential election, the Democratic rhetoric was all about "Stopping" Big Oil, Big Tobacco, Big This and Big That. Al Gore promised to distribute lockboxes and to fight urban sprawl to calm the "quiet sadness" that plagues Americans. Leftwing magazines and activists brim with fear of technology in particular and change in general. And they pass on lies about how bad the environment is doing in order to terrorize their audience into action. Public policy in this country is crippled by the maddening psychological addiction of liberals to outdated ideas and downright antique bureaucracies.

Moreover, when someone questions liberal priorities the response is far more transparently psychological than rational. It is the Left which confuses politics for human worth; they are the ones who believe ideology is a window to the soul. Propose giving scholarships to black kids in the form of vouchers and in the bang-your-bottle-on-your-high-chair logic of the left you are "mean-spirited" and "declaring war on children." Talk about the need for a psychiatrist.

CONSERVING WHAT? Meanwhile, conservatives are the ones demanding change. We want the Supreme Court to go back and fix its mistakes. We want the federal government to get out of the business of regulating political speech. We want Americans to make more of their own decisions, keep more of their own money, etc. We're even willing to say that not all of our changes will have only positive effects, unlike many on the left who suffer from the sort of cognitive closure and blindness to ambiguity which forces them to believe that only good things happen when good things are done.

And that brings us to the fundamental problem, identified most famously by Samuel Huntington in his 1957 essay "Conservatism as an Ideology." Conservatism in much of the world is situational. A conservative in Saudi Arabia or Russia wants to conserve something very different from what a conservative in America wants to conserve. A Saudi conservative wants to maintain State control of the economy, scoffs at civil liberties and wants to spread Wahhabbi Islam around the globe. Meanwhile, in America it's true that conservatives want to defend traditional arrangements but our traditional arrangements are defined by classically liberal institutions. This is why Hayek admired American conservatives even though he distrusted European ones — because American conservatives are determined to defend the institutions which keep us free. American liberals are determined to protect the "advances" they believe keep us "progressive."

And therein lies the debate, caliper boys. There are radicals and reactionaries — psychologically speaking — in all ideological camps. There are leftists and rightists afraid of change and in love of change. There are leftists and rightists who love ambiguity and there are those who hate it. But this study is classic scientific poppycock because it is confirmed by contradictory facts. When Stalin or Castro kill people it is because they are crypto-rightwingers when Hitler kills people, he's being consistent. In other words, conservatives are always the bad guys.

So, yes, conservatism is a temperament, but it is also an ideology. And that ideology is not dependent on the need for "cognitive closure" or a "fear of ambiguity" at all. In fact, most conservative thinkers see their project completely differently. The threat they see is from a statist elite which seeks to impose uniformity and cookie-cutter banality across the society. Conservatism, as Russell Kirk noted, is marked by an "Affection for the proliferating variety and mystery of human existence." Indeed, if these authors had spent a bit more time reading Russell Kirk's The Conservative Mind, they wouldn't have bollixed up their own depiction of the conservative mind so badly.


TOPICS: Miscellaneous
KEYWORDS:

1 posted on 07/24/2003 3:49:48 PM PDT by sjersey
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To: sjersey
SCIENCE!!
2 posted on 07/24/2003 3:58:45 PM PDT by freedomlover
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To: sjersey
They should've been here when the herds of buffalo were farting!
3 posted on 07/24/2003 4:06:47 PM PDT by SwinneySwitch (Freedom is not Free - Support the Troops.)
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To: sjersey
read later
4 posted on 07/24/2003 4:20:18 PM PDT by LiteKeeper
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To: sjersey
If the Earth needs an enema, Berserkeley is where you'd put the syringe....
5 posted on 07/24/2003 4:27:48 PM PDT by JoJo Gunn (Help control the Leftist population. Have them spayed or neutered....)
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To: freedomlover
Its not just farting cows, it is stupid vegetarians, they fart excessively too. And they are growing in numbers as their brains shrink.
6 posted on 07/24/2003 4:56:02 PM PDT by Leo Carpathian
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To: sjersey
Wow, that reminded me of something.

When I was going to school at Alabama a few years ago, there was this discussion-oriented honors english class. When the teacher started discussing politics, I obliged her by discussing back. When she started babbling about how white men kept native americans crammed into trailor homes, several men and women per each, I exclaimed that the only way I could imagine you could keep several people crammed into a trailor home for very long at all is to post guards around the exit and threaten to shoot anyone who tried to leave. Then she kicked me out of the classroom, and then later that day I had academic misconduct charges filed against me for threatening/intimidating the teacher.

So they told me not to go back to class, and they sent a psychologist to visit the class to see what they felt about me and to find out if I had caused any additional trauma to the classroom (like I obviously did to the teacher). Now you should be aware that no one in the class liked me because I was obviously the smartest, and could not help but demonstrate it repeatedly because you were graded on whether or not you spoke up in class, so I would periodically just have to add something (brilliant) to the conversation, and the teacher would just croon and say how insightful I was, and how much she wished everyone else's writing could be as good as mine. So in conclusion, the class hated me.

They even persuaded one girl to say, in an effort to be helpful in getting to the bottom of a terrible situation, that maybe she thought one of her friends had maybe seen me in my dorm room alone, rocking back and forth huddled up.

When the dean of whatever it is that takes care of this stuff had me in her office, and my account of events was 100% different from the teachers', the only conclusion that could be drawn was that I was quite insane and disturbed and antisocial, and that I was living in a fantasy world, and they demanded that I go see a psychologist in the school health center.

So I went to see him and he interviewed me and it was fun, and he decided I was quite happily normal.

They really couldnt do anything then, since they had put all their eggs in that basket.

The situation was eventually resolved by my talking to her the teacher's boss and explaining my perspective, and him laughing and shaking his head and saying 'Sounds about right' and administratively dropping me from the class.

The bottom line is, I am pretty sure that I was considered almost brain-damagedly antisocial for so stridently defending opinions that no one (all freshmen, we were then) had the guts to say they agreed with when it came down to it, and that were generally agreed to be excessively ruthlessly cruel. Without anyone to back me up, I *did* seem totally weird.

But I am glad to say, some students there at Alabama recovered from the shock of their freshmen year, and in my third year I was able to lead several other students out of the class when the class and teacher got a little too wacky.

Yeah!! its screwed up. They seriouslly thought I didnt have it all together upstairs. So this berkeley report isnt saying anythign the academic community didn't already teach.

P.s. the dean of whatever it is that handled stuff like that was also a renowned sociology professor, or something.

7 posted on 07/24/2003 4:56:35 PM PDT by zeromus
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To: sjersey
I don't see people as gleeful over Jonah's writing as with other conservative authors we all know and love such as Coulter and Steyn. Jonah hit the nail on the head with this article and did it in a laugh out loud and funny way. Good Work!! I miss his emails.
8 posted on 07/24/2003 5:17:53 PM PDT by mlmr (Support bears naked.)
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To: sjersey
bump
9 posted on 07/24/2003 5:54:27 PM PDT by lowbridge (Rob: "I see a five letter word. F-R-E-E-P. Freep." Jerry: "Freep? What's that?" - Dick Van Dyke Show)
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To: mlmr
Jonah is great! I am a huge fan and read The Corner at NRO every day, mainly for him. I love his use of humor and pop culture references, plus he usually hits the nail on the head as you say. If you did not see his recent rant on Jerry Springer, you should go to NRO and check it out (I also posted it here last week).
10 posted on 07/24/2003 7:38:28 PM PDT by Akira (5 in a row for Big Tex!)
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To: mlmr
Jonah is great! I am a huge fan and read The Corner at NRO every day, mainly for him. I love his use of humor and pop culture references, plus he usually hits the nail on the head as you say. If you did not see his recent rant on Jerry Springer, you should go to NRO and check it out (I also posted it here last week).
11 posted on 07/24/2003 7:43:57 PM PDT by Akira (5 in a row for Big Tex!)
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To: mlmr
Oops. I apparently thought that what I had to say was so important, it needed to be posted twice. ;-)
12 posted on 07/24/2003 7:45:20 PM PDT by Akira (5 in a row for Big Tex!)
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To: Akira
Thanks, I will.
13 posted on 07/25/2003 3:03:01 AM PDT by mlmr (Support bears naked.)
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