MONDAY, JUNE 12, 2023
Wilhoit's Law in the modern world: The formulation known as Wilhoit's Law was promulgated in 2018, in a comment to a Crooked Timber blog post.
It wasn't promulgated by the American political scientist Francis M. "Frank" Wilhoit, who died in 2010.
In fact, the formulation was promulgated by a different, unrelated Frank Wilhoit—by the Frank Wilhoit who was a 59-year-old Ohio composer at that point in time.
The formulation has moved from the realm of blog comments into a realm of its own—even though, as this essay at Slate explained last year, it's routinely attributed to the wrong Frank Wilhoit.
Thanks to the so-called democratization of media, our modern discourse is often driven by such examples of human error. At any rate the formulation known as Wilhoit's Law goes exactly like this:
Wilhoit's Law
Conservatism consists of exactly one proposition, to wit: There must be ingroups whom the law protects but does not bind, alongside outgroups whom the law binds but does not protect.
It's a definition of what is now routinely described as tribalism. It says there is only one basic idea behind "conservatism"—the idea that the law must protect our conservative tribe while binding and restraining all others.
Just a guess:
This promulgation describes a very basic human impulse, one which leads back in time to the age of unfettered monarchs. Essentially, the basic human takes this form:
Our tribe will unite behind the greatness of our monarch. We will try to "bind"—we will try to subjugate—all other human tribes, described herein as the outgroups.
Does Wilhoit's Law describe the mindset of Trump-era conservative politics? Sadly, we'd say that it largely does, at least as applied to tribal leaders,
We'd quickly add that it also seems to describe the impulse behind much of modern-day liberalism, in which our tribunes only speak to assemblies of "our favorite reporters and friends." In the venues to which we now repair, no other ideas need apply!
Our red and blue tribes have split far apart. We'd say that Wilhoit's Law captures the ancient, hard-wired tribal impulse which defines much of the history of our war-inclined human race.
You can't run a modern nation in the face of such an aggressive tribal separation! It isn't clear that there's a way to "win" a dispute between two such aggressively segregated ingroups.
Wilhoit's Law comes into play today because of another comment to a blog post by the composer Frank Wilhoit. Wilhoit offered his comment in response to a Sunday post by Kevin Drum, who we've often described as our favorite blogger.
Drum had sone some superlative work down through the ages. The new post to which Wilhoit commented is not, in our view, an example of such work.
In his post, Drum was asking why Donald J. Trump does the weird things he endlessly does. Drum ended with this formulation, making the analysts tear their hair and cry:
DRUM (6/11/23): My wife says she knows the answer: Trump is a wackadoodle and he just does weird, unexplainable stuff. Maybe that's all it is.
We scrolled through 58 comments to that post in search of an intelligent rejoinder. Finally, near the very end of the pile, Ohio's Frank Wilhoit said this:
WILHOIT (6/11/23): Mental illness is the last taboo. We can still use dismissive, reductive words like "whackadoodle", "batshit", etc. The problem with these words is not that they are offensive—the presumption is that their targets are too severely compromised to even take offense—but that, by putting mental illness in a box, and a cute, little box at that, they foreclose any real effort to understand the problem. The problem is quite a large one, arguably the largest that we face, but general understanding of it is essentially nil.
We're not going to solve that one here today, so call Trump a "whackadoodle" all you like—but don't allow the connotation that he is an outlier, because he is not. Half the country thinks like him, and possibly much more than half. Try to think of remedies; build, along the way, a case for medicalizing it, or even build a case for criminalizing it—but don't minimize it, don't brush it off.
We don't believe that "half the country thinks like [Trump]." We aren't even inclined to believe that Trump's atavistic impulses should be regarded or described as a form of "thinking."
We do agree with Wilhoit's general view concerning the role of "mental illness" / mental health / (severe) personality disorder. To wit:
According to modern psychiatry, something like 6 percent of adult men can be diagnosed as (so-called) "sociopaths." It's astounding to us that Drum still prefers to use terms like "wackadoodle" in place of the (admittedly challenging) terms which were and are a basic part of 20th and 21st century medical science.
We had to go very deep into comments to find a commenter pushing back against Drum's formulation. That's especially odd in face of modern tribal history, in which blue tribe commenters were already eager to apply psychiatric analyses to the behavior of President George W. Bush.
Today, we seem to have a genuine "sociopath" out on the hustings, and yet we still play around in the manner of Kevin's blog post. It's also true that we saw Trump speaking this weekend at one of his campaign events, and even as he offered delusional accounts of what he will miraculously accomplish if he gets in the White House again. it occurred to us—for the first time, very strongly—that he really could get elected again next year.
The woods are lovely, dark and deep, but we humans are not "the rational animal." Our technological skills can't be denied, but we're deeply atavistic tribal beings in other realms of inquiry and assessment.
In our view, Wilhoit's Law applies to modern liberalism too. We'd rewrite the law the following way in search of our own tribe's current impulses:
Wilhoit's Law, extended:
Liberalism consists of exactly one proposition, to wit: There must be ingroups whom the law protects, alongside outgroups who liberal ingroups will aggressively name-call.
We humans aren't especially sharp, even here within our own tribe. That post by Kevin is one example—and then, Dear God! Those comments!
Tomorrow: Donald Trump goes for the win
"Our tribe will unite behind the greatness of our monarch. We will try to "bind"—we will try to subjugate—all other human tribes, described herein as the outgroups."
ReplyDeleteAnd yet there are so many examples of groups of people who have not conformed to this supposed law over time and history. Does Somerby ever test his assertions by looking for facts?
Aviva Chomsky: Central American history, US intervention, and Migration --
ReplyDeletehttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W69Wi1gDjK4
And yet there sits Mexico on our Southern border and we have not yet taken it over, not even invaded it (since 1846). Same with Canada to the North. Why have we not taken over these outgroups? Is our monarch not great enough?
DeleteThere was certainly a period of nationalistic consolidation, also one of colonization as the world was "discovered," but recently we have been involved in globalization and cooperation among nations, with much less otherization and domination (excluding Russia, which seems like a throwback).
Is it possible that this is not actually a human universal, as Somerby suggests, but rather a stage in the growth of human civilization dependent on changes in travel and communication among people?
Don’t forget Israel, still taking Palestinian land, with US support.
DeleteConflicts over borders and resources always exist but are most often resolved peacefully. This one is far more complex than you portray it. Arguably, there is no war going on over so-called Palestinian land. If you count terrorism as war then the US is in the middle of a war being waged on it by the US right wing.
DeleteThe red-blue split is not occurring because Democrats have a lust to conquer the outgroup. It is occurring because Republicans have once again abandoned our union and are pursuing their own interests without regard for others in our nation. They have given up on winning elections because of their increasing minority status and have decided to take power however they can, most recently with the help of longtime American enemy, Russia. They are abandoning democracy in favor of fascism and now seek to put a dictator in power, Trump. Because power is their goal, not the common good or even the good of the people in their party.
ReplyDeleteSomerby is wrong to blame both sides for this situation. The left has not behaved aggressively toward the right but has tried to maintain the rule of law and democratic functioning. It is irresponsible for Somerby to encourage the right by pretending Democrats have wronged them.
But Somerby is no student of history, nor anthropology, knows absolutely nothing about psychology and cognitive science or neuroscience, is ignorant of science and technology (by his own admission) and has nothing to say to people here except to spread right wing disinformation.
It’s back to Clinton hate because it is all they got, pretty much the case before Trump came along. No one knows this better than Bob. If he’s not being paid off, he’s acting like he is.
DeleteWe must “quickly add” that it’s getting to the point where we must consider the mental stability of Bob Somerby. Is a “disordered” gansterish bully who was made the most powerful man in the world really equatable with
ReplyDeletethe sometimes giggly TV commentators on the left (who time has proved essentially correct in this terrible matter)? Does Bob, who seems to have abandoned his balderdash about a political solution for a legal problem display his own pathology?
Find somebody with a sliding scale Bob.
"Half the country thinks like him, and possibly much more than half."
ReplyDeleteThis way overstates Trump's influence on people. Less than 1/3 of the Republican party thinks like Trump (25-30% of Republicans). And Republicans are not even close to 50% of registered voters. As of the 4th quarter of 2021, 28% of those polled by Gallup called themselves Republican and not all Republicans support Trump. As of 2022, Trump had lost the support of most Independents too, including those who say they lean right. This was before he was convicted of sexual abuse.
Yes, the Republican party has closed ranks around Trump, but this is because they are all vying to inherit his base and don't want to be seen attacking him until it is clear he won't be the Republican nominee. They are thinking about what will happen when Trump's candidacy and current power implodes, not support him out of belief or enthusiasm but political expediency.
So that leaves the Republicans with far less than 50% of the nation as followers. This is among actual voters. Much of the nation does not vote at all (66.9% voted in 2020). That 33.1 is not participating in politics. So how then can Somerby claim that half our nation is Republican or right wing or red tribe, when nearly half is not political and the Republicans are a far smaller group than the Democrats?
So, one might ask why Republicans control the House. The answer is that they recognized their demographic disadvantage and spent the last 10 years preparing to gerrymander voting districts after the 2010 census, which made it difficult for Democrats to maintain control. They worked hard at suppressing votes in the traditional Democratic party base. They accepted cash and other help from Russia (hacking computers, social media campaigns) to undermine elections. And when they still lost the presidency, they engaged in insurrection and numerous illegal acts. In other words, they have taken to cheating.
Somerby will not acknowledge this. He pretends this is a 50-50 conflict when it is a determined minority of Republicans clinging to power in any way they can, legal or not. The majority in the US is blue and it is Somerby who is magnifying the claims of the right.
Yes. At least he has eased up, for now, in claiming the Dems are playing politics against a poor, disordered man.
DeleteThe electorate is standing by Trump.
DeleteBeing a treasonous criminal doesn't effect his bigotry cred.
Delete"Liberalism consists of exactly one proposition, to wit: There must be ingroups whom the law protects, alongside outgroups who liberal ingroups will aggressively name-call."
ReplyDeleteAnd yet it is Somerby, who is not a liberal, who keeps calling Trump mentally ill -- a name, not a diagnosis.
Is it really name-calling when the law indicts and convicts the right wing for engaging in politically motivated violence to overturn an election that it lost at the polls?
It seems to me that the left has a lot to hold the right accountable for, and that the substance of those complaints is far from name-calling. Objectively, was it not the right who drove our nation to the brink of default on our debts? It is the right who has made the House dysfunctional, by electing and tolerating extremists in its own ranks.
But Somerby is not serious with this formulation of Wilhoit's law. He is himself name-calling the left by claiming that we have no dedication to any principles beyond partisan complaint, when that is obviously and ridiculously untrue. For one thing, his objection to so-called name-calling by the left concerns efforts to eliminate racism and other forms of bigotry in service of advancing civil rights and stopping Republican persecution of minorities in our country. That has nothing to do with fighting partisan wars (the ingroup outgroup nonsense Somerby references) and everything to do with the strongly held value that all people are created equal under our constitution and the law. Even trans people and even Donald Trump -- equal.
Reducing that to "name-calling" suggests that Somerby has no idea what the left stands for and is only himself name-calling by calling liberals name-callers. And that is about as childish as an argument can get.
It's palpable. The feeling.
Delete"We humans aren't especially sharp, even here within our own tribe. That post by Kevin is one example—and then, Dear God! Those comments!"
ReplyDeleteSo, all humans but especially the left are responsible for the comments at Kevin Drum's blog? We don't even know those people over there. How many are even left wing? How much do they reflect Drum's own cluelessness? How and when did they all become not only Democrats, but elected representatives of our blue tribe, much less the human race?
Somerby is not very sharp. I suspect he learned that fact at Harvard, and has hated them ever since for cutting him down to size. When that happens to most people, they buckle down and try to learn and improve their sharpness. Somerby apparently retreated into bitterness and went to find the one group he could be superior to mentally, 7 year old inner city disadvantaged black kids. He spent 10 years repairing his ego as "sage on the stage" and then found an actual stage where he could mock his audience for consumerism ("Hey, breakfast cereal advertising, what's up with that? Amirite?"). And now he has the gall to pontificate about human nature while blaming the left for the right's transgressions.
DeleteIf humans were warlike, would murder be a crime or would it be honored and admired, rewarded?
ReplyDeleteIf humans were warlike, wouldn't Trump be admired by all, not called crazy for wanting to be a dictator?
If humans were warlike, would we have sublimated aggressive urges into sports instead of training actual gladiators? Wouldn't the current fascination with guns and special ops among men be acted out in actual violence instead of fantasy and video games?
If humans were warlike, would we have a long history of striving for peace, would peace be a value at all?
Somerby neglects to mention that philosophers and thinkers (such as Freud for example) have hypothesized competing urges in humanity toward death and creation. For that matter, Somerby does seem to equate competition and conflict with war, when it is nature's principal mechanism for testing, honing and improving its systems.
It also feels quaint to add… the press coverage of the Trump indictment is, like most things, imperfect. Trump’s often show comment about Nixon and the Presidential Pardons Act has never been clarified. It’s nonsense, of course, but the average viewer does not know that or why. Someone who was doing what Bob once did could still be very useful in this situation. But Bob has made it his mission to advocate for Trump, and he finds degrading himself in service of the Right to be a higher calling.
ReplyDeleteanon 10:49, why is it that you and all these other anons (assuming that there are any anons other than you - no way to be sure) claim that TDH advocates for Trump (that's his "mission'???). It's plainly false.TDH calls Trump mentally ill (I think TDH is off the rails on that whole obsession of his) but it's not in the slightest a "defense" of Trump. Would you think I was defending you, if I said your comment here proved that you were mentally ill? I doubt it.
DeleteIt’s obvious to all non Trump supporters that Somerby advocates for Trump. Somerby only trots out “mentally ill” when Trump does something beyond the pale, otherwise Somerby generally refers to Trump as being perfectly reasonable.
DeleteFirst Somerby calls Trump mentally ill, then he says Trump should be pitied and explains that he doesn't think anyone should be locked up, then he argues that the pending impeachment or indictment will be bad for the people, overturn the will of the voters, deepen the divide between red and blue, made the right too upset, and so on. This latter part is Somerby's purpose -- to argue that Trump should be let off the hook for whatever he is being charged with. You've been here and seen this cycle repeated yourself, AC/MA, first with the two impeachments, then with the 1/6 Committee hearings, which Somerby feared with upset the right too much to enable our divided nation to stand (he quoted Lincoln on several occasions), then with the indictment for hush money (which Somerby thought shouldn't have been pursued), then E.J. Carroll's case, and now with this indictment. This is what Somerby does -- he argues that it would somehow unify our divided nation to let Trump off the hook. That is what various of us mean by "defending Trump".
DeleteSomerby has done the same for various other right wing notables, including Roy Moore, Kyle Rittenhouse, George Zimmerman, George Floyd's killer cops, and others. He even tried to defend Matt Gaetz, whose investigation has been revived lately.
Somerby's partisanship and sexism are revealed by the fact that he couldn't bring himself to defend must less promote Hillary, even when she was the Democratic party nominee and he was giving airtime to Michael Moore's prediction that she would lose. Somerby's job is to undermine the strength of liberal attacks on Trump and his minions. There are enough soviet-paid social media bots lioning Trump elsewhere.
Duly noted that you, AC/MA, don't agree that Trump is mentally ill. We will remember that the next time you claim to have voted Democratic. Somerby calls Trump mentally ill for the same reason he quote Dylan song lyrics. To preserve the fiction that he is a bleeding heart liberal urging peace love and an end to prisons just in time for Trump to evade punishment.
A snarky quip on Drum's blog may be fun to cite, but it isn't particularly deep thinking and it definitely hasn't been supported with anything except rancor. Turning that around to name-call Democrats (for name-calling) is about at the level of Cecelia's thinking (and childishness).
ReplyDeleteName-calling was integral to Trump's campaigning. He picked on people who hadn't said or done anything to him, calling Rosie O'Donnell an ugly name out of a clear blue sky. His first act when DeSantis talked about running was to find a suitable name for him, as he did for every competitor in the Republican primary (remember Little Marco).
When Democrats call Republicans bigots and racists and sexist, it is for specific acts of bigotry, racism and sexism. It is labeling behavior so that people can eliminate hurtful acts against minorities, women, and those who are different as LGBTQ+ people may be.
Referring to civil rights as name-calling avoids the call for change in behavior and treatment of others. This is what Somerby and the right has been resisting.
It is not name-calling to say that someone is a thief who must stop stealing other people's stuff and give back what he took. Somerby is saying, look at the name-calling not the theft, and by the way, the guy who took your stuff is mentally ill, so pity him and stop trying to persecute him for his acts. At some point we may find out that Somerby is being paid to shill for the thieves union, but in the meantime, don't be taken in by Somerby's specious nonsense.
Republicans love to turn Democratic words and arguments against them. It isn't clever and it isn't correct either. What Somerby has written today is lazy propagandizing.
DeleteIt is fair to say that Republicans have no principles, issues, no platform beyond power seeking, because it can be shown from their actions that this is true. When has Somerby or the right ever shown that Democrats care more about calling names than we do about actually implementing change, working toward the articulated goals of our party's platform and our strongly held values? Never. But they say these things anyway.
You're the name caller -- no you are -- am not -- are too -- well oh yeah, you have cooties -- do not -- do too.
None but the willfully blind failed to notice years ago that Trump’s thing was to accuse the people who caught him at something of doing what he had done. This is no doubt what got him in hot water on the Iraq document. Sadly that is now the sad sewer he had dragged most of his party into, no matter how many times Bob wants to give him a pass.
DeleteEvery right wing accusation is a confession:
Delete***************
55. While meeting with Trump Attorney 1 and Trump Attorney 2 on May 23, TRUMP, in sum and substance, told the following story, as memorialized by Trump Attorney 1:
[Attorney], he was great, he did a great job. You know what? He said, he said that it – that it was him. That he was the one who deleted all of her emails, the 30,000 emails, because they basically dealt with her scheduling and her going to the gym and her having beauty appointments. And he was great. And he, so she didn’t get in any trouble because he said that he was the one who deleted them.
***************
Anonymouse 10:40am: “A snarky quip on Drum's blog may be fun to cite, but it isn't particularly deep thinking and it definitely hasn't been supported with anything except rancor. Turning that around to name-call Democrats (for name-calling) is about at the level of Cecelia's thinking (and childishness).”
DeleteWhat snarky quip from Drum’s blog did Somerby reference?
Please quote it so that readers can assess whether it’s superfluous and representative of a childish argument that I might make.
Hard to get more childish than pretending to be a woman while crucifying others for wanting to be their natural selves.
DeleteAnonymouse 3:08pm, shouldn’t we actually know the so-called “snarky quip” that Bob referenced to be sure?
DeleteHere it is:
Delete"Wilhoit's Law
Conservatism consists of exactly one proposition, to wit: There must be ingroups whom the law protects but does not bind, alongside outgroups whom the law binds but does not protect."
Wilhoit is not a philosopher or political scientist. He is a composer of music. He made this quip as snark but it gets repeated because it resonates with liberals and seems to characterize the right well. It isn't any kind of "Law" and it doesn't arise from analysis of the American right wing.
I take back what I said about it being something you might say. It is more clever than anything you come up with. And I don't see anyone going around repeating anything you've said here or anywhere else. I stand by the childishness.
I do find it amusing that you couldn't tell which quip I was referring to. That says a lot about you, Cecelia. Wilhoit was just sniping not being profound.
That’s not a snarky quip. It’s an accurate description of conservatives.
DeleteAnonymouse 7:01pm, Wilhoit did not issue snark. His remarks were not quips based upon what you previously described as only rancor. That liberals (including Bob) take Wilhoit’s remarks about conservatives seriously, would belie your statements about how shallow Bob was in pointing them out.
DeleteYour earlier post was your usual tripe in which you chided Bob for bemoaning the current political culture via little more than a blogboard denizens’ rancorousness, which you didn’t bother to go and read, let alone cite. You prefaced your put downs on the usual grounds that Bob just does this stuff because he’s intellectually shallow and nobody likes him.
In other words, you did your usual routine that you endlessly depict as scintillating and illuminating dialectics.
Where did I say "only rancor"? Where is your evidence Somerby was taking Wilhoit seriously. He made his own quip by modifying Wilhoit's. It suggests he was NOT taking it seriously that he used it as a slap at liberals instead of embroidering it on a throw pillow. People use it as a snarky attack on conservatives, not words to live by. You are such a simpleton and your arguments by authority, in which you put words and thoughts into Somerby's head that he never said, occur in the complete absence of any thoughts of your own. If there weren't a dear leader for you to follow, you would stand in the street with your mouth hanging open, waiting for someone to tell you what do do.
DeleteSomerby is absolutely intellectually shallow -- in fact he is worse than that -- he is incoherent in the sense that his thoughts do not hang together, have no internal consistency, are vague to the point of vapidity, and are often untrue, inaccurate, wrong. Nobody except the right wing fanboys (of which you are one) likes him here. Some pity him and others dislike him. I dislike him intensely because I think he is deliberately undermining institutions essential to our democratic system. And I think he was bought off, not simply dishonest and incompetent.
I do not depict my writing as "scintillating and illuminating dialectics" which is the kind of bobble-headed phrase someone who doesn't understand big words uses. But kudos for correct spelling.
Now go have another drink and soon it will be time to fall asleep over your keyboard.
Somerby made Wilhoit’s depiction of conservatives more bipartisan. He did not dismiss Wilhoit's call to action.
DeleteYou speciously argue that Wilhoit description of conservatives was both snark and truth because you have to do that. You had simply trivialized Bob’s lamentations as to our political culture as being shallow asininity prefaced on nothing more than snarky Jabberwocky commenters when Bob said much more than that.
As usual.
Somerby and Wilhoit say different things.
Delete“Bob” didn’t say shit.
DeleteYet another squalid both-sider false-equivalence screed from a truly unhappy man.
ReplyDelete"Today, we seem to have a genuine "sociopath" out on the hustings, and yet we still play around in the manner of Kevin's blog post."
ReplyDeleteSociopath is not an explanation for Trump's behavior. Neither is being mentally ill. Even people with such labels have motives. Frequently, normal people engage in seemingly unexplainable behavior. Sociopath is Somerby's "wackadoodle" and just as empty and stupid as an explanation as Drum's wife's remark.
Trump kept those documents for a reason that has not been revealed yet. I agree with those who suspect he wanted them for leverage of some type, since that is consistent with how Trump and power brokers in general operate. He showed them to other people to display his power and that suggests he would sell or give them to others who have no right to see them, if it served his purposes. Everything Trump does is to enhance his own interests. That is one reason why it is wrong to consider him mentally ill -- he knows his own interests and acts consistently to enhance them.
Somerby has no business mocking Drum when he is making the same mistake himself.
Comey is refusing to testify.
DeleteWe have incomplete info. We may yet find out what Trump did with the documents, and it may be treason, not solely espionage.
DeleteWhy is there no overt investigation of Kushner's relationship with the Saudis? Will we find out that Trump too has sold out to them? I wouldn't be surprised. Somerby won't go there, though. That's why I doubt Somerby really understands what a sociopath is.
Kushner's relationship with the Saudis has been fully investigated.
DeleteKushner’s relationship with the Saudis hasn’t even been fully speculated, much less investigated.
DeleteSomerby’s favorite psychologist, Dr Bandy Lee, has already given her assessment of Trump and his supporters: she does not say they are necessarily sociopaths, she says they are suffering from a pathology that has them stuck in survivor mode such that reasonable persuasion has no impact, she says they are dragging our country down a death spiral.
Separately Dr Bandy Lee also wrote an essay (that Somerby linked to but apparently did not read) that discussed a connection between childhood trauma and the pathology exhibited by the Right.
TDH here, and every other commenter, has misinterpreted Wilhoit the Artist's quote. Wilhoit is expressing that the laws in this country and elsewhere let "conservatives" off the hook, and don't protect anyone else, presumably meaning by "conservatives" the people who make and carry out the laws, i.e., the legislators, the wealthy who finance the legislators', and the courts (the judges) who interpret the laws. Wilhoit isn't talking about "tribes," such as the blue tribe and red tribe in the US right now, like TDH and everyone else here seems to assume. Wilhoit, who might not have a clue about what to do about the situation he bemoans, sounds to me to be analyzing the world similar to "critical theory", (from which "critical race theory" is an off-shoot.)
DeleteAC/MA, good of you to notice.
DeleteNot only does Wilhoit sound like he’s straight out of the GRU, he echoed the philosophy:
“Try to think of remedies; build, along the way, a case for medicalizing it, or even build a case for criminalizing it—but don't minimize it, don't brush it off.”
(My italics)
DeleteThe investigation into Kushner's relationship with the Saudis has more or less be completed.
DeleteNo charges were brought.
Wilhoit applied the word “Conservatism” which is typically used in reference to right wing viewpoints (the red tribe) and there’s no indication to suggest otherwise. Furthermore, he says conservatism is about “in groups” and “out groups”, aka tribes. He does seem to say that the in group (the red tribe) wants to create systems and institutions (law) that serve their self interest and maintain their dominance over the interests of others.
DeleteThat’s early Wilhoit, later Wilhoit expressed a notion about criminalizing “it”, although it’s clear he’s not referring to merely mental illness, but the largest problem we face, which is left undefined, but is something obfuscated by overly compartmentalizing mental illness. Wilhoit’s criminalizing notion is perfectly reasonable, when considering common root causes of a problem that is the “largest we face”, causes such as child abuse.
In fact it does seem like right wingers are bent on decriminalizing toxic behavior, like abuse and murder by Whites.
Political philosophies and theories often have overlapping sentiments, which is why it is important to clearly define terms, such as “left” and “right”. Terms left undefined or poorly defined, will allow bad actors like ac/ma and Cecelia to muddy the discourse in a way that serves to maintain the power imbalance we see in our society today. Wilhoit made a valiant attempt, others have made better ones.
Also, Wilhoit has been quoted out of context.
DeleteHis statement seems to say that only power relationships between groups (in and out) are important to conservatives but we know that they are also motivated by greed and bigotry, and an unconscious fear of death (symbolized by a variety of dangers in their world and making them hyper-responsive to threat).
This is why Wilhoit's Law is simplistic.
DeleteWilhoit’s Law is true.
DeleteIt is incomplete.
DeleteAnonymouse 7:21pm, it’s call them crazy (medicate/hospitalize them) or put them in jail.
DeleteWhere has that happened before?
Cecelia, I admire you.
DeleteThis week Wilhoit issued a call that is not new, opaque, or easily misunderstood by anyone who came of age during the last century.
ReplyDeleteWilhoit didn't say it this week. Go back and read Drum's blog.
DeleteAnonymouse 8:38pm, what week is it in which we read Wilhoit’s ground zero priorities as being salient now.
DeleteYou misunderstood it, similar to how you misunderstood how pretending to be a woman would go over.
DeleteWe on the left understand where your misguided notions come from, the traumatizing past that left you so wounded, and although we are not always tinkled pink that you routinely turn the comments section into a therapy session for you, we are here for you.
Anonymouse 9:01pm, I’m here for you too.
DeleteAs long as Bob’s door is open.
I’m not here for her.
DeleteThe investigation into Kushner being paid billions by Saudi Arabia and Qatar is ongoing, charges are unlikely due to the nature of the corruption for which there is no clear specific statute; however, in part due to the investigation, the issue will hound Kushner for the rest of his life, he will forever be known as one of the most corrupt people in America.
ReplyDelete