Friday, December 30, 2005

Fear as the driving political belief

The NSA eavesdropping scandal is rendering more vivid than ever the central role which fear plays in driving many people to support the whole range of George Bush’s policies that are justified in the name of fighting terrorists. At bottom, so many of the public policy debates we are having end up at that destination, where this one simple though incomparably potent emotion -- fear -- stands revealed as the true engine driving support for the Bush world-view.

When all else fails, what we end up hearing from Bush supporters, usually in quite strained and urgent tones, is that we have no real choice but to consent to the latest item of controversy on the Bush agenda (which now even includes allowing the President to break the law when he decides that our protection requires that), because if we do not, we will all die violent and horrible deaths at the hands of the powerful Islamic terrorists. Our very survival is at risk -- the people who want to kill us all are coming -- and given our dire state, anything and everything is justified to stop them.

There have been two excellent posts on this subject recently -- one by Maha and then one by Digby -- and I posted my own views on this and related topics here and here. Now, researchers in the Social Psychology program at Rutgers University-New Brunswick are offering some empirical evidence which demonstrates the critical role which fear plays in driving people to support George Bush. These social scientists are reporting on their findings from a study which sought to measure the impact which fear had on voting choices in the 2004 election:


Their findings demonstrated that registered voters in a psychologically benign state of mind preferred Senator Kerry to President Bush, but Bush was more popular than Kerry after voters received a subtle reminder of death. Citing an Osama bin Laden tape that surfaced a few days before the election, among other factors, the authors state, "the present study adds convergent support to the idea that George W. Bush's victory in the 2004 presidential election was facilitated by Americans' nonconscious concerns about death…" The authors believe that people were scared into voting for Bush.

More than 130 registered voters participated in the study. Split into two groups, the first group was asked to write down a description of their emotions regarding the
thought of their own death and, as specifically as possible, write down what will physically happen when they die and after they are dead. The second group responded to parallel questions regarding watching television. Within the first group 32 responded that they would vote for Bush and 14 opted for Kerry. In the second group, the decision was reversed as 34 selected Kerry and 8 selected Bush.

The full article itself is behind a subscription firewall. I have e-mailed the editors of the journal to request a copy of the article and will elaborate on the study if I receive it. I find this study far from dispositive, to put it mildly, and, as is usually the case with endeavors of this sort, my guess is that the structure of the study was influenced by lots of preconceived beliefs on the part of the researchers with regard to the subject they were studying.

Nonetheless, its conclusions are consistent with what is quite apparent to the naked eye: a large segment of Americans have had instilled into them a deep-seated fear of terrorism which is the predominant factor in how they form their political views. Does anyone doubt a correlation between the quantity of fear as an emotion and the likelihood they will support George Bush -- that the more someone lives in emotional fear of an Islamic terrorist attack, the more likely it is that they are a Bush voter?

It is not difficult to find the source of these fears. Here is George Bush in a randomly selected and quite typical speech delivered on October 6, 2005, doing everything he can to inflame those fears in order to bolster support for our occupation of Iraq:

We know the vision of the radicals because they've openly stated it -- in videos, and audiotapes, and letters, and declarations, and websites. . . . Their tactic to meet this goal has been consistent for a quarter-century: They hit us, and expect us to run. They want us to repeat the sad history of Beirut in 1983, and Mogadishu in 1993 -- only this time on a larger scale, with greater consequences.

"The militants believe that controlling one country will rally the Muslim masses, enabling them to overthrow all moderate governments in the region, and establish a radical Islamic empire that spans from Spain to Indonesia. With greater economic and military and political power, the terrorists would be able to advance their stated agenda: to develop weapons of mass destruction, to destroy Israel, to intimidate Europe, to assault the American people, and to blackmail our government into isolation."

"Our enemy is utterly committed. As Zarqawi has vowed, 'We will either achieve victory over the human race or we will pass to the eternal life.' And the civilized world knows very well that other fanatics in history, from Hitler to Stalin to Pol Pot, consumed whole nations in war and genocide before leaving the stage of history."

The murderous ideology of the Islamic radicals is the great challenge of our new century. Yet, in many ways, this fight resembles the struggle against communism in the last century. . . .

With the rise of a deadly enemy and the unfolding of a global ideological struggle, our time in history will be remembered for new challenges and unprecedented dangers.

Islamic terrorists here, as always, are depicted as omnipotent villains with quite attainable dreams of world domination, genocide, and the obliteration of the United States. They are trying to take over the world and murder us all. And this is not merely a threat we face. It is much more than that. It is the predominant issue facing the United States -- more important than all others. Everything pales in comparison to fighting off this danger. We face not mere danger, but "unprecedented danger" -- the worst, scariest, most threatening danger ever.

And literally for four years, this is what Americans have heard over and over and over from their Government – that we face a mortal and incomparably powerful enemy on the precipice of destroying us, and only the most extreme measures taken by our Government can save us. We are a nation engaged in a War of Civilizations whose very existence is in imminent jeopardy. All of those plans for the future, dreams for your children, career aspirations, life goals – it’s all for naught unless, first and foremost, we stand behind George Bush as he protects us and defeats this enemy.

There is virtually no policy incapable of being justified with this fear. It is an all-purpose tool. We have to invade and occupy Iraq because the terrorists will kill us all if we don’t. We have to allow the Government to incarcerate American citizens without due process, employ torture as a state-sanctioned weapon, and even allow the Administration to violate the law, because the terrorists will kill us all if we don’t. It is the one and only argument which enables the Bush Administration to win again and again. The more afraid of terrorists people are, the more likely they are to support the Bush world-view. And another terrorist attack on U.S. soil, which is certainly likely, is sure to ramp up that dynamic -- both the fear itself and the policies it enables -- by several orders of magnitude.

Acknowledging a threat, even a serious threat, and taking steps to address it, does not require fear. But what does require fear is an agenda which demands that blind faith be placed by the citizenry in the power of the Government in exchange for being protected by it. And it is that fear, inflamed more and more every day, which is now driving America’s political choices.

16 comments:

  1. Anonymous8:59 AM

    Fear is a time-tested weapon that very authoritarian government has used to secure the blind consent of the dominated. It's such a primal and instinctive force that anyone who understands it can easily manipulate it.

    There is virtually no speech Bush or Cheney give where they don't purposely scare the shit out of everyone. And then hold themselves up as the only ones who can protect people from this fear. That is what our country has become. It makes me want to cry, or vomit, depending on the day of the week.

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  2. Anonymous11:51 AM

    Recognizing a serious evil is not an irrational fear. What is irrational is to shut your eyes to it and hope against hope that it goes away. I don't know if you've ever been to downtown Manhattan, but if you think that fear of terrorism is irrational, you should take a look at the huge hole where the Twin Towers used to be.

    It will show you how real the threat is.

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  3. It will show you how real the threat is.

    It is possible to exaggerate and overreact even to "real threats." If you don't let your 10-year-old child out of the house after 9 pm, you are reasonably responding to the real threat of crime. If you never let him leave the house, you are overreacting to a real threat.

    A great analogy is Joe McCarthy, who was included in the 10 Worst Americans list of even most right-wing bloggers. Why is that? After all, McCarthy was responding to a threat that was quite real and serious - communist infiltration of America's governmental institutions, where actual Stalin loyalists had consolidated real power. But he converted a rational recognition of this threat into sickly paranoia which led to great excesses and abuses in the name of combatting that threat.

    That's a fairly accurate description of what is going on today with terrorism. To call for rationality in the face of this threat is not the same - not even close to being the same - as claiming that the threat is not real.

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  4. a large segment of Americans have had instilled into them a deep-seated fear of terrorism which is the predominant factor in how they form their political views...It is not difficult to find the source of these fears. Here is George Bush...

    ??? As if it was GWB who assasinated my neighbor when I was a kid, blew up our Marines in Lebanon, attacked one of our ships in Yemen, destroyed the WTC, smashed the Pentagon, and is deliberately killing civilians in the Middle East?

    C'mon, Glenn. There are reasonable fears and unreasonable fears. 9-11 demonstrated that terrorist attacks culminating in mass destruction are reasonable fears.

    (Please read at least my post Holy Warrior Education & The Patriot Act before you respond, and maybe my Why is the U.S. in Iraq? series for my full philosophy. What we are doing is not "overreaction", nor is anyone calling for "abuses".)

    I consider that it is irresponsible to acknowledge reasonable fears yet not act upon them responsibly (you offer no counter-proposals) because of some red herring - isn't that how you conclude your post? For I do not perceive that George W. Bush demanded "that blind faith be placed by the citizenry in the power of the Government in exchange for being protected by it".

    But when he was running for President, was that not the attitude of Senator Kerry, as he never explained himself and his policy plans consistently and cogently? President Bush's speeches are thus the height of responsible conduct, and offer to all the chance to sensibly critique his policies.

    The atmosphere in America today is not the paranoia of the McCarthy era. No one's career is threatened by the charge that they are too far to the left or even Islamist, nobody is afraid that they will be suddenly interrogated before a congressional committee for their political convictions, etc.

    Glenn, you have command of some of the facts, but you seem locked into one particular frame of mind as to how to perceive them. Consider shifting the frame around a bit, and you may discover a perspective that fits reality better, although it may not match your preconceptions.

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  5. Shoeless, even as you have recited the events, you have missed the general pattern, the big picture: from single killings by a false mailman to attacks killing thousands by disguised suicide pilots. With the progressive spread of WMDs throughout a world that possess the desire to use them aggressively for conquest, IMO the threat has reached existential levels.

    Terrorists without home addresses can't be deterred like the Soviets could. Just because you are a "girly man" doesn't mean that there aren't people out there trying to kill you.

    And you don't have to be paranoid or act like one to defend yourself. Not even I, who lost another neighbor on 9-11. One takes the proper measures that one can, and then goes about one's daily business.

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  6. Anonymous2:47 PM

    Thanks for your blog Glenn, you're one of the sanest voices out here. I've just been reading you recently. Keep it up! Don't let the snipers get you down.

    And Happy New Year...

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  7. If you think anything the Islamofascists could do to us could destroy us as a nation, you are unworthy of being called an American. Do you really think that even something as terrible as the detonation of a nuclear bomb in an American city, or even several, would be the end of us?...In truth, there is one power alone on this earth with sufficient strength to destroy us as a nation. And that is ourselves...Unfortunately, we will be attacked again. The good news is it will not destroy us...

    Maybe WMDs will never touch the grotto where Shoeless is rubbing sticks, but don't the rest of us have a right to advocate our own defense without being labelled "unworthy Americans"? Or not be trapped into calmly looking forward to the destruction of millions of our compatriots with the reassurance that such an event "will not destroy us" - but will be the fault of those who tried to advocate the defense their nation to the best of their judgment, rather than the actual perpetrators?

    And he calls me insane!

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  8. I'd be willing to wager, based on your argumentation, that if you were honest, you would be forced to admit that in the past 3 years you have called at least ONE other American something akin to unworthy, like "traitor" or "terrorist"

    Not a difficult wager after reading my comments about Kerry, is it? But given Kerry's record, denouncing him can reasonably be considered an exercise in good judgment.

    I'm "playing" the same game that those who advocate the way you do have been for the last 3 years. Of course, it's hypocritical of me to do so -

    You confess your own hypocrisy, but what does that have to do with me? How relevant is "hypocrisy" anyway?

    You won't be responsible for attacking us, you will be responsible for letting it happen.

    If you believe that an aggressive militaristic policy itself engenders a reaction that can lead to a nation's destruction, then I do indeed see your point. That fate has indeed happened to other nations.

    The flaw in such an argument is that the Islamofascists are not like Romans intent to establish order but fanatics out to destroy us anyway; they see us first as an object to play out their fantasies upon, only second as a threat. They were at war at us long before we were at war with them.

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  9. Anonymous7:41 PM

    I find this study far from dispositive, to put it mildly, and, as is usually the case with endeavors of this sort, my guess is that the structure of the study was influenced by lots of preconceived beliefs on the part of the researchers with regard to the subject they were studying.

    Uh-huh, and acknowledging all that, you still go on to rely on this drivel because it supports your overwrought assertions that the American public is living in some state of unwarranted terror of Islamo-fascists. It is not.

    If any of these nutjobs get their hands on certain bio-terrorism agents and release them here or abroad, won't you feel chagrined? Do you give Bush any credit at all for the fact that there has been no replay of 9/11?

    The reason there is no hue and cry over the NSA surveillance is because people simply do not grasp the issues involved. That's it, not unreasoning fear.

    And I agree with Solomon2 entirely about John Kerry. For reasons having nothing to do with the war on terror, I would not vote for him for any reason under the sun.

    As for this crap: the irony here is these Bush supporters love to show that they are the brave he-men standing up to the terrorists with their big dicks.

    AS a female Bush supporter, I have no dick, large or small, to swagger. Bush got the soccer mom vote, and by all reports, they lack male erectile organs.

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  10. Anonymous8:52 PM

    shoeless spews at solomon2:The correct attitude lies in between denial of the problem and knee-knocking fear. You need to grow a spine and join us back in the middle, in the world of reality.

    With George Bush, America finally grew a spine and began to behave like a superpower that will actually protect its people. Prior to 9/11, by contrast, the nation had behaved like a bunch of pansy-assed, dithering schoolgirls vis-a-vis terrorists, and we paid for that.

    What eventually follows is from a 1985 issue of The American Spectator, an article entitled "Prime Time Terror." In that year, shiite terrorists hijacked an American Boeing 727 in Beirut, holding hundreds of our citizens captive at gunpoint for some humiliating ten days, and beating and summarily executing one Robert Dean Stethem, because they thought the 23-yr-old was Jewish.

    During this crisis, America and Reagan, revealed themsleves as impotent pussies. This nation secretly negotiated with Israel to meet the terrorists demands of releasing a bunch of prisoners. We sure as hell did nothing insensitive, like, you know, retaliating with military force. And we would pay for that, for another 15 years.

    As the author of this prescient, two-decades-old piece says in his conclusion:

    What can be done about threats like this?...Tying a yellow ribbon around the old oak tree is not part of the solution; indeed it may be part of the problem in that it sends the wrong message to terrorists. It signals a naive, spineless America, an America that dwells in an atmosphere of appeasement, helpless when confronted by the hooded face of an unknown enemy.

    The answer lies in action, intelligent and forceful action. If the United States is serious about stopping terrorism it should go past the rhetoric of a "war on terrorism" and actually, legally, make a formal declaration of war....How much danger would we face now if the United States and Israel had mounted a commando raid on the TWA jet on the second day of the hijacking, with the simultaneous bombing of selected targets in Beirut, the terrorist training camps in the Bekaa Valley, the Iranian embassy in Damascus, and terror bases in Libya and South Yemen? A sophisticated, superbly coordinated show of massive force would put a very clear message across: Strike at us once and we will go to the ends of the earth to destroy you.


    Amen, brother. Since that time, more has happened. Saddam Hussein gave sanctuary to one of the '93 WTC bombers, and tried to assassinate one of our former Presidents. Bill Clinton sent a few effete missiles toward Saddam, which I'm sure really, really impressed him.

    I'm not driven by fear; I'm driven by resolute, cold anger. Harbor terrorists, do anything nice for them at all, try to kill our heads of state, and: We. Will. Destroy. You.

    That's Bush's message, and it is about damned time.

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  11. Solomon2, regarding existential threats, you think that American civilization will be brought down if the terrorists got extremely lucky and shut down a sizable American city like, say, New Orleans? As tragic as that would be, I think that we are more resilient than that. And in any case, it's far from obvious that George Bush is anywhere remotely capable of acting to prevent such a catastrophe from happening.

    Hypatia, it is far easier for the terrorists to pull a Malvo and set up a bunch of sniper teams in cars than it would be to stage a complex chemical or biological attack. Or to stage an attack on a real live chemical plant with tons of nasty chemical agents already in place. And odds are that such attacks will be much more effective than the sheer fantasies you bring up. And invading Iraq has reduced the possiblity of those attacks in what way?

    I think that George Bush has done an admirable job saving the Brooklyn Bridge from blowtorch assault. And I salute Tony Blair for diverting Bush's attention from Iraq long enough that we could drive Osama into hiding in Afghanistan. On the main, though, George Bush has squandered an awful lot of capital (economic, human, and political) for apparently very little gain.

    Contrary to your viewpoint, if you spend all your time swatting mosquitoes, there's always going to be scads more where they came from. Indiscriminate spraying with DDT only produces DDT-resistant mosquitoes. Draining the swamps in which the mosquitoes live may not be manly enough for you, but it is effective.

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  12. Anonymous1:37 AM

    And odds are that such attacks will be much more effective than the sheer fantasies you bring up.

    I brought up no sheer fantasies, certainly nothing more fanatastic than the idea that people would board American airplanes and turn them into weapons that bring down our major buildings and shut the country down for a week or longer.

    And you would stop them how, exactly? You know, all pretty literary allegory aside 'n all.

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  13. Anonymous6:00 AM

    glenn: a large segment of Americans have had instilled into them a deep-seated fear of terrorism which is the predominant factor in how they form their political views.

    We've run into this scenario several times before and they've not been some of the prouder moments in American history. In retrospect, the threat always appears quantifiable and exagerated but at the time, to do it justice, it appears ubiquitious and overpowering.

    This goes for everything from the Salem Witch Trials to the McCarthy era. It's exactly the same dynamic in play. People are scared out of their wits -- not for no reason, but for signs and indications that do exist but which are blown out of proportion by charletans on the right who try to take political advantage of it.

    In this case, our current experience is no different. We have possibly the most incompetent president in the history of our country, who has brought us to the verge of bankruptcy and military exhaustion -- who is constanting running back to the trough of terrorism to justify his failures.

    Eventually what happens is that the public starts to catch on. It develops a tolerance for all the fear-mongering -- the fear-mongering begins to bounce off the body politic like so many other doomsday scenarios -- and people begin to turn back to what really matters in their lives.

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  14. Anonymous6:14 AM

    And by the way, it's not as if Bush had any particular competence in dealing with terrorism. All we have to show for the so-called War on Terrorism is a devasted country in the Middle East, over 2,000 American troops dead, tens of thousands of Iraqis dead, unprecendented regional instability, unprecendented anti-americanism, and a perpetrator of the attack on the WTC, namely Osama Bin Laden, who's still at large. Not much of a record if you ask me.

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  15. Anonymous3:58 PM

    hypatia, have you gone off the deep end? What the hell does this mean?

    "Uh-huh, and acknowledging all that, you still go on to rely on this drivel because it supports your overwrought assertions that the American public is living in some state of unwarranted terror of Islamo-fascists. It is not."

    You may not fear the Islamofascists, but you are nearly alone among your loudest buddies on the right. Almost without exception, "terrorist" is a code word for Islamofascist, the "existential" threat to America.

    And, no, I give Bush NO credit for no repeat of 9/11. That was a complex and difficult act, made almost impossible to follow by the few relatively effective measures put in place after the attack - all measures taken HERE or in Afghanistan, not in Iraq.

    I know you are a lawyer, and I truly thought logic was part of a lawyers training. Logic says that you can't prove a negative statment. You can only disprove a positive statment. So the fact we had no major attacks since 9/11 does not mean that ANY DAMN THING BUSH HAS DONE HAS MADE A DIFFERENCE. It only means there were no successful attacks.

    Soccer moms? Jeebus, hypatia, could you choose any more innocuous and uninformed group to use as your standard of excellence? Holy shit, they drive their Hummers a block to the Quick Stop, on their cell phone the whole time. They haven't a clue about the Koran, and less of a clue about the mideast. Math is a challenge, and god forbid they should grasp statistics. Personally, I like them, but I don't turn to them for advice on how to run the country or wage a war.

    The nation paid? Shit, hypatia, GW and crowd couldn't be bothered with terrorism until 9/11. The republican controlled congress couldn't be bothered with terrorism until 9/11. Just who were the pussies? The argument can be made that it was the radical right wusses who led us down this garden path, not the libruls.

    As for bioterror, are you so sure we haven't been subject to an attack? What about anthrax? How many people died? WHAT IS IT WITH YOU PEOPLE? The pres blithely talks of 30k dead in Iraq and everybody on the right, misusing logic, says, but we didn't have any attacks here. WHAT KIND OF BULLSHIT ETHICS IS THAT? Even a dirty bomb would have less effect that Katrina. What did the pres do about Katrina? He went on vacation then played guitar. THIS IS THE GUY YOU THINK IS GONNA SAVE YOU?

    Not in this lifetime. Or any other.

    If this is cold, resolute anger, then give me rational patience any day. You are blinded by your own emotions, hypatia. People die all the time. Indiscriminately killing peole who had NOTHING to do with 9/11 is not the answer. It is murder. Why can't you grasp that fact? It's not rocket science. KILLING PEOPLE IN IRAQ DOES NOT MAKE YOU SAFE.

    Jake

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  16. Quick replies:

    Shoeless:

    an aggressive militaristic policy that cannot identify the correct target, and goes off on a tangent at the exclusion of nearly all other more appropriate targets and steps has lead to this nation's being made more unsafe than otherwise.

    We did this in spades in WWII w/o ill effects.

    It was Clinton who stalled Nunn-Lugar at its most important phase. He never really explained why and I was not happy about it.

    You need to grow a spine and join us back in the middle

    Waffles don't have spines. That the "middle" is always the right position is an argument full of fallacies: do I jump off the diving board or not? No middle possible. Reasonable positions can be defeated by people taking unreasonable positions and, if matters are left to "middlers" who don't apply judgment, disaster can occur.

    Les:

    Widespread domestic wiretapping OK? The Framers of the Constitution would puke.

    Not at all! They regularly opened the mail of suspected Loyalists -- or anyone acting suspiciously. That's how they nabbed Benedict Arnold.

    ploeq:
    you think that American civilization will be brought down if the terrorists got extremely lucky and shut down a sizable American city

    Who would want such a thing to happen in the first place?

    if you spend all your time swatting mosquitoes, there's always going to be scads more where they came from. Indiscriminate spraying with DDT only produces DDT-resistant mosquitoes.

    No, or we would never have been able to build the Panama Canal. Attrition works, although repeat treatments are sometimes needed.

    anon:
    it's not as if Bush had any particular competence in dealing with terrorism. All we have to show

    There's plenty to show, but you have to be willing to see it.

    Jake:

    Try constructing a timeline of the order of events; I think you'll get a better handle on things that way.

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