My admiration for Jonathan Haidt is high, and he will figure
prominently in an upcoming post. However I have always objected to his
contention that liberals stress only two of the moral foundations, while
conservatives stress all six more equally.
I find that liberals stress disgust/purity a great deal, and the
remaining three foundations more than he credits. I think his original research
focused on things that were more likely to elicit a purity/disgust response
from conservatives, and had he asked about other items we would see a greater
consonance. Food or environmental
concerns, for example, are often framed in terms of disgust. Some things
disgust most human beings, others are more variable.
The current election is bearing me out. Disgust is absolutely a moral foundation in
play in liberals’ – and not them exclusively – rejection of Donald Trump. That was even more strongly in play this past
weekend, when a recording of him talking about groping women, with more graphic
and vulgar terms than has been usual even for him, surfaced.
After what we saw this weekend, don’t
tell me liberals aren’t motivated by disgust.
Which is fine, BTW. I agree with
them on this disgust. The only way it
could have lessened was with a really good apology geared to quieting disgust,
and Trump didn’t come close to achieving that.
His defenders moved to highlight equivalences with a
previous vice-president and more especially, a recent president, both
Democrats, who had not been treated with the same rejection by Democrats that
Trump is receiving.* But in making that
comparison they moved off the Disgust foundation to the Fairness foundation.
Different rules apply there. Ironically, Fairness is the least fair of the
foundations, as events are easy to rationalize in any direction, to make them
look more similar or less similar. Disgust is more automatic, harder to get
around.
Yes, it is objectively far worse that Bill Clinton raped
women, and that Hillary was party to the silencing and discrediting of
them. If you could get those matters
before Martian judges evaluating fairness, you would win hands down. That this does not happen is infuriating to
all those who believe that it would, except for media bias. Perhaps so, but only in part. People will
minimize the sins of their tribesmen and maximize the guilt of their opponents
quite well even without help from media sources.
Either way, Bill Clinton’s raping of women is not much
imagined by his supporters, and the few surviving quotes and descriptions that
might elicit disgust may not even be known to them. “You better put some ice on that” seems to
show up mostly in the conservative press.
Hillary’s creating of the “War Room” is even less in their minds, eventhough the story has credible backers. It is a convenience that virtually all
groups and individuals use. If someone
doesn’t admit guilt, then you can keep up the charade that they didn’t “really”
do it. Even a conviction in a court of
law is not a guarantee that they will abandon you. And absent a formal conviction or a
confession, no amount of evidence will convince some people. That’s not just liberals, that’s human
nature.
Thus, disgust is taken out of the picture, and the argument
to hypocrisy moves to the more malleable Fairness foundation. Apples and oranges.
I wonder how it all fits with the concept of embarrassment
as a moral disqualifier. It shouldn't be
that deeply related, but the complaints about Trump's vulgarity come as a
package with shudders about his hair, and his facial expressions. Well, small sample size on that: on my FB feed and where I work there are
plenty of mini-rants about how infuriating it is to listen to him and look at
him - grown women talking like sophomore girls. Worse, that is what attracts
all their energy, though they are educated enough to develop a coherent
argument based on policy and principles.
Lord knows Trump supplies enough material to not have to be distracted
into discussing how he is just such an
impossible man. I don't get it.
*One more example of people rewriting their own histories to
suit their needs. Every woman I read this year who
addressed the issue of Bill Clinton 1996-1998 claimed that she had greatly
disapproved of his actions then. Yet they recalled only Monica Lewisnky and
minimized the events as mere cheating on his wife. No settlement with Paula Jones, no Linda
Tripp, no Vernon Jordan, no perjury was remembered. Also, his popularity among women rose
starting in 1996, peaked in 1998 and did not drop until the middle of 1999,
when it dropped among everyone. One
wonders what form their disapproval took, then.
2 comments:
Good point, AVI. A big part of the Democrat/Progesssive game plan is to paint their opponents as The Other. One way to otherise their opponents is paint their opponents as having no sense of decency. Mitt Romney was that horrible, disgusting person who put his dog on the roof of his auto. Consider Demo/Progs incessant labeling of their political opponents as "racist/bigoted." Political opponents of Democrats/Progressives are disgusting bigots/racists, while Democrats/Progressives are pure as the driven snow who are prejudiced against no one-Republicans or such deplorables excepted, of course.
For another example of of disgust/purity, consider what many Democrats call supporters of the Tea Party. Calling others "Deplorables" also smacks of disgust/purity.
Not entirely appropriate, but I am reminded of Have You No Sense of Decency? But it does point out the the anti-anti Communists were motivated in part by disgust/purity. As was McCarthy.
When girls say they hate a man, that usually indicates they are attracted to him.
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